6:22:22

Cléo from 5 to 7 in Varda by Agnes, 2019

Coffee and Covid, June 15, 2022


“Six days ago, CBS ran a short story headlined, ‘Nicaragua Gives Permission for Russian Troops to Enter Country.’

Wait, what?

On the same day, the Hill — which didn’t even report the story as straight news — ran an op-ed headlined, “With Russian Forces Set to Enter Central America, How Will the US Respond?” That doesn’t sound too good.

So what’s going on?

CBS’s story’s first graph explains: ‘The government of Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega has authorized Russian troops, planes and ships to deploy to Nicaragua for purposes of training, law enforcement or emergency response.’

Ah. Not just troops. PLANES and SHIPS too. Remind me, what do we call troops plus planes plus ships? Like, “an army” or something? Anyway, the Hill’s op-ed adds that in previous arrangements of this kind, such as in Myanmar, Russia’s similar “training access” has morphed into a permanent military base.

Try to follow me here. Nicaragua is only about 1,000 miles from our southern border. That’s within missile range.

Now, OUR media doesn’t seem too interested in this dull, boring story. What’s the big deal? It’s just for training and law enforcement purposes. Like Russia has anything better to do with those troops, planes, and ships anyway. Yawn.

Our media may not be interested, but RUSSIA’S media is all over it. Some kind of over-produced Russian TV network news show aired a story about all this on June 9th, and the anchor lady said (translated):

‘The most unpleasant cherry atop the democratic cake for the United States was the sensational announcement that [Ortega has] permitted Russian troops, ships and planes to enter Nicaragua. Of course, only for humanitarian purposes. Russian troops can enter Nicaragua in the second part of 2022. What did you want? If American missile systems can reach nearly Moscow from Ukrainian territory, it’s time for Russia to roll out something powerful — closer to the American city on a hill.’
That’s what the Russians are talking about. Here? Crickets.

Notice the reference to American missile systems. Those are the ones Joe Biden just sent to the Ukrainians based on their oral promises to not fire them directly into Russia. I guess the Russians saw that as an escalation, or something, for some reason.

You’d think by now, at least ONE U.S. reporter would have asked that Pierre lady about this, if not Biden himself.

We’re shutting this down, right Joe? This aggression will not stand? Joe? Hello?

But it gets even more interesting. The U.S. got sideways with Nicaragua back in March, when the Nicaraguan government criticized the U.S. for its 43 biolabs in Ukraine and said they should be investigated. The U.S. responded the next day by putting nine Nicaraguan officials on the ‘no travel’ list. Tit, tat.

The WHO’s registry, which lists biolabs like the ones in Ukraine, also includes a “veterinary research” biolab in Nicaragua — owned by WEF-affiliated Canada. That makes sense, right, that Canada has a biolab in Nicaragua?

Russia seems to be very focused just now on the countries hosting these WEF-affiliated biolabs.

Independent online analysts speculate that all these DOD-WEF-Gates-Biden-linked ‘veterinary research’ labs were created over the last several years to evade gain of function research restrictions. Animal research gives them cover to claim they aren’t actually building any ‘human’ virus weapons. Instead, they innocuously claim to be working on genetically enhanced mosquitos and stuff.

Like BAT viruses.

Get it? Biolabs -> Covid -> Ukraine. It SEEMS connected because it IS connected.

Russia appears to be determined to expose what the democrats and their WEF allies have been up to lately. I have a feeling we’re going to learn a LOT, and sooner rather than later. And we’re not going to like it.

In late April, Judicial Watch ran a story on its website headlined, ‘Records Reveal Safety Lapses and Violations at U.S. Biosafety Laboratories that Conduct Research on Dangerous Agents and Toxins.’

Judicial Watch described heavily-redacted records and communications it finally got from the Federal Select Agent Program (FSAP) showing ‘safety lapses and violations’ at U.S. biosafety laboratories researching dangerous agents and toxins. The ‘lapses’ included mishaps, human errors, animal escapes, improper and defective personal protective equipment, facility equipment failures and containment failures, which continue at some of the United States’ most secure and regulated high-containment biosafety laboratories.

It’s an alarming article with a LOT of detail. Then, just yesterday, Judicial Watch posted a tweet referring to its biolab story and wondering — same as me —if U.S. labs are this bad, how bad are labs in places like Nicaragua?”

Previous
Previous

6:23:22

Next
Next

6:21:22