Wednesday, December 9, 2020

COVID-19 Vaccine is Liquid Gold

“It is the most valuable asset on earth right now.”

So that is what they will be injecting into you for a "di$ea$e" they have never isolated and from which over 99.97% of people recover or never even knew they had because they never did.


All based on a flawed and faulty test that doesn't detect for infection and one which can be manipulated to show anything officialdom wants.

"After botched COVID response, UK tackles giant vaccine rollout; Britain left hospitals short of masks and gowns, and stumbled on testing and tracing, so can it vaccinate tens of millions of people in a matter of months?" by Stephen Castle and Elian Peltier New York Times, December 7, 2020

LONDON — In Bristol, a sports stadium is being converted into a temporary clinic to provide inoculations, as is a racecourse outside London. Village halls, libraries, and parking lots across the country are also being quickly turned into makeshift vaccination centers, with the government enlisting military planners for advice. 

Now you know why you are getting second lockdowns on inflated if not outright fake case totals. Being under a military premise simply exposes this as a worldwide Communi$t coup.

You can call me conspiracy theorist or whatever, I don't care. There is simply no denying what is going on right now. It's all out in the open, and only those who are willfully blind won't see. They are scared of truth, but not facing up to what is going on is doom.

I pray the British people revolt the way we once did against them, with Britain firing the first shot as it were in the 21st century revolution for all humanity. 

This an abomination, folks, and the pre$$ has become criminal for advancing it.

As it prepares to begin rolling out a coronavirus vaccine Tuesday, Britain is taking on the biggest logistical challenge ever faced by the country’s health service: the vaccination of tens of millions of people against coronavirus in a matter of months. At the same time, law enforcement authorities are contending with an array of potential security threats to the vaccination campaign.

Oh, NOW WHAT?

Antifa going to blow up convoys under military guard like they tried to derail trains last summer?

Now they are laying the predicate for false flag attacks, f**king us either way. The operations succeed, more tyranny is imposed.

Inoculations are expected to begin Tuesday at selected hospitals throughout Britain that have received the first batches of vaccine made by Pfizer and BioNTech, which need to be stored at very low temperatures, but the temporary clinics that are being hurriedly put together are expected to play critical roles as the mass vaccination program expands.

Has ANYONE ASKED the PEOPLE if they WANT THIS MONSTROUS CONCOCTION?

New York Times?

Hello?

Retired health workers are being asked to help, while the National Health Service is also recruiting tens of thousands of first aid workers and others to help administer the shot, as the vaccine becomes available to progressively more people.

“I think all people who can help should put their hands up,” said Sarah Wollaston, who worked as a doctor before serving in Parliament until recently. She has just completed part of an online refresher course to qualify to help in the vaccine rollout. “Physically, giving someone a vaccine is very straightforward,” she said. “The challenge is the logistics.” 


While industry experts and health officials grapple with that, law enforcement officers and cyber-sleuths face an equally pressing challenge in the potential security threats surrounding a product in such high demand.

“It is the most valuable asset on earth right now,” said Lisa Forte, a former British counterintelligence employee and a partner at Red Goat, a cybersecurity firm. “Naturally, this will attract highly skilled cybercriminals, criminal groups, and state actors.”

I'm about ready to vomit!

Europol has warned that organized crime groups might target trucks containing vaccines for theft and hijacking, and last week Interpol warned against an “onslaught of all types of criminal activity linked to the COVID-19 vaccine,” which it has described as “liquid gold.” From the factory to hospitals and other sites, the Pfizer vaccine — because it has to be stored at around minus 70 degrees Celsius (minus 94 Fahrenheit), is acutely vulnerable to sabotage, in addition to theft.

Last week, IBM said it had detected a series of cyberattacks in September against companies involved in the distribution of coronavirus vaccines across the world. IBM said the attackers, whose identity could not be determined, had tried to learn how the vaccines would be stored and delivered. 

The hackers are invariably western intelligence and cyber "$ecurity" software firms, sorry.

“We’ve seen petrochemical companies targeted, because they’re essential in producing dry ice used to store the vaccine,” said Claire Zaboeva, a senior cyberthreat analyst at IBM’s Security X-Force. 

Makes up for the decreased demand for oil.

As nations compete to be among the first to administer the vaccine, Zaboeva added, state actors or even terrorist groups might try to disrupt deliveries. “Making loads of vaccine doses spoiled and useless, that would be a pretty destructive attack,” she said.

I'd laugh if this wasn't such a threat.

While security agencies look after those concerns, Britain’s health service will have the daunting problem of managing a mass vaccination program that will reach further and faster into the population than any other public health outreach in living memory.

Success is hardly guaranteed, given Britain’s spotty record on logistics during the COVID-19 crisis. In the early stages of the pandemic hospitals were left chronically short of basic protective equipment like masks and gloves, putting some workers at risk of infection.

How reassuring to the British people.

Since then, the government has struggled to establish a test and trace system, despite budgeting around $16 billion for the much-criticized project. Already, Pfizer’s problems sourcing raw materials may force it to cut the number of vaccine doses promised for delivery this year to Britain possibly by around half, to 5 million, and there is a potential bottleneck in the production of dry ice needed for packing and shipping the vaccine, yet specialists are cautiously optimistic that the vaccine rollout will go better than the government’s earlier, fumbling efforts to address the pandemic because it will be handled under the umbrella of the National Health Service, which has extensive experience with organizing mass immunizations, like annual flu shots. “It is not going to be without problems because of its scale and the logistics — I would be amazed if, in six months something, somewhere, didn’t go wrong,” said Helen Buckingham, director of strategy and operations at the Nuffield Trust, a research institute specializing in health, but the concept of mass vaccination is a familiar one, she added, “and overall people are putting a lot of effort into making this work.

With help from military advisers, of course.

Vaccines will be offered at three different types of locations: hospitals; doctors’ offices, and clinics; and temporary vaccination centers still being prepared, including drive-thru sites, sports stadiums, and public buildings. Family doctors, who will carry much of the burden, can call on their experience of giving at least 15 million flu shots each year.

Murderers and shills, all of them.

Coronavirus vaccination will be different for several reasons, however. In addition to the Pfizer and BioNTech vaccine, Britain is likely to authorize at least two others, one produced by Moderna and another by AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford, but when and where each one will be available is unclear.

Martin Marshall, chair of the council of the Royal College of General Practitioners, notes that refrigeration requirements particularly for the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines introduce a complication doctors do not have to manage with flu shots. Both require a second injection after several weeks, which can be an administrative nightmare.

“We are pretty used to delivering big vaccination programs, but of course no one has ever had to deliver one in a situation where the vaccinations don’t come through in prefilled syringes,” Marshall said.

Early plans to vaccinate nursing home residents have been shelved because of the deceptively vexing issue of how to break down the 975-dose batches that Pfizer ships and safely take them into those facilities, and it is unclear when — and in what quantity — other vaccines will become available.

All this has to be done at a time when the health care sector is under acute strain, its staff stretched after months of relentless pressure and during a winter season when people are generally more susceptible to illness; nonetheless, Marshall is confident that the vaccine rollout can succeed.

“I think we can make this work if we work across the NHS and show some flexibility,” he said. “It plays to the strength of the NHS, which is a centralized, organized, and managed system — and it plays to our values as well.”

Spoken like a true genocidal Communi$t!

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Are you ready for the sickening and scripted public relations photo opportunity?

"UK starts virus campaign with a shot watched round the world" by Danica Kirk Associated Press December 8, 2020

LONDON (AP) — A nurse rolled up 90-year-old Margaret Keenan’s sleeve and administered a shot watched round the world -– the first jab in the U.K.’s COVID-19 vaccination program kicking off an unprecedented global effort to try to end a pandemic that has killed 1.5 million people.

Take about six percent of that and it's the real death toll from whatever they are calling the never identified COVID.

Keenan, a retired shop clerk from Northern Ireland who celebrates her birthday next week, was at the front of the line at University Hospital Coventry to receive the vaccine that was approved by British regulators last week. 

I'm sure the AP will check up on her.

The U.K. is the first Western country to deliver a broadly tested and independently reviewed vaccine to the general public. The COVID-19 shot was developed by U.S. drugmaker Pfizer and Germany’s BioNTech. U.S. and European Union regulators may approve it in the coming days or weeks.

“All done?” Keenan asked nurse May Parsons. “All done,” came the reply, as hospital staff broke into applause and also clapped for her as she was wheeled down a corridor.

“I feel so privileged to be the first person vaccinated against COVID-19,” said Keenan, who wore a surgical mask and a blue “Merry Christmas” T-shirt with a cartoon penguin in a Santa hat. “It’s the best early birthday present I could wish for because it means I can finally look forward to spending time with my family and friends in the New Year after being on my own for most of the year.” 

Are they going to let you do that because we have all been told can't do that anyway even after a vaccine.

The second injection, in a fitting bit of drama, went to an 81-year-old man named William Shakespeare from Warwickshire, the county where the bard was born. 

Oh, the DRAMA of SHAKESPEARE! 

A TRAGEDY INDEED!

The fanfare was good cheer to the nation, if but for a moment. Authorities warned that the vaccination campaign would take many months, meaning painful restrictions that have disrupted daily life and punished the economy are likely to continue until spring. The U.K. has seen over 61,000 deaths in the pandemic — more than any other country in Europe — and has recorded more than 1.7 million confirmed cases. 

The vomit is spewing from my mouth like that of Linda Blair.

Fanfare is good cheer, huh?

“This really feels like the beginning of the end,″ said Stephen Powis, medical director for the National Health Service in England. “It’s been a really dreadful year, 2020 — all those things that we are so used to, meeting friends and family, going to the cinema, have been disrupted. We can get those back. Not tomorrow. Not next week. Not next month, but in the months to come,″ but it is important beyond these shores. Britain’s program is likely to provide lessons for other countries as they prepare for the unprecedented task of vaccinating billions

Whether they need it or not, and the pokes are to never end.

On Saturday, Russia began vaccinations with its Sputnik V vaccine, and China has also begun giving its own domestically made shots to its citizens and selling them abroad, but those are being viewed differently because neither countries’ vaccines have finished the late-stage trials scientists consider essential for proving a serum is safe and effective.

Yeah, only the globalists garbage is any good (hmmmm).

Other vaccines are also being reviewed by regulators around the world, including a collaboration between Oxford University and drugmaker AstraZeneca and one developed by U.S. biotechnology company Moderna.

Documents released by U.S. regulators Tuesday confirmed that Pfizer’s vaccine was strongly protective against COVID-19 and appeared safe.

APPEARED SAFE?

New results on a possible vaccine from Oxford University and drugmaker AstraZeneca suggest it is safe and about 70% effective, according to early test results from Britain and Brazil, but that report, in the medical journal Lancet, showed that questions remain about how well it helps protect those over 55.

SUGGESTS it is SAFE?

British regulators approved the Pfizer shot Dec. 2, and the country has received 800,000 doses, enough to vaccinate 400,000 people. The first shots are going to people over 80 who are either hospitalized or already have outpatient appointments scheduled, along with nursing home workers and vaccination staff.

Others must wait, and health officials have said that those who are most at risk from the virus will be vaccinated in the early stages. For most people, it will be next year before there is enough vaccine to expand the program.

U.K. health officials have worked for months to adapt a system geared toward vaccinating groups like school children and pregnant women into one that can rapidly reach much of the population.

You sick f**ks.

Questions arose about when the country’s most prominent senior couple — Queen Elizabeth II, 94, and her husband, Prince Philip, 99 — would get the vaccine and whether it would happen on camera.

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab appeared nonplussed when he was asked about it by NBC. “I’m not sure whether they’d do it on camera,” Raab said, “but I’m sure arrangements will be made according to the phased approach that I set out, and like any family, they would have felt the pressures and all the worries that surround this pandemic as well.’’

They are a cancer on the British soul.

The 800,000 doses are only a fraction of what is needed in the U.K. The government is targeting more than 25 million people, or about 40% of the population, in the first phase of its vaccination program, which gives first priority to those at highest risk from the virus.

The program will be expanded when supply increases, with the vaccine offered roughly on the basis of age groups, starting with the oldest. Britain plans to offer vaccines to everyone over the age of 50, as well as younger adults with health conditions that put them at greater risk. 

What if the demand dries up?

In England, the vaccine is being delivered to 50 hospital hubs in the first wave of the program, with more hospitals expected to offer it as the rollout ramps up. Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales are making their own plans under the U.K.’s system of devolved administration.

Logistical issues are slowing the distribution of the Pfizer vaccine because it has to be stored at minus-70 degrees Celsius (minus-94 degrees Fahrenheit). Authorities are focusing on large-scale distribution points because each package of vaccine contains 975 doses and they don’t want any to be wasted. 

It has to be frozen solid because there is a live agent that will activate as your body warms and then alter your DNA.

The U.K. has agreed to buy more than 350 million doses from seven different producers. Governments around the world are making agreements with multiple developers to ensure they lock in delivery of the products that are ultimately approved for widespread use.

All these logistical challenges culminated Tuesday in Keenan’s vaccination by Parsons, a nurse originally from the Philippines who has worked for the NHS for 24 years.

“I’m just glad to be able to play a part on this historic day,” she said. “The last few months have been tough for all of us working in the NHS, but now it feels like there is a light at the end of the tunnel.”

Woo-woo! 

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The light he sees is Trump's Legacy as we have reached a turning point in the Globe's coverage as they $hell game my printed piece into the bu$ine$$(??) $ection.

Not even the Jedi can $ave us.

Related:


He orders tiered lockdowns and then leaves for Brussels?

Also see:


Better search for another place to travel, or cancel altogether for the sake of the planet:

"Another month on a warming planet: Record-hot November; Global temperatures were about 0.2 degree Fahrenheit above the previous record-holders, in 2016 and 2019" by Henry Fountain New York Times, December 7, 2020

This comes as we are in a pre-winter cold snap and after a foot of snow fell last week.

The $hit-shoveling is overwhelming, and all part and parcel to the Great Reset that the pre$$ is una$hamedly promoting.

I hope they roast in a globally-warmed hell, or better yet, freeze in it!

Last month was the hottest November on record, European researchers said Monday, as the relentlessly warming climate proved too much even for any possible effects of cooler ocean temperatures in the tropical Pacific Ocean.

That is strange since so much business and commerce has been shut down the last eight months, thereby vastly reducing emissions.

Warm conditions persisted over large swaths of the planet, with temperatures the highest above average across Northern Europe and Siberia, and the Arctic Ocean. Much of the United States was warmer than average as well.

“These records are consistent with the long-term warming trend of the global climate,” the Copernicus service director, Carlo Buontempo, said in a statement. “All policymakers who prioritize mitigating climate risks should see these records as alarm bells.”

Can't hear you over the chattering of my teeth, sorry.

In September, the world entered La Nina, a phase of the climate pattern that also brings El Nino and affects weather across the world. La Nina is marked by cooler-than-normal sea surface temperatures in the eastern and central tropical Pacific Ocean. Last month scientists with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said that La Nina had strengthened, meaning that surface temperatures had further declined. 

They are supposed to be heating up!

While La Nina can bring warmer conditions to certain regions — notably, the southern United States — generally it has an overall cooling effect. Last week, in releasing a World Meteorological Organization climate report that noted, among other things, that 2020 was on track to be one of the three warmest years ever, the organization’s secretary-general, Petteri Taalas, said that La Nina’s cooling effect “has not been sufficient to put a brake on this year’s heat.”

PFFFFFFFFFFFFT!

It's not global warming at all!

Marybeth Arcodia, a doctoral student studying climate dynamics at the University of Miami, said there are other elements that affect climate, including natural oscillations of wind, precipitation, air pressure and ocean temperatures over different time scales. “There’s just so many different climate factors at play that could mask that La Nina signal,” Arcodia said, but the biggest element, she noted, is human-induced climate change.

PFFFFFFFFFFT! 

We have been SIDELINED and SHUTDOWN, a$$hole!

“Something to keep in mind is that the average global temperature is increasing at an unprecedented rate due to human influences,” she said. “That’s the main factor here, so we will continue to see these record-breaking temperatures even when we have climate phases, like La Nina, that could bring cooler temperatures.”

This is such a pile of $hit!

The Copernicus service scientists said the warm conditions in the Arctic last month had slowed the freeze-up of ice in the Arctic Ocean. The extent of sea-ice coverage was the second lowest for a November since satellites began observing the region in 1979. A slower freeze-up could lead to thinner ice and thus more melting in the late spring and summer.

The Arctic has been extraordinarily warm for much of the year, part of a long-term trend in which the region is warming significantly faster than other areas of the world. The warmth contributed to extensive wildfires in Siberia during the summer and led to the second-lowest minimum sea-ice extent for a September, the end of the summer melting season. 

Yeah, it's warming only where you are not and can't check, and we are to take lying $cienti$ts and the pre$$'s word for it. 

F**K OFF!

The Copernicus Climate Change Service is part of the European Center for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts, which is supported by the European Union. In the United States, NOAA also reports monthly and annual temperature data, usually later than the European agency. Although the analytical techniques differ, the findings are often very similar.....

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Did you notice there was NOT ONE MENTION of the COVID or the SHUTDOWNS that reduced the GREENHOUSE GASES!? 

Somehow, none of that helped, huh?

Don't think of hugging to prevent freezing, either:

"The World Health Organization has an unwelcome but potentially life-saving message for the holiday season: Don’t hug. To stop the spread of the coronavirus, WHO’s emergencies chief said Monday that the “shocking” rate of COVID-19 cases and deaths, particularly in the U.S., means that people shouldn’t get too close to their loved ones this year. Ryan was responding to a question during a news conference about whether hugs could be considered “close contact” — which the U.N. health agency has generally advised against in areas of high coronavirus transmission. Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO’s technical lead on COVID-19, said most transmission happens among people who tend to spend a lot of time together sharing meals and indoor spaces, in workplaces or homes — but it’s sometimes hard to “disentangle” how exactly the virus was spread. Added Ryan: “It’s a horrible thing to think that we would be here as the World Health Organization saying to people, ‘Don’t hug each other.’ It’s terrible.” 

It certainly is, and proves once and for all how Satanic people like Ryan are, for THERE IS NEVER A MORE URGENT TIME to HUG YOUR LOVED ONES for you MAY NEVER SEE THEM AGAIN!

Besides, the hugs will help dispel some of the cosmic evil we are battling.

Btw, the Globe's coverage of Australia is literally shit, and their coverage of next-door New Zealand also stinks to high heaven so I skipped it. Sorry.