Did you hear me swear? Sorry-
We knew this plan. I don't think we've had the connection to covid testing.
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Team Source: Trusted. Coming to you just as I found it-
Program launched Worldwide.
Synthetic...Human...Genome...
Do...you...understand...now?
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Think: COVID Testing. Goal?
Jeffrey Epstein had a 'Frankenstein'-like plan to analyze human DNA in the US Virgin Islands, and it reportedly pulled in $200 million
https://www.businessinsider.com/jeffrey-epstein-dna-genetics-research-drug-companies-2019-8?utmSource=twitter&utmContent=referral&utmTerm=topbar&referrer=twitter
Pub'd October 2019
The firm overseeing the project, called Southern Trust, pulled in $200 million in revenue,
Jeffrey Epstein received a valuable tax break on the basis of an outlandish business plan to study people's DNA on a Caribbean island and sell the resulting data to drug manufacturers.
In years past, Epstein surrounded himself with scientists and other scholars, crafting plans that ranged from racist to eccentric. He once aimed to impregnate women in an attempt to seed the human race with his own DNA. On another occasion, he brought environmentally harmful species to an island in the Caribbean, prompting a warning from local officials.
"What Southern Trust will do will be basically organizing mathematical algorithms so that if I want to know what my predisposition is for cancer we can now have my genes specifically sequenced," Epstein said.
Epstein also said he was working with at least one US scientist on the project.
The science project had three main elements: First, a team of researchers would gather DNA from St. Thomas residents and use it to create catalog of population-level genetics data. Second, the team would design a search engine that would allow them to look for links to particular diseases. Finally, they would create a "virtual laboratory" to do experiments with computer models.
Gabriel Otte, the founder and CEO of cancer genetics startup Freenome, said Epstein's plan was far-fetched and simplistic. Two other knowledgeable sources consulted by Business Insider concurred.
"It's like he had conversations with 10 people who knew what they were doing and said, 'I'm going to create a company that does all of these things,'" Otte told Business Insider.
The idea of sequencing people's DNA, analyzing it, and selling the insights to drug companies is well-known to companies in the space, for example.
Last year, personal genetics company 23andMe signed a $300 million deal last year to sell de-identified batches of genetic data to drug giant GlaxoSmithKline; Calico, Google's life-extension spinoff, once teamed up with genealogy and DNA site Ancestry to study the genetics of longevity.
When asked how the setup might work, he answered: "It's the Frankenstein version but it's true, yes. In fact it will turn out that certain people can learn certain things. Certain people can move through space differently."
Epstein also compared St. Thomas to Iceland and said the island was an ideal location for DNA analysis because of its isolation.
Epstein said in the testimony that he only needed a small team of researchers to get his project off the ground. He added that he was already working with one of them: someone who hailed from Harvard and previously worked at Princeton's Institute of Advanced Study.
Harvard mathematical biologist Martin Nowak meets that description. He was photographed meeting with Epstein in 2012, BuzzFeed reported. Nowak did not respond to requests from Business Insider to be interviewed or provide comment for this story. A Harvard spokesperson declined to comment.
In 2003, Epstein gave $6.5 million dollars to Harvard to start a new academic track called the Program for Evolutionary Dynamics. It was led by Nowak, and in 2012, his researchers developed the first mathematical model showing how colon cancer cells stop responding to a type of cancer treatment, the Wall Street Journal reported.
I want to know the thoughts of God. Everything else is just details.
A Miracle is when God makes His Reality our Experience