Source: Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
From Anthony Fauci to the NIAID, from Germany to Japan, from the Geneva Protocol to the Patriot Act, from Nixon to Obama, from the CIA to the Wuhan lab: the history of bioweapons research and our country’s role in escalating the bioweapons arms race is more twisted and alarming than most people realize. And the Covid-19 pandemic and Sars-CoV-2—a product of bioweapons research—were just the tip of the iceberg. RFK Jr. tells the full story in his new book, “The Wuhan Cover-Up: And the Terrifying Bioweapons Arms Race.”
The US bioweapons program has led to the COVID-19 pandemic and a shift towards authoritarian rule, and there is a need to study its history and hold key figures accountable. Below are some of the key points made by RFK Jr. in the above video:
- The US bioweapons program inherited its ideology and techniques from Nazi and Japanese scientists, leading to a culture of moral bankruptcy.
- The US bioweapons program became as deadly as nuclear weapons but was unilaterally terminated by President Nixon in 1969, leading scientists to focus on saving lives instead of destroying them.
- The bioweapons treaty was pushed through, but the Patriot Act effectively relaunched the bioweapons arms race by allowing federal officials to participate in bioweapons research without prosecution.
- Bioweapons program history includes military responsibilities, escape of bugs, and offshore research.
- US bioweapons research was moved to Ukraine, Georgia, and a Chinese lab run by the military due to strategic competition between the US and China, with the CIA, Pentagon, and NIH being the largest funders of research at the Wuhan lab.
- All gain of function science should be criminalized and an international treaty should be implemented.
- SARS K2 is the product of bioweapons research with a defective lab system and shy procedures, leading to a Wuhan cover-up and ongoing arms race.
- The U.S. bioweapons program led to the COVID-19 pandemic and a shift towards authoritarian rule, prompting the need to study its history and hold key figures accountable.