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CH: WEF-members are available now. Not all members yet, but the number will increase in next few days and weeks. I got no beef with it. There's star forts scattered around the world. I honestly don't know who really started it. There's some really dope ones on Malta that look pretty old. Although, "official" dating and story-lines don't always add up. There's also a bunch of star forts in the netherlands.
So, kind of makes me think some of these in America were built during the "colonial" expansions by the Dutch East Indies Trading Company. But then annexed by Merica for Merica. There's a lot of interesting structural features to the forts, tho. I don't think all of them were built for military applications. Some of their features makes me think of harmonics, possibly being a way to better absorb telluric currents or something of that nature. Neiiiiighhh Edition. Senior Australian health exec refers to 'ethically aborted human fetus' amid COVID vaccine debate 'I think we can have every faith that the way that they have manufactured the vaccine has been against the highest of ethical standards internationally,' said Dr.
Nick Coatsworth, commenting on a vaccine being made using cells taken from an aborted baby. AUSTRALIA, August 25, LifeSiteNews - Australia's second-most senior medical officer has described cell lines which come from a healthy baby girl aborted in and are now being used in the development of a coronavirus vaccine as coming from an "ethically aborted human fetus. Nick Coatsworth was responding to recent comments made by Archbishop Anthony Fisher of Sydney, after the Australian government announced a plan to supply Australians with Astrazeneca's coronavirus vaccine.
Astrazeneca's vaccine is being developed in collaboration with the University of Oxford and is using the HEK cell line, which was originally derived from kidney tissue taken from a baby girl who was aborted in the netherlands in and later developed into a cell line in a lab in That is the concern that was raised by the archbishop," Coatsworth said. So I think we can have every faith that the way that they have manufactured the vaccine has been against the highest of ethical standards internationally," Coatsworth added.
Following the announcement of the deal with Astrazeneca, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said that a coronavirus vaccine will be made "as mandatory as you can possibly make it.