The Gates Foundation gave $9.5 million to the University of Wisconsin-Madison and principal investigator Yoshihiro Kawaoka.
The funding paid for experiments to modify Avian Influenza H5N1 viruses to preferentially recognize human-type receptors and rapidly transmit in mammals.
Gates's role in the experiments was highlighted by world-renowned cardiologist Dr. Peter McCullough.
In a post on X, McCullough stated:
Back in 2006, Kawaoka and colleague Taisuke Horimoto published a study aimed at developing new "vaccines" for H5N1 influenza A viruses, Natural News reports.
At the time, there was a contrived H5N1 scare that went nowhere compared to what happened with Covid.
Both poultry and people reportedly contracted H5N1 which "raised concerns."
Kawaoka and Horimoto warned in their 2006 study,
An H5N1 pandemic never materialized, of course, so now they are trying it all again...!
Millions of allegedly infected birds all across America and beyond have been slaughtered.
Meanwhile, the Gates Foundation is funneling masses of cash into more research on H5N1 that conveniently aims to,
According to UW-Madison, the five-year grant from Gates is all about identifying certain virus "mutations."
The school says Gates wants to know how those mutations,
However, the research states that avian viruses in general do not infect human or other mammalian hosts.
Nevertheless, if the bioweapons experiments can trigger "a mutation," a new pandemic will be launched, the researchers note. Kawaoka and Horimoto are reportedly being paid by Gates to identify how a "mutation occurs" in such viruses.
The Gates Foundation claims the experiments are being conducted so that globalists can develop an early warning system to prepare a global outbreak and pandemic.
Details of Gates's role in funding these experiments come amid growing skepticism about the chance of such viruses occurring naturally.
Experts are warning that,
During a Senate hearing on the Covid pandemic this week, expert witnesses Steven C. Quay, M.D., Ph.D., the CEO of Atossa Therapeutics Inc. and a former faculty member at Stanford University's School of Medicine, asserted that,
Quay testified that there's a,
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