by Jon Rappoport
June 12, 2016
from
JonRappoport Website
I compare a patent
application
with what at least one company
can deliver
to the unknowing public now...
Thanks to researcher Mary Baker for
showing me an explosive patent application and its implications.
Before getting to the details, the
overview is this:
a technology exists to embed tiny invisible
particles in food products, and these particles can deliver
nutrients, drugs and vaccines.
Apparently, the technology has existed
for at least 10 years.
Yet, as Baker states,
-
When have
you seen a food label that mentions such particles?
-
Are we to assume the technology
hasn't yet been applied?
-
Is it operating at a stealth level?
I'll try to answer these questions in a
minute.
But first:
US Patent application 'US20080044481
A1'
"Microparticles
for oral delivery"
May 27, 2005
The inventor and assignee is listed
as Mordechai Harel, who was associated with Advanced
BioNutrition Corporation of Columbia, Maryland. Here are a group
of quotes from the patent application.
The statements leave no doubt about
the wide, wide application of the technology.
"The particles described herein
can be used to deliver bioactive agents (e.g., nutrients,
drugs, vaccines, antibodies, and the like), bacteria (e.g.,
probiotic bacteria), smaller particles, or substantially any
other material to the animal."
"The particles described herein
can be prepared and used as free-flowing dry powders,
slurries, suspensions, and the like, and are useful for
delivering to an animal a drug, a pesticide, a nutrient, a
vaccine, a smaller particle, or substantially any other
composition that can be contained in the particles.
The
particles are thus suitable for use in human food products,
animal feeds (e.g., pet foods and farmed animal diets),
therapeutic compositions (e.g., drugs), prophylactic
compositions (e.g., vaccines, antibiotics, and probiotic
bacterial preparations), and pest control products among
other products."
"A 'particle' is a discrete
piece of a (homogeneous or heterogeneous) material having a
maximum dimension not greater than 5000 micrometers."
"Furthermore, when the
microparticles are to be used as components of a food
product, it can be desirable that the microparticles are not
visible."
"The particles described herein
can be used to deliver substantially any chemical species,
combination of chemicals, cell, or other piece of matter
that can be incorporated into the particle to a component of
an animal.
All such items are referred to herein as
'bioactive' compositions, regardless of what the utility of
the composition is.
Bioactive compositions include, for
example,
pharmaceutical compositions or compounds, nutraceutical compositions or compounds, nutritional
components, probiotic bacteria, bacteriophages, viruses,
flavorants, fragrances, detergents or other surface-active
compositions."
"Examples of these [deliverable
micro] agents include,
antibiotics, analgesics, vaccines,
anti-inflammatory agents, antidepressants, anti-viral
agents, anti-tumor agents, enzyme inhibitors, formulations
containing zidovudine, proteins or peptides (such as
vaccines, antibodies, antimicrobial peptides), enzymes,
(e.g., amylases, proteases, lipases, pectinases, cellulases,
hemicellulases, pentosanases, xylanases, and phytases),
liposomes, aromatic nitro and nitroso compounds and their
metabolites, HIV protease inhibitors, viruses, and steroids,
hormones or other growth stimulating agents, pesticides,
herbicides, germicides, biocides, algicides, rodenticides,
fungicides, insecticides, antioxidants, plant and animal
growth promoters, plant and animal growth inhibitors,
preservatives, nutraceuticals, disinfectants, sterilization
agents, catalysts, chemical reactants, fermentation agents,
foods, animal feeds, food or animal feed supplements,
nutrients, flavors, colors, dyes, cosmetics, drugs,
vitamins, sex sterilants, fertility inhibitors, fertility
promoters, air purifiers, microorganism attenuators, nucleic
acids (e.g., RNA, DNA, PNA, vectors, plasmids, ribozymes,
aptamers, dendrimers, and the like), antioxidants,
phytochemicals, hormones, vitamins (such as vitamins A, B1,
B2, B6, B12; C, D, E, and K, pantothenate, and folic acid),
pro-vitamins, carotenoids, minerals (such as calcium,
selenium, magnesium salts, available iron, and iron salts),
microorganisms (such as bacteria, such as probiotics,
lactobacilli, fungi, and yeast), prebiotics, trace elements,
essential and/or highly unsaturated fatty acids (such as
omega-3 fatty acids, and mid-chain triglycerides),
nutritional supplements, enzymes (such as amylases,
proteases, lipases, pectinases, cellulases, hemicellulases,
pentosanases, xylanases, and phytases), pigments, amino
acids, agriculturally useful compositions to either prevent
infestation (such as herbicides, pesticides, insecticides,
rodenticides, fungicides, mixtures thereof) or to promote
growth (such as hormones, fertilizers, or other growth
stimulating agents), flavorants, and fragrances."
I'd say that's a wide range of
application, wouldn't you?
Did you notice, among the blizzard of
compounds deliverable through invisible microparticles, the drug
called
zidovudine? That's AZT, a chemo medicine used to treat AIDS
patients.
To say AZT is toxic would be a vast
understatement. It destroys the ability of cells to replicate. And
back in 2005, it was mentioned as a drug that can be delivered in
food.
So is this technology being applied? Do
we, in fact, have these microparticles and their bioactive
components in our food?
Let's go back to the 2005 patent
application.
As I mentioned, the inventor, Mordechai
Harel, was associated with a company, Advanced BioNutrition
Corporation.
On the
company's website, we find a link to a scientific
paper co-authored by Roger Drewes, who became the company's chief
science officer in 2010 ("A
novel targeted delivery technology for protecting sensitive
bioactive compounds...").
This is an interesting paper.
Here is
some of the language in the paper. Does any of it remind you of
quotes from the 2005 patent application?
The paper mentions a novel and
proprietary "delivery technology," MicroMax, which,
"protect[s] sensitive bioactive
compounds through food manufacturing processes."
Also mentioned:
"a formulation containing natural
polymers surrounding the probiotic bacteria or other
biologically active materials…"
The probiotic bacteria,
"remain quiescent while retaining
their activity for a long period of time under challenging…
gastric conditions… [MicroMax was tested using] bacteria,
essential oils, vitamins, enzymes, pigments, and even vaccines
in a variety of food and feed products… and the microparticles
were sieved to deliver the desired particle range…"
This might help.
Here is the abstract from the 2005
patent application:
"The invention provides microbeads
containing oil-associated biologically active compounds and
methods for their manufacture and use.
The microbeads consist of a soluble
complex of non-digestible polymer and emulsifier with
oil-associated biologically active compounds embedded in a
matrix of digestible polymer.
The disclosed microbead complex
protects the biologically active compounds, such as vitamins,
fish oil and carotenoids, from oxidation, taste and odor
degradation.
The disclosed microbeads also
provide protection from the stomach digestive distraction
[e.g., gastric activity] and allows for the delivery of the
biologically active compounds in the intestine."
I think we're looking at the same
technology in the 2005 patent application and in Advanced
BioNutrition Corp's MicroMax methods - or two technologies that
closely resemble each other - in which case, yes, invisible microparticles in food are much more than a proposed system.
This is a working system, available now.
It can deliver a stunning array of chemicals and bioactive
substances to people in their food.
(Note: I have no idea
what Advanced BioNutrition Corp is or isn't delivering to its
customers - but I think the company should make these facts known.)
-
Who knows what other companies have, and
are using, this technology?
-
Are we looking at zero informed consent
to be treated, in food, with medicines and vaccines?
-
Zero knowledge
on the part of the public?
-
Zero accountability?
-
Nothing on the food
labels?
If this is happening to the population
now, the word "stealth" only begins to describe it...
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