Wednesday, January 18, 2023

ITS REALLY USA,CANADA,UK AGAINST RUSSIA-THE PUPPET UKRAINES JUST GET WEAPONS AND DIE.

ITS REALLY USA,CANADA,UK AGAINST RUSSIA-THE PUPPET UKRAINES JUST GET WEAPONS AND DIE.

AMERICA (POLITICAL BABYLON)(NUKED BY SNEAK ATTACK FROM RUSSIA)

IN REVELATION 17 & 18 IS THE DESTRUCTION OF THE RELIGIOUS AND POLITICAL BABYLONS.IF YOU CAN NOT DECERN BETWEEN THE 2 BABYLONS IN REV 17 & 18.YOU WILL JUST THINK THEIR BOTH THE SAME.BUT NO-THERES A RELIGIOUS BABYLON (THE VATICAN IN REV 17)(AND THE POLITICAL BABYLON IN REV 18 (AMERICA OR NEW YORK TO BE EXACT)

ISAIAH 34:10
10  It (AMERICA-POLITICAL BABYLON) shall not be quenched night nor day; the smoke thereof shall go up for ever: from generation to generation it shall lie waste; none shall pass through it for ever and ever.

JEREMIAH 51:29-32 (CYBER ATTACK 1ST)
29  And the land shall tremble and sorrow: for every purpose of the LORD shall be performed against Babylon,(AMERICA-NEW YORK) to make the land of Babylon (AMERICA) a desolation without an inhabitant.
30  The mighty men of Babylon (AMERICA) have forborn to fight, they have remained in their holds: their might hath failed; they became as women: they have burned her dwellingplaces; her bars are broken.
031  One post shall run to meet another, and one messenger to meet another, to shew the king of Babylon (NEW YORK) that his city is taken at one end,
32  And that the passages are stopped,(THE WAR COMPUTERS HACKED OR EMP'D) and the reeds they have burned with fire, and the men of war are affrighted.(DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO)

COMPLETE SILENCE AFTER AN EMP GOES OFF
REVELATION 8:1
1 And when he had opened the seventh seal, there was silence in heaven about the space of half an hour.

JEREMIAH 50:3,24
3 For out of the north (RUSSIA) there cometh up a nation against her, which shall make her land desolate, and none shall dwell therein: they shall remove, they shall depart, both man and beast.
24 I have laid a snare for thee, and thou art also taken, O Babylon,(AMERICA) and thou wast not aware: thou art found, and also caught, because thou hast striven against the LORD. (RUSSIA A SNEAK CYBER,EMP ATTACK,THEN NUKE ATTACK ON AM

I FINALLY FIGURED OUT THIS WEST AGAINST RUSSIA WAR. THE UKRAINES ARE JUST THE PUPPET PROXY OF THE WEST. AND DIE INSTEAD OF THE WESTS FIGHTING AND DYING.NOW THE AMERICANS ARE CONNING ISRAEL INTO SENDING THEIR WEAPONS TO THE UKRAINE. UNDER THE CLAIM. ISRAEL WILL GET ALL THE WEAPONS BACK. BECAUSE THE USA IS SO WEAK FROM SENDING ALL THEIR WEAPONS TO THE UKRAINE WEST PUPPET ZELENSKY. THEIR GETTING LOW ON WEAPONS. AND RUSSIA COULD EASILY NOW USE A CYBER ATTACK, THEN EMP OVER NEW YORK AND FINALLY NUKE NEW YORK ANY TIME NOW. OF COURSE TODAY CANADA ANNOUNCED THEIR SENDING HEAVY WEAPONS TO UKRAINE TO KILL OFF MORE UKRAINIANS.AFTER RUSSIA TAKES OVER A UKRAINE CITY. STEELS ALL THE WEAPONS FROM THE DEAD UKRAINIANS. THEN USES THEM WEAPONS WHAT CAME FROM THE WEST. TO KILL OFF EVEN MORE UKRANIAN PROXY PUPPETS. THANK YOU WESTERN COUNTRIES FOR KEEPING THIS SLAUGHTER OF PROXY UKRANIANS GOING.UNDER THE GUISE OF HELP THE UKRAINIAN PUPPETS WITH WEAPONS TO DEFEAT RUSSIA.CANADA HAS SENT OVER TO THE PUPPET PROXY UKRAINIANS MORE THAT 5 BILLION DOLLARS SO FAR. AND TODAY ANOTHER 200 ARMED VIHICLES.

USA-27.40%, UK-3.71, POLAND-1.80, GERMANY-1.19, CANADA-0.92, NORWAY-0.32, DENMARK-0.30, LATVIA-0.30, CZECH REPUBLIC-0.28, SWEDEN-0.27 (EU)


Where Military Aid to Ukraine Comes From by Katharina Buchholz,Nov 10, 2022

Looking at pledges of military aid to Ukraine between Jan 24 and October 3, the U.S. government has committed to providing the most arms, weapons and other equipment by far. More than $27 billion in military aid was pledged up until the given date, according to the Ukraine Support Tracker by the Kiel Institute for the World Economy.The second-ranked country, the United Kingdom, has pledged far less - just under $4 billion – in the given time frame. In relative terms, however, both military aid commitments amount to approximately 0.1 percent of either country's GDP. Looking at this metric, Ukraine's smaller neighbors contributed more to its war effort, for example Poland (military aid of 0.3 percent of GDP) or Latvia (0.9 percent). Even when combining military, financial and humanitarian aid delivered or pledged by the U.S. is added up, this only amounts to 0.25 percent the country's GDP.Other big donors of military aid to Ukraine are Germany and Canada - even though their relative pledges only amount to 0.03 percent and 0.06 percent of their respective GDPs.The IfW Kiel's Ukraine Support Tracker systematically records the value of support that the governments of 37 mostly Western countries have pledged to Ukraine since the start of the Russian invasion on February 24, 2022. Military, financial and humanitarian aid that is publicly known is recorded in the database.Description-This chart shows the countries pledging most arms/weapons transfers to Ukraine, Jan 24 to Oct 3, 2022 (in billion U.S. dollars).


As U.S. involvement in Ukraine deepens, military support drains American weapons stocks-The scale of U.S. arms being sent to Ukraine is undermining America's potential defense of Taiwan, experts warn.By Aaron Kliegman-Updated: January 17, 2023 - 11:16pm

The Biden administration is supplying so much military aid to Ukraine to combat Russian forces that it will take several years to replenish the drained U.S. weapons inventories, potentially undermining America's ability to defend Taiwan from a Chinese invasion, experts warn.
Concerns about the scale of American assistance are mounting amid deepening U.S. involvement in Ukraine as the nation's top U.S. military official traveled to Europe this week to monitor efforts to train Ukrainian soldiers."As the United States transfers massive amounts of weapons, munitions, and supplies to Ukraine, questions arise about the health of U.S. inventories," Mark Cancian of the Center for Strategic and International Studies wrote in a recent report. "Most inventories, though not all, will take many years to replace. For most items, there are workarounds, but there may be a crisis brewing over artillery ammunition."According to Cancian's calculations based on a variety of government sources, it could take seven years, for example, to rebuild the country's inventory of 155 mm ammunition based on production levels funded in the last few years and four or five years based on a "surge" rate of increased production.This category consists of a wide variety of non-precision projectiles that military planners appear to regard as "the most serious shortage since artillery constitutes the backbone of ground-based firepower," wrote Cancian. "Rebuilding inventories at the current production rate is probably not possible because of routine U.S. training needs."He noted this could become a "crisis" as artillery has become "the most important combat arm" in Ukraine, which might have to ration shells and fire at only the highest priority targets — as the U.S. drains its stockpile.As for the 155 mm precision Excalibur, an artillery shell guided by GPS, "the United States may soon run out of Excalibur projectiles to send."Meanwhile, it will take three years to rebuild the inventory of High Mobility Artillery Rockets Systems, or HIMARS, at the recent rate of production and about 2.5 years at the surge rate.The most well-known U.S. weapons sent to Ukraine are Javelin antitank missiles and Stinger antiaircraft missiles. According to Cancian, it will take about 12.5 years to replenish the Javelin stockpile at the recent production rate and 5.5 to 6.5 years at the surge rate. As for Stingers, he calculated 18 years at the recent rate and 6.5 years at the surge rate.The U.S. has committed some 8,500 Javelin antitank missiles and over 1,600 Stinger antiaircraft missiles to Ukraine, according to the Defense Department."We've essentially used up 13 years' worth of Stinger production and five years' worth of Javelin production," Raytheon Technologies CEO Greg Hayes said at the Reagan Defense Forum last month.In May, when the U.S. had sent only 5,000 Javelins and the 1,400 Stingers to Ukraine, lawmakers expressed concern that those figures amounted to one-third and one-quarter of the existing U.S. supply, respectively.The Defense Department is working to restock, turning to industry to boost production. On Capitol Hill, the annual defense bill signed into law last month that sets the Pentagon's spending and policy priorities for the next fiscal year authorizes contracts to procure up to 28,300 Javelins and 5,600 Stingers.Beyond Ukraine, the U.S. is also trying to fulfill Taiwan's orders for Stingers and Javelins, weapons that Taiwanese officials deem essential to combat a potential Chinese invasion."Taiwan needs to have something tangible, such as a homeland defense force," Adm. Lee Hsi-ming, Taiwan's former defense chief, said in a recent interview. "If these small-scale troops are all over Taiwan and are equipped with weapons like Stingers, Javelins and grenades, Taiwan can demonstrate its social toughness and resilience."China considers Taiwan, a nearby island run by a democratic government, as a renegade Chinese province that must be reunited with the mainland — by force, if necessary. U.S. officials have warned repeatedly in recent months that China might invade in the next five years.Taiwan, however, reportedly has around $19 billion in arms sales backlogged in the U.S. Many of the same weapons systems have been sent to Ukraine. Experts have noted that the U.S. must be able to surge weapons to Taiwan at a moment of crisis to deter and defend against a Chinese attack.The U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission blamed the "diversion of existing stocks of weapons and munitions" to Ukraine for delays in delivering promised systems to Taiwan. Lawmakers have been expressing concerns about aid to Ukraine undermining a potential U.S. defense of Taiwan, which maintains strong economic ties and defense cooperation with Washington.Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), for example, argued in a recent letter to Secretary of State Antony Blinken that the Biden administration's extensive military aid to Ukraine has compromised more important efforts to strengthen Taiwan's defenses.Concerns about the status of U.S. weapons inventories come as Washington appears to be deepening its involvement in Ukraine.Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, on Tuesday had his first in-person meeting with Gen. Valery Zaluzhny, the top officer in Ukraine's armed forces, since Russia invaded Ukraine early last year.The face-to-face came two days after the U.S. military began expanded combat training of Ukrainian forces in Germany. Milley visited the training facility on Monday, explaining the program is meant to hone the skills of Ukrainian forces so they'll be better prepared to defend themselves by launching an offensive or countering Russian attacks."This is not a run-of-the-mill rotation," said Milley. "This is one of those moments in time where if you want to make a difference, this is it."Just the News reached out to the Pentagon, which didn't respond to inquiries asking if the U.S. is increasing the scope of its support for Ukraine and whether the military is concerned about depleting key weapons arsenals, especially when it comes to the ability to defend Taiwan from a potential Chinese invasion.Milley's trip came a few days after Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov told the BBC that Ukraine is a "member of NATO, de facto not de jure."Under Article Five of the North Atlantic Treaty, NATO's founding document, any attack on a NATO member "shall be considered an attack against them all." However, Ukraine is not a member of NATO and therefore not protected by the treaty's collective defense obligations.

US transfers weapons stored in Israel to Ukraine-Israel has an agreement to use the stored ammunition in emergency scenarios.By Madeleine Hubbard-Updated: January 18, 2023 - 11:40am

The United States has transferred hundreds-of-thousands of munitions from storage in Israel to Ukraine, according to U.S. and Israeli officials on Wednesday.The U.S. and Israel agreed to move 300,000 155-millimeter shells, "some" of which have already been transferred to Ukraine, a U.S. official told CNN.While only U.S. military personnel are able to access the locked weapons warehouses, Israel has an agreement to use the ammunition in emergency scenarios with U.S. approval. Moving the munitions is "American business" and Israel does not need to approve the weapons transfer, Israel Defense Forces spokesperson Richard Hecht said.The United States plans to replenish Israel with any transferred weapons, The Jerusalem Post reported. An IDF spokesperson said the transfer of weapons does not mean Israel is shifting its policy on Ukrainian military aid. Israel has condemned the invasion, sent humanitarian aid and taken in refugees, but the country has not sent military aid.

DISEASES-ANIMAL TO HUMAN

REVELATION 6:7-8 (500 MILLION DEAD EACH FROM THE 4 JUDGEMENTS)(2 BILLION TOT DEAD HERE)
7 And when he had opened the fourth seal, I heard the voice of the fourth beast say, Come and see.
8 And I looked, and behold a pale horse:(CHLORES GREEN) and his name that sat on him was Death, and Hell followed with him. And power was given unto them over the fourth part of the earth,(2 billion) of (8 billion) to kill with sword,(WEAPONS)(500 million) and with hunger,(FAMINE)(500 million) and with death,(INCURABLE DISEASES)(500 million) and with the beasts of the earth.(ANIMAL TO HUMAN DISEASE)(500 million).

THE COVID-19 TOTALS.
WORLD OVER ALL CASES-670,112,012 - DEAD 6,722,344 - AS OF TUE JAN 17,2023 (AND THE SCAM JUST GOES ON)

FAUCCI-SCIENCE-KILLER VACCINE

https://reinettesenumsfoghornexpress.substack.com/p/dr-judy-mikovitz-takes-on-the-cult?r=e3wpo&omnisendContactID=61f08aade0df39002397067c

CDC identifies potential side effects in Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine-The agency contended that it is "very unlikely that the signal in VSD represents a true clinical risk" and does not recommend any changes to its vaccine practices at this time.By Ben Whedon-Updated: January 13, 2023 - 3:29pm

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday announced that the data it had collected merited an investigation into potential stroke risks for recipients for the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine."Following the availability and use of the updated (bivalent) COVID-19 vaccines, CDC’s Vaccine Safety Datalink (VSD), a near real-time surveillance system, met the statistical criteria to prompt additional investigation into whether there was a safety concern for ischemic stroke in people ages 65 and older who received the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccine, Bivalent," the agency wrote in a press release.It further noted that the "preliminary signal" that prompted the investigation of the Pfizer vaccine has not been identified in the Moderna vaccine.The agency contended that it is "very unlikely that the signal in VSD represents a true clinical risk" and does not recommend any changes to its vaccine practices at this time.

New omicron subvariant may be more likely to infect vaccinated, those who had COVID: NYC officials-Even four doses of mRNA vaccine do not produce high levels of protection against the subvariant, the WHO said.BY Madeleine Hubbard-Updated: January 17, 2023 - 11:22am

The omicron subvariant XBB.1.5 may be more likely to infect people who are vaccinated against COVID-19 or who already had the virus, according to the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. "Omicron subvariant XBB.1.5 now accounts for 73% of all sequenced COVID-19 cases in NYC. XBB.1.5 is the most transmissible form of COVID-19 that we know of to date and may be more likely to infect people who have been vaccinated or already had COVID-19," the local health agency tweeted Friday.City officials still said getting vaccinated and boosted is the "best way to protect yourself from hospitalization and death from COVID-19, including from these new variants."The World Health Organization said last week that "XBB variants are the most antibody-resistant variants to date." Even four doses of an mRNA vaccine combined with previous omicron infection does not produce high levels of protection against the subvariant, the United Nations health agency said."There is currently no data on real world vaccine effectiveness against severe disease or death," the WHO said about the XBB variants. The agency is still assessing the subvariants but said "XBB.1.5 does not carry any mutation known to be associated with potential change in severity."

Pfizer, Fauci staffers sign off on research finding mRNA COVID vaccines produce worse antibodies-Second study in a month to find "class switch" to so-called IgG4 antibodies, known for their mild immune response, in mRNA recipients alone. Future of Johnson & Johnson's traditional vaccine unclear as demand craters.By Greg Piper-Updated: January 17, 2023 - 11:24pm

Less than a month after the CDC marked the two-year anniversary of the first administered COVID-19 vaccine by telling Americans to get a bivalent booster, two peer-reviewed German studies have found that mRNA vaccines — the vast majority of the U.S. market — induce worse antibodies compared to traditional adenovirus vaccines.The first paper, published in Science Immunology Dec. 22, focused on mRNA boosters, while the second, published in Frontiers in Immunology Jan. 12, found the same association with the two-dose primary series.The Frontiers paper has the added distinction of a Pfizer scientist serving as its editor and one of Anthony Fauci's staffers at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases as a peer reviewer, suggesting the mRNA vaccine maker and feds were aware of a potential antibody problem around the time Omicron-targeting boosters were authorized.The findings call into question the government's promotion of bivalent boosting even while regulators admit that newer COVID variants are evading vaccines.New York City's Department of Health told residents Friday the XBB.1.5 Omicron subvariant now comprises three-quarters of documented COVID infections in the city. It is "the most transmissible form of COVID-19 that we know of to date and may be more likely to infect people who have been vaccinated or already had COVID-19," the department tweeted. It didn't answer Just the News queries about the evidence for its claims about vaccination or prior infection.The CDC said XBB.1.5 accounted for 43% of documented infections nationwide last week, with under 3% from BA.5, which is part of the bivalent cocktail. University of Tokyo virologists shared research Sunday that found XBB.1.5 exhibits "profound immune resistance" and "augmented ACE2 binding affinity," and hence "increased transmissibility," due to specific mutations.While the World Health Organization deemed XBB variants "the most antibody-resistant variants to date" in a "rapid risk assessment" last week, it said XBB.1.5 specifically "does not carry any mutation known to be associated with potential change in severity."The University of Lübeck researchers behind the Frontiers study confirmed the so-called IgG4 antibody "class switch" first observed by their peers at University of Erlangen-Nuremberg among healthcare workers in the Science Immunology paper, which was submitted 11 days earlier in August.The Lübeck researchers recruited 157 people starting in December 2020 and split them into six groups, five of which had no known prior infection. The first five received either two doses of Pfizer, Moderna or traditional AstraZeneca, or one dose of AstraZeneca followed by either a Pfizer or Moderna dose. The sixth group — infected but not hospitalized — received one or two Pfizer doses."[R]epeated immunization of [uninfected] individuals with the mRNA vaccines increased the proportion of the IgG4 subclass over time which might influence the long-term Ab [antibody] effector functions," according to the paper. IgG4 is known for a mild immune response that "can even inhibit the effector functions of IgG1 and IgG3" antibodies, the researchers said. (Elsevier's ScienceDirect says IgG1 accounts for about 70% of total antibodies in adults, while IgG3 "mediates comparable functional activity.")The groups that received any Moderna dose, whether a full primary series or just second dose, had a "higher potential to generate" long-term IgG4 responses compared to those who received any Pfizer dose, the paper says, speculating the higher mRNA concentration in Moderna might explain this.Researchers didn't find a long-term IgG4 response in those who received two doses of AstraZeneca, the non-mRNA vaccine. (The study period was 270 days.)-The sixth group, with documented prior infection, which received the Pfizer vaccine, had "comparable long-term IgG subclass levels when compared to" uninfected Pfizer recipients, but "their IgG4 response seemed not to be or barely induced," the paper says. This result was "likely generated by re-activation" of memory B cells induced by natural infection."If I were to choose between mRNA vaccines and adeno-vaccines based on these data alone, I would choose adeno-vaccine," University of Southern Denmark global health professor Christine Stabell Benn tweeted. She coauthored a paper last year finding that Pfizer and Moderna vaccines didn't reduce all-cause mortality, but it has not been published yet.Pfizer and NIAID did not respond to Just the News queries on when they knew mRNA vaccines might induce a less effective antibody response, given their employees' involvement in editing and reviewing the Frontiers paper. Fauci stepped down as NIAID director at year's end, after his scientist completed peer review."The long-term impact of the switch to IgG4 antibodies is unclear," former New York Times drug industry reporter Alex Berenson wrote in his newsletter, which analyzed both IgG4 studies. "But nearly all the wealthy countries that heavily used the mRNA jabs continue to endure waves of Covid and significant numbers of deaths," particularly those with little prior infection such as Japan.Without a stark change in across-the-board COVID vaccination policy, the U.S. stands to become even more heavily reliant on mRNA vaccines amid uncertainty over Johnson & Johnson's place in the market.U.S. regulators crippled the reputation of J&J's traditional vaccine by recommending a "pause" to investigate a handful of blood clots in spring 2021. They did not repeat the pause when acknowledging heart inflammation reports in mRNA recipients that summer.The Wall Street Journal reported last week that "slumping demand" led J&J to end manufacturing agreements for its traditional vaccine. It's also in arbitration with Merck, whose vaccine partnership was created under pressure from the Biden administration.J&J said it has hundreds of millions of doses it will continue to make available "where needed," but didn't tell the Journal whether it will keep making its vaccine, which does not purport to target newer variants. The only other traditional COVID vaccine maker, Novavax, received authorization just six months ago.

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