A few weeks ago, I told you about Professor Petr Chumakov, a leading Russian microbiologist at Russia’s Federal Research Centre for Research and Development of Immunobiological Preparations. He said the Chinese Wuhan lab was doing ‘absolutely crazy things’ in the laboratory.
He claimed they had been “actively involved in the development of various coronavirus variants for over ten years.
‘Moreover, they did this, supposedly not with the aim of creating pathogenic variants, but to study their pathogenicity.”
The ‘crazy things’ they did were:
‘For example, inserts in the genome, which gave the virus the ability to infect human cells.
‘Now all this has been analyzed.
‘The picture of the possible creation of the current coronavirus is slowly emerging.’
He told Moskovsky Komsomolets newspaper: ‘There are several inserts, that is, substitutions of the natural sequence of the genome, which gave it special properties.
‘It is interesting that the Chinese and Americans who worked with them published all their works in the open (scientific) press.
Basically, he accused them of taking viruses that wouldn’t transfer to humans, altering them, and making the virus a threat to human beings.
This is critical because a new study from Austria says the exact same thing about COVID-19. They say it’s been manipulated in a lab. The general consensus now is that COVID-19 did, in fact, come from the Wuhan lab. The question has now been whether it was a natural virus that escaped, or was it manipulated by humans.
A scientific study in Austria has found that SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus that has led to a pandemic, was likely created in a lab, barring some “remarkable coincidence” that led to the virus naturally evolving to be optimised to attack human cells.
The study was led by Nikolai Petrovsky, a vaccine researcher at Flinders University. The scientists in his team discovered that the coronavirus is optimized for penetration into human cells, rather than animal cells, which means that the theory that it emerged from an animal market and jumped to humans naturally is unlikely.
Lifesite News reports that the scientists “used a version of the novel coronavirus collected in the earliest days of the outbreak and applied computer models to test its capacity to bind to certain cell receptor enzymes, called “ACE2,” that allow the virus to infect human and animal cells to varying degrees of efficacy.”
“They found that “the novel coronavirus most powerfully binds with human ACE2, and with variously lesser degrees of effectiveness with animal versions of the receptor.”
The authors believe this means that the virus “became specialized for human cell penetration by living previously in human cells, quite possibly in a laboratory.”
Pretty remarkable if the study holds up.
0 Comments
Trackbacks/Pingbacks