Needlecraft has animal DNA (chimpanzee adenovirus advertised as being harmless) in them. After taking the injections you are no longer fully human. If after taking the Covid injection/s what will be your afterlife consequences? Think about this. Animals don't "go to heaven." You will no longer be what it means to be human because you will have animal RNA (modified human DNA?) in you. When you reincarnate what do you come back as? An animal? We are involved in this at a very deep spiritual degree. There are enormous spiritual consequences in all this. People better think long and hard about this because most will "decommission themselves." What we see happening is these technocrats getting control over human production and once this transpires you are owned. That ownership will come through a patent.
Ancient parallels: Animal-human hybrids or "chimeras" created to fight wars.
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Source: Life Site
US Senate passes bill to give billions of dollars in funding for human-animal hybrid experiments
'We shouldn't need to clarify in law that creating animal-human hybrids or "chimeras" is ethically unthinkable, but sadly the need for that very clear distinction has arrived,' said Senator James Lankford.
Mon Jun 14, 2021 | By Ashley Sadler
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US Senate passes bill to give billions of dollars in funding for human-animal hybrid experiments
'We shouldn't need to clarify in law that creating animal-human hybrids or "chimeras" is ethically unthinkable, but sadly the need for that very clear distinction has arrived,' said Senator James Lankford.
Mon Jun 14, 2021 | By Ashley Sadler
LifeSiteNews has been permanently banned on YouTube. Click HERE to sign up to receive emails when we add to our video library.
WASHINGTON, D.C. June 14, 2021 (LifeSiteNews) – The U.S. Senate has passed a bill which will allocate billions of dollars to the National Institutes of Health (NIH), with some of the funds expected to go toward a disturbing form of research whereby tissue from aborted babies is spliced with animal cells to create mixed-species organisms called "chimeras."
Introduced by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-New York), the U.S. Innovation and Competition Act (USICA), also called the "Endless Frontier Act," was passed by the Senate in a 68-32 vote June 9.
Supposed to address growing Chinese technological competition by increasing investment in American innovation in science and technology to the tune of $250 billion, the bill had been hotly debated on the Senate floor for weeks, with over 600 amendments being proposed before last week's vote.
Although the measure passed with significant bipartisan support, it had drawn fire from Senate Republicans concerned about the possible ethical implications of some of the bill's intended spending.
One of their concerns had to do with the bill's proposed funding for the National Institutes of Health, which has long considered lifting its moratorium on conducting chimeric experiments pending new guidelines from the International Society for Stem Cell Research (ISSCR).
Introduced by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-New York), the U.S. Innovation and Competition Act (USICA), also called the "Endless Frontier Act," was passed by the Senate in a 68-32 vote June 9.
Supposed to address growing Chinese technological competition by increasing investment in American innovation in science and technology to the tune of $250 billion, the bill had been hotly debated on the Senate floor for weeks, with over 600 amendments being proposed before last week's vote.
Although the measure passed with significant bipartisan support, it had drawn fire from Senate Republicans concerned about the possible ethical implications of some of the bill's intended spending.
One of their concerns had to do with the bill's proposed funding for the National Institutes of Health, which has long considered lifting its moratorium on conducting chimeric experiments pending new guidelines from the International Society for Stem Cell Research (ISSCR).
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