Tuesday, 21 October 2014

CDC Whistleblower Exposes Ebola Vaccinations Containing RFID Chips

A CDC whistleblower has recently
gone on record to expose nefarious
government plans which would use
the impending US Ebola pandemic as
an opportunity to implant RFID
technology in American citizens.
Brent Hopskins was a CDC contractor
before coming forward with serious
allegations against his former
employer. Hopskins claims that an
Ebola vaccine has been prepared for
the general public in the form of
disposable, one-use syringes. The
downside, however, is that each of
these syringes will contain not only
the vaccine, but a micro RFID chip as
well.
CDC officials intend to issue these
syringe packages to over 200, 000
households by December 1st.
Consumers will also be able to
request the Ebola vaccine at their
local drug store.
Hopskins also indicates that the RFID
chip will work toward more easily
identifying and separating those who
have been inoculated and those who
have not. Individuals who refuse to
receive the Ebola vaccination will face
serious hurdles in gaining
employment, visiting public places,
obtaining future medical care, and
even potential prison time.
During correspondence with National
Report, Brent Hopskins is quoted as
saying, “I cannot sit idly by as these
atrocities unfold… The American
government wants to implant RFID
chips in every man, woman and child.
They are now using the threat of
Ebola to push this nefarious plot. The
public is forced to make a decision
between the horrible demise that
Ebola offers, or relinquish every
ounce of their privacy by getting an
RFID chip implanted under their skin.
Many Americans have expressed
concern that the CDC officials are
collaborating with the government to
use this new system as a way to
introduce martial law. Others, such
as popular radio host, Alex Jones,
insist that the deadly virus was
deliberately planted on US soil to
thin the ever-growing population
. As Hopskins puts it, “This is a baby
step towards complete control of the
masses who have grown increasingly
frustrated and distrustful of the
powers that be. The ultimate goal of
the United States Government is to
enslave all people who fall bellow a
particular tax bracket and Ebola is
how they’re going to do it.”

Wednesday, 1 October 2014

Tuesday, 23 September 2014

Research: Bioengineered protein may stop cancer metastasis

A team of Stanford researchers has
developed a protein therapy that disrupts
the process that causes cancer cells to
break away from original tumor sites, travel
through the blood stream and start
aggressive new growths elsewhere in the
body.
This process, known as metastasis, can
cause cancer to spread with deadly effect.
"The majority of patients who succumb to
cancer fall prey to metastatic forms of the
disease," said Jennifer Cochran, an
associate professor of bioengineering who
describes a new therapeutic approach in
Nature Chemical Biology.
Today doctors try to slow or stop metastasis
with chemotherapy, but these treatments
are unfortunately not very effective and
have severe side effects.
The Stanford team seeks to stop metastasis,
without side effects, by preventing two
proteins -- Axl and Gas6 -- from interacting
to initiate the spread of cancer.
Axl proteins stand like bristles on the
surface of cancer cells, poised to receive
biochemical signals from Gas6 proteins.
When two Gas6 proteins link with two Axls,
the signals that are generated enable cancer
cells to leave the original tumor site,
migrate to other parts of the body and
form new cancer nodules.
To stop this process Cochran used protein
engineering to create a harmless version of
Axl that acts like a decoy. This decoy Axl
latches on to Gas6 proteins in the blood
stream and prevents them from linking with
and activating the Axls present on cancer
cells.
In collaboration with Professor Amato
Giaccia, who heads the Radiation Biology
Program in Stanford's Cancer Center, the
researchers gave intravenous treatments of
this bioengineered decoy protein to mice
with aggressive breast and ovarian cancers.
Mice in the breast cancer treatment group
had 78 percent fewer metastatic nodules
than untreated mice. Mice with ovarian
cancer had a 90 percent reduction in
metastatic nodules when treated with the
engineered decoy protein.
"This is a very promising therapy that
appears to be effective and non-toxic in
pre-clinical experiments," Giaccia said. "It
could open up a new approach to cancer
treatment."
Giaccia and Cochran are scientific advisors
to Ruga Corp., a biotech startup in Palo
Alto that has licensed this technology from
Stanford. Further preclinical and animal
tests must be done before determining
whether this therapy is safe and effective in
humans.
Greg Lemke, of the Molecular Neurobiology
Laboratory at the Salk Institute, called this
"a prime example of what bioengineering
can do" to open up new therapeutic
approaches to treat metastatic cancer.
"One of the remarkable things about this
work is the binding affinity of the decoy
protein," said Lemke, a noted authority on
Axl and Gas6 who was not part of the
Stanford experiments.
"The decoy attaches to Gas6 up to a
hundredfold more effectively than the
natural Axl," Lemke said. "It really sops up
Gas6 and takes it out of action."

Source:
Stanford School of Engineering

Varsity student caught with bombs on campus

There was anxiety at the University of
Uyo (UNIUYO) campus in Akwa Ibom
State yesterday when a part one student
(names withheld) was caught with two
hand grenades tucked in his bag by
operatives of Peace on Campus
Initiatives (PCI), an anti-cultism NGO
operating on campuses of higher
institutions.
Two improvised explosive devices (IEDs),
widely speculated as hand grenades,
were found in a bag that belonged to the
suspect by some students, who alerted
the PCI.
National Coordinator of PCI, Mr. Oliver
Cromwell, said yesterday that his men in
the UNIUYO chapter got information
about the suspect keeping the IEDs, and
trailed him to his males’ hostel.
Cromwell said his men on discovering
the bombs that were well-packaged in a
bag in the hostel’s room, apprehended
the suspect and invited the anti-bomb
squad of the state police command, Ikot
Akpan Abia, Uyo, to the scene for
verification. The squad detonated the
two devices and searched the hostel
rooms for more.
The suspect who was said to have
confessed during interrogation, to
keeping the explosives, dismissed that he
bought or made them with intent to
wreaking havoc on campus. According to
him, he found the devices within the
school premises, saying he was trying to
hand them over to the university’s
security.
“It all started on Friday when I was
coming back from church. Just close to
where the construction was going on, I
saw two white things on the ground.
When I picked them, I saw the
instruction ‘hand grenade.”
He however, did not explain why he did
not alert the school security.
The command’s spokesman, Mr. Etim
Dickson, a Deputy Superintendent of
Police, who confirmed the incident,
however, explained that the explosives
were local devices, which could have
been invented by any of the science
students in the university.
Promising that the police would
investigate, Dickson urged students and
parents not to entertain any fear about
possible breakdown of law and order in
the university community. “The incident
had been properly taken care of. We are
on top of the situation as we urge all
students and employees of the institution
to go about their normal businesses. We
shall get to the root of the mater,” he
said.
The university’s spokesman, Mr Godfrey
Essien, confirmed the incident, but
stressed that he would not speak further
on it since the matter had been taken
over by the police.

Friday, 19 September 2014

Skeletons found 'holding hands' after 700 years

A couple of skeletons which have
been "holding hands" for 700 years
have been uncovered at the lost
chapel of St Morrell in Leicestershire,
central England.
Two skeletons were found holding
hands, buried at a lost chapel in
Leicester
11 skeletons have been found so
far, but are yet to be analyzed
Early findings suggest one died by
being struck on the head with a
pole axe
Leicester was also the site where
the remains of King Richard III
were found.
Even death couldn't part
two skeletons excavated from a lost
chapel in an English county, found
with their fingers entwined.
A team of archaeologists from the
University of Leicester Archaeological
Services (ULAS) are working with
volunteers on a four-year excavation
project at the site, which overlooks
the small village of Hallaton.
Vicki Score, ULAS project manager,
says the skeletons were placed
together in this position, as there
was enough room in the grave to
have them buried apart.

The remains of King Richard III Cracking the genetic code of Richard III Aside from the bonded couple, 11
skeletons have been found so far,
which are yet to be analyzed, but
some discoveries have been made
already.
Score says one was of an older man
aged 46 or over who appeared to
have been struck on the head with a
sharp weapon such as a pole axe.
Another, she says, was in his mid-
twenties, with teeth showing severe
childhood trauma during the first
nine years of his life.
"He was buried in a very unusual
position in a pit with his legs splayed
widely apart, arms flexed at the
elbows and hands tucked beneath his
chin.
"We have no idea why he was buried
like this -- it could possibly be due to
a medical condition."
Both skeletons also had lesions on
their skulls which suggest they had
head lice.
The team are hoping to find out
more about how the gravesite was
chosen.
Score says: "We have seen similar
skeletons before from Leicester
where a couple has been buried
together in a single grave. The main
question we find ourselves asking is
why were they buried up there?"
It is thought the chapel may have
served as a pilgrimage, or the main
church possibly refused to bury the
bodies because they were criminals,
foreigners or diseased.
She adds that Roman archaeology
beneath the chapel imply that
something important already existed
there, which made it a special place.
Other findings include the walls and
tiled floors of the site, fragments of
stone masonry, wall plaster, tiles and
lead from the windows. Silver
pennies dating between the 12th and
16th centuries give clues as to when
the chapel was in use.
In 2000, the Hallaton Treasure was
discovered, consisting of Iron Age
coins, parts of Roman helmets and
debris from feasting.
The county was also where the
remains of 15th-century monarch
Richard III were uncovered beneath a
parking lot in 2012, raising questions
about how the controversial ruler
lived and died.

Wednesday, 17 September 2014

School resumption: GEJ pleads with NUT, says Govt isn't foolish

Speaking with journalists yesterday September
16th in Abuja, President Jonathan appealed
to members of the Nigerian Union of
Teachers, NUT to return to the classrooms
on Sept. 22 as there is no known case of
Ebola in the country at the moment. Below
is what he said...
"We have been able to manage Ebola and
the whole world is happy with us and we
must tell the whole world that we have
managed Ebola and no Nigerian should be
segregated because of Ebola. In fact Osun
State was to have their festival and the
news came to me to cancel it I said no,
Ebola is no longer a threat in Nigeria and
we must tell the world that we have been
able to contained Ebola."
Yes, Ebola is in the West Coast, it could
happen in Ghana, it could happen in
Senegal or any of the West African countries
or beyond but they have not closed down
their institutions. If we still have Ebola
definitely we will not open any of our
institutions but we don’t have Ebola. I dare
ask is NUT saying that until the world is
able to end Ebola is Guinea, Liberia and
Sierra Leone before Nigeria should open our
institutions? It is not right. Government is
not a fool, it is not any labour body that
asked us to take that decision, we took it
because we felt that we must protect our
citizens.
This is one government that discusses with
anybody that has issues to discuss. Even
NUT has no reason to threaten industrial
action because of Ebola, the governors took
that decision. I called all the governors of
the states to come with their
commissioners of health. On the day of that
meeting I did not even allow them to speak
because they will play politics. I asked all
the commissioners including the Secretary
of Health in Abuja, to brief us on the steps
they have taken and they listened to their
colleagues because it was also a peer
review process. If you are hiding certain
things by the time you hear your colleagues
you will go back and get things done.
We are sure that even if one mad Sawyer
comes again, nobody will contract Ebola. We
have managed Ebola very well, the world is
happy we must tell the world that no
Nigerian should be suspected of Ebola and
that is the position of government. I will
plead with NUT and other unions that this
does not require industrial action. They
should commend government, they should
work with us, they are Nigerians, all
Nigerians must work together to make sure
that we contain Ebola. Why do we want to
create problems where it is not necessary,
it is uncalled for.” He said

Tuesday, 16 September 2014

Boko Haram installs emirs in Gwoza, Dambua

•Senate to Jonathan: Declare total
war on sect now.
Boko Haram has installed emirs in
Gwoza and Dambua, Borno State, the
two towns that fell to the Islamist sect
two weeks ago, Senator Ali Dume told his
colleagues as Senate resumed from its
two-month recess yesterday.This is even
as the Upper Chamber urged President
Goodluck Jonathan to declare total war
on the insurgents, advising him to
mobilise all resources and efforts to that
effect.
Senator Ndume, who represents
southern Borno, told lawmakers that
Boko Haram has literally sacked two
emirs and installed their own on
Monday.
His words: “I represent southern Borno
and Gwoza. The challenges we are facing
are more serious than what we have
faced before. We, the people of southern
Borno, particularly Gwoza, parts of
Adamawa and Yobe know that it’s
presently occupied!
“I read here on the Senate Order Paper
about a threat. It’s no longer a threat;
somebody is occupying that place and
he’s declared it a caliphate!
“Yesterday, a new emir was installed by
Boko Haram in Dambua. The original
emir is taking refuge in Abuja. Boko
Haram installed a new emir in Gwoza…
Recently, we conceded the extension of
state of emergency and it was because it
could get out of hand. Can it get out of
hand more than what is happening
now?”, he asked.
Chairman of the Senate Committeeon
Investment, Nenadi Usman, pleaded with
the chamber to “look at the issue
holistically because there are internally
displaced persons in my constituency
too.
The resolution for the declaration of total
war came through a motion moved by
Senate Leader Victor Ndoma-Egba (SAN)
and 107 senators tagged: “Threat to
national sovereignty and territorial
integrity of Nigeria by insurgents.” The
Senate resolved that the Boko Haram
challenge had risen beyond mere
insurgency to a full-scale war against the
Nigerian state. The lawmakers declared
that only a declaration of total war by
the President will offer a sustainable
solution to the menace of the sect.
Ruling on the motion, Senate President
David Mark, insisted that Nigeria must
move beyond bandying words with Boko
Haram and declare total war now.
“When Boko Haram moved from
kidnapping, killing of people and
destruction of property to occupation of
parts of Nigerian territory, it has
declared a total war on Nigeria. There is
no difference between what Boko Haram
is doing against Nigeria and what an
enemy country waging war in Nigeria
would have done.
“The issue is beyond that of mere
internal security. It is about how we
execute the war. If Boko Haram has
captured most of the parts of the country
we represent and has created a
caliphate, it means that some of the
senators from those areas can no longer
be in this chamber. This is why we must
pay urgent attention to the matter,” he
said.
Mark also noted out that the threat
posed by Boko Haram war will affect the
2015 general elections. He, however,
insisted that the issue at stake is far
beyond that of election. He said: “There
is no question of election, it is not even
on the table now. We are in a state of
war. All of us cannot carry guns to fight
but we all have roles to play in bringing
the situation to an end”.
The entire Senate leadership, chairmen
of committees that have roles to play on
national security, defence and
intelligence as well as all senators from
the three affected states of Adamawa,
Borno and Yobe are now scheduled to
meet with Mr. President and deliver the
resolutions of the Senate.
Deputy Senate President Ike
Ekweremadu seconded the motion with a
warning that there may not be elections
in Nigeria in 2015 if Boko Haram
insurgency persists. “We must make no
mistake about this; if we don’t secure
the North East, there may not be
elections in 2015. If anyone thinks
because he is from Lagos, Enugu and it
doesn’t concern him, that person is
mistaken…Democracy isn’t working in
Yobe, Adamawa and Borno states. We
must take a firm stand now.”
Meanwhile, the Upper Chamber also
resolved that the $1billion external loan
requested by the President shortly
before it embarked on long recess be
granted with accelerated approval.