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The Gates Foundation and DFID have partnered on various projects, including their work on Livestock. Their efforts focus on improving animal survival through vaccines and better genetics, resulting in increased productivity. In Ethiopia, chickens are laying more eggs, providing better nutrition, and even contributing to small household savings. Edinburgh is a hub for top-notch research in this field, which is why Dipit and the Gates Foundation are funding scientists there.

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In 2016, the Gates Foundation genetically modified chickens for African families, despite their lack of interest. The chickens required special food and vaccinations, which raised concerns about sustainability. The Gates Foundation also funded the development of genetically modified mosquitoes, but the plan backfired when the modified mosquitoes bred with natural ones, resulting in a stronger mosquito population. The involvement of the US Army and the secrecy surrounding these projects raise questions about their true intentions. Additionally, the Gates Foundation's influence over the WHO and its director general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, has been criticized, especially considering Tedros' involvement in corruption scandals with the Clinton Foundation and the Global Fund.

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The Gates Foundation and Difida have partnered on various projects, including their work on livestock. They aim to improve animal survival through vaccines and better genetics, resulting in increased productivity. This has had a significant impact in Ethiopia, where chickens are laying more eggs, providing better nutrition, and even contributing to small savings in households. Edinburgh is a hub for top-notch research in this field, which is why Dipit and the Gates Foundation are funding scientists there.

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Our foundation supports 50 in 5, a collaboration with the World Bank and other partners. This initiative aims to provide country leaders with the necessary tools and expertise to modernize ID and civil registration systems. By 2028, over 500 million people will have a digital identity, enabling easier access to employment, education, financial services, healthcare, and government programs.

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Research on potential pandemic pathogens, known as gain of function studies, has led to valuable public health insights. Previous NSABB reports support this. While I won't argue for the necessity of this research, there are many freely available studies showing how mutations identified through these studies have helped us prepare for epidemics and pandemics.

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Our foundation supports 50 in 5, a collaboration with the World Bank and other partners. This initiative aims to provide country leaders with the necessary tools and expertise to modernize ID and civil registration systems. By 2028, over 500 million people will have a digital identity, enabling easier access to employment, education, financial services, healthcare, and government programs.

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Most have developed a remarkable immune system. The antibodies which a hen develops when she's infected with whatever are deposited in the eggs of the ostrich. Ostrich eggs are very big. There are a lot of antibodies, and they turn out to be very robust, and they turn out to be useful from species to species. So these antibodies to Ebola, COVID-nineteen, Pseudomonas, all kinds of pathogenic organisms can be given by nasal spray. They can be painted on the inside of a mask. They can be delivered orally as a nutritional supplement, making vaccine technology irrelevant. The birds are healthy. There are scientists in The United States, in Japan, and in Canada working together on this antibody information.

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In the agricultural sector, there are two impressive approaches to reduce methane emissions from beef production. By enhancing cow breeding and providing additional inputs, we can effectively decrease their methane output. This prioritization of methane work is commendable as methane has a significant impact on near-term temperature rise.

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Speaker 0: Prime minister Shigeru Ishba, Gates highlighted the importance of upcoming high level talks in Japan focused on advancing health care in Africa. He emphasized how Japanese innovation could lead the new health products benefiting Africa. Global health, activities with Gobi, with Global Fund, and the kind of innovation taking place in Japan that'll, create new products that

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The launch of Improvac in the European Union is a significant event for Pfizer. It is the world's first vaccine for the control of Portane, offering a high level of reliability with over 99% success. Improvac improves productivity and provides benefits for animal welfare and the environment. Its approval by the European Union further enhances its global reputation, as it is already approved in over 50 countries. The comprehensive clinical program for Improvac included over 130 trials to prove its safety and efficacy. This product combines profitability with animal welfare and environmental sustainability, meeting consumer demands. The success of Improvac is attributed to strong partnerships and considering the needs of all stakeholders.

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The speaker states that organizations like the Gates Foundation are recommitting to global health initiatives. Despite challenges, there is optimism regarding the potential eradication of diseases like polio and malaria within the next twenty years, citing available tools and strategies. The Gates Foundation is pledging $1.6 billion to Gavi for the next five years and will invest billions more in developing new, low-cost vaccines to enhance Gavi's effectiveness. The speaker quotes Nelson Mandela on the importance of how a society treats its children, noting that Gavi has helped over one billion children live healthier lives in the last 25 years. Continued support is crucial to maintain this progress in the coming decades.

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The Gates Foundation genetically modified chickens for African families, but the locals didn't want them. The chickens required special food and vaccinations, leading to a bird flu outbreak. Hendrix Genetics replaced the dead chickens. The Gates Foundation also funded the development of genetically modified mosquitoes to combat diseases like Zika and malaria, but the plan backfired as the mosquitoes became stronger. The collaboration between the Gates Foundation and the US army, as well as the involvement of Oxitec, raises questions about bioweapons and military tests. Bill Gates's influence extends to the WHO, with the organization heavily dependent on his funding. The director general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, has ties to the Clintons and was involved in corruption scandals.

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The Gates Foundation and Difida collaborate on livestock projects, improving animal health and productivity through vaccines and genetics. In Ethiopia, chickens are laying more eggs, providing better nutrition and savings for households. Edinburgh is a hub for top research in this field, with Difida and the Gates Foundation supporting scientists there.

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The transcript presents a critical examination of Bill Gates, portraying him as transforming from a software magnate into a global health power broker whose wealth and influence have reshaped public health, vaccine development, and population policy. It argues that Gates’ philanthropic activities are not purely charitable but are deployed to extend control over health systems, global research agendas, and even the reproductive choices of people worldwide. Key claims and points are detailed across several strands: - Public image and power shift: Bill Gates is described as no longer a “public health expert” yet becoming a central figure in billions of lives, guiding medical actions and vaccine strategies. The program asserts that Gates’ reinvention through the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has been aided by a sophisticated public relations apparatus and by directing media coverage of global health issues. - Foundation scale and reach: The Gates Foundation is depicted as the world’s largest private foundation, with assets reported as tens of billions of dollars and a broad remit in global health, development, growth, and policy advocacy. Its influence extends to funding media outlets, think tanks, and reporting units across multiple outlets (BBC, NPR, Our World in Data, ABC, among others), creating what the program calls “tentacles” across global health. - Partnerships and funding of global health initiatives: Gates is credited with initiating and funding major global health vehicles, including: - Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, with seed funding and ongoing commitments that have shaped vaccination markets. - The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria, and other public-private partnerships that coordinate vaccine development and immunization programs. - Support for CEPI (Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations), the World Health Organization’s vaccine initiatives, and other pandemic preparedness efforts. - The World Health Organization’s funding profile, described as heavily dependent on Gates Foundation support, with Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus noted as a non-medical doctor connected to Gates-backed initiatives. - The “Decade of Vaccines” and vaccine policy: Gates is credited with launching a decade-long vaccine initiative, including a pledge of billions of dollars to vaccine development and distribution. This is linked to the creation of a global vaccine action plan and to Gavi’s role in establishing vaccine markets. The narrative asserts that vaccines have been used to steer global health policy and to secure roles for private firms in public health decision-making. - Vaccine development concerns: The program raises concerns about the safety and speed of vaccine development, criticizing the eighteen-month timeline Gates advocates for a universal vaccine, and questioning the use of new technologies (DNA and mRNA platforms) and rapid deployment with limited testing. It highlights potential safety risks, including historical vaccine-associated disease enhancement and concerns about broad immunization in a short period. - Vaccine safety and regulation: It is claimed that vaccine safety at scale is hard to guarantee and that liability protections for vaccine makers and public health officials have been enacted (e.g., a U.S. declaration granting liability immunity for COVID-19 countermeasures), a point framed as enabling risk-bearing without accountability. - Population control framing: A central thread is the assertion that Gates seeks to reduce population growth through health improvements, vaccines, and reproductive health services. The transcript traces Gates’ interest in contraception and population issues to his family background and to Rockefeller-era eugenics historical contexts, arguing that discussions about fertility, contraceptive technologies, and demographic trends have long-term population implications. It cites specific Gates Foundation activities in reproductive health, including funding for innovative birth-control delivery methods, depot injections, implanted devices, and efforts to develop digital identity tied to health services as tools within a broader population-control framework. - Digital identity and biometric ID: The narrative emphasizes Gates’ involvement with biometric identification through Gavi and ID2020, noting partnerships with Microsoft and the Rockefeller Foundation, the Aadhaar system in India, and the World Bank’s ID4D initiative. It argues that vaccination programs, biometric identity, and cashless payments are being integrated into a comprehensive “population control grid,” enabling state and private actors to track, truncate, or deny access to services based on identity and health status. - Data, surveillance, and privacy concerns: The piece contends that the push for digital IDs, digital health records, and biometrics will erode privacy and enable broad government and corporate surveillance, linking health data to financial services, voting, housing, and welfare. It highlights projects involving digital certificates, immunity passports, and real-time health data collection via microneedle patches and barcode-like skin markers, suggesting these innovations could be used to control access to services. - Epstein connections and broader conspiracy context: The program references alleged connections between Gates and Jeffrey Epstein, including flight logs and involvement in philanthropic funding discussions, framing these ties as part of a broader pattern of influence. It also points to prior associations with notable figures (Buffett, Rockefeller, Soros) and critiques of Gates as aligning with a “population control” ideology. - The underlying motive and conclusion: Throughout, the narrative asserts that Gates’ wealth is being used not for charity alone but to build an overarching system of control—over health institutions, research funding, public policy, identification, and financial systems. It contrasts his public image as a generous philanthropist with alleged hidden agendas, suggesting that the real aim is to shape global governance and human behavior through vaccination, identification, and digital infrastructure. - Final framing and call to action: The closing sections urge viewers to recognize Gates’ influence as part of an ideology rather than a single person’s plan. It frames the situation as a broader movement that could continue beyond Gates personally, urging awareness and action to resist what the program deems a population-control regime embedded in global health and digital identity initiatives. In sum, the transcript portrays Bill Gates as a central figure driving a multifaceted, globally interconnected program—through the Gates Foundation, Gavi, CEPI, and related partnerships—that allegedly reconfigures vaccine policy, global health governance, reproductive health, biometric identification, and digital payments into a cohesive system of population control and surveillance, using philanthropy as a veneer for power and control.

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Vaccinations are crucial for livestock and have significantly improved fish farming welfare. In the UK, most livestock are vaccinated, including fish, which face unique challenges. At the Inchmore facility in Scotland, Atlantic salmon smolts are first anesthetized to ensure a smooth vaccination process. They are then positioned in an automated vaccinator that can immunize up to 18,000 fish per hour, a significant improvement over the manual method that used to take weeks. Salmon are vaccinated to protect against bacterial and viral diseases encountered in seawater pens after leaving bio-secure hatcheries. This proactive approach enhances fish welfare and has led to a dramatic reduction in antibiotic use in salmon farming. Overall, vaccination is a safe and effective measure for both fish and consumers.

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We ensure there is enough capacity and competition for vaccines, leading to lower prices and the development of new vaccines. This includes vaccines for TB, malaria, HIV, and even COVID-19. To improve vaccines, we aim for longer duration and broader coverage, and plan to replace needles with patches. The pandemic has shown that we have not invested enough in these innovations. Our partners in India play a crucial role in achieving these breakthrough products.

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We need to provide better tools to poor farmers to combat climate change. I became aware of this issue while visiting Africa and witnessing the devastating effects of temperature increase on crops, leading to malnutrition and increased deaths. By utilizing gene sequencing, AI, and satellite data, we can enhance the productivity and resilience of all crops, not just mainstream ones. This will greatly improve the lives of over 500 million farmers. Scaling up these improvements is crucial, and prioritizing high-impact interventions, similar to how we prioritize health interventions, is essential. Today marks a significant milestone in accelerating innovation for climate adaptation.

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In the agricultural sector, there are two impressive approaches to reduce methane emissions from cows and improve their breeding. This is important because methane has a significant impact on near-term temperature increase. The prioritization of methane work is commendable.

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With cooperation, generosity, and innovation, a partnership with BioNTech aims to create vaccines for TB, HIV, and malaria. If the right actions are taken over the next 20 years, most countries can escape the poverty trap and become self-sufficient. Accelerating this process is a positive goal that many leaders are engaged in. However, due to cuts in aid budgets, including Germany's, approximately 30% less funding will be raised for vaccines compared to five years ago.

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The Gates Foundation and DFID have partnered on various projects, including their work on Livestock. Their efforts focus on improving animal survival through vaccines and better genetics, resulting in increased productivity. In Ethiopia, chickens are laying more eggs, providing better nutrition, and even contributing to small household savings. Edinburgh is a hub for top-notch research in this field, which is why scientists in the city are being funded by Dipit and the Gates Foundation.

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The Gates Foundation and Difida have partnered on various initiatives, including their work on livestock. This collaboration focuses on improving animal survival through vaccines and better genetics, ultimately increasing productivity. The impact of these efforts is evident in Ethiopia, where chickens are laying more eggs, providing better nutrition, and even contributing to small household savings. Edinburgh is a hub for top-notch research in this field, which is why Dithead and the Gates Foundation are funding scientists there.

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The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has played a significant role in various global health initiatives. They sponsored the creation of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, which aims to establish healthy markets for vaccines. The foundation provided substantial funding to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria, as well as supported efforts to eliminate neglected tropical diseases. They were also a founding partner of the Global Financing Facility for women, children, and adolescents, contributing $275 million. Additionally, the Gates Foundation injected $100 million into the Coalition For Epidemic Preparedness Innovations to develop vaccines for emerging infectious diseases. Their influence can be seen in numerous major global health initiatives over the past two decades.

Unlimited Hangout

Framing Surveillance and Eugenics as “Healthcare” with Johnny Vedmore
Guests: Johnny Vedmore
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Whitney Webb and Johnny Vedmore discuss how elite institutions that steered COVID-19 policies are moving to shape a post-COVID world, focusing on Welcome Leap and the Trinity Challenge, and tracing their ties to the Wellcome Trust, the Gates Foundation, DARPA, and Silicon Valley. They note Welcome Leap’s deep links to the Wellcome Trust, which was involved with the Oxford AstraZeneca vaccine, and highlight a framework in which philanthropy blends with biotech and for‑profit entities. They quote a Sunday Times profile describing Wellcome as a vehicle where “what Henry Welcom set out was a double edged scheme to run a business and a charity together. The flagship would be a philanthropic body, now the Wellcome Trust, enjoying the image and tax benefits of magnanimous public spirited generosity. But behind this would operate, industrial organizations and, straight up and down for profit corporations.” They ask who holds more sway over public policy—Bill Gates or the Wellcome Trust?—noting overlap between Gates Foundation and Wellcome Trust in the developing world. They discuss Welcome Leap’s leadership: Regina Dugan, who began at DARPA in 1996, leading a program that won awards for identifying land mines, then headed a counterism task force, and later created a defense‑focused tech firm Red X Defense that contracted with the military. Dugan “greenlighted DARPA's investment in mRNA vaccine technology” and, after leaving DARPA, was recruited by Google to lead Building 8, with projects including “digital tattoo” and “digital authentication pill,” and a focus on neural wearables and transhumanist aims. Dugan’s association with the Clinton Global Initiative and Bilderberg, and her role in Google’s DARPA‑like efforts, are cited as part of a broader transhumanist trajectory. Ken Gabriel, COO of Welcome Leap, is described as a DARPA veteran who led MEMS research, worked with both the FBI and CIA, and later joined Draper Labs before becoming involved with the Wellcome Trust; he sits on the Galvani Bioelectronics board, linking GlaxoSmithKline, Google, and Verily. Jay Flatley, Illumina’s longtime chief, is highlighted as a genomics power broker tied to the World Economic Forum and a push to gene‑tested populations from birth to grave. The four Welcome Leap programs are introduced. HOPE stands for human organs, physiology, and engineering, with aims to grow and translate organ systems that “will have a functional immune system,” potentially replacing animal trials and advancing bioengineering for transplantable organs and synthetic hybrid organs. The second program, the “first thousand days,” targets infants from three months to three years, outlining “wearables, constant twenty four seven surveillance of children,” including respiratory rate, heart rate, eye tracking, and ambient data to build an “in silico” AI model of a child’s brain, with the goal of having “eighty percent of children” matched to the synthetic model within ten years. The third program, Delta Tissue, is described as precision medicine to map cells and tissues for cancer prediction and prevention, potentially enabling AI‑driven interventions. The fourth, Multi Channel Psych, aims to study “anhedonia” and to develop brain stimulation interventions to shape behavior, including mood quantification, and to create scalable measurement tools via wearables that monitor mood, sleep, social interactions, and reward processing. They turn to the Trinity Challenge, chaired by Dame Sally Davies, with founding members including the University of Hong Kong, Cambridge, Northeastern, Imperial College London, and corporations such as Microsoft, Facebook, Google, GlaxoSmithKline, and McKinsey, plus the Gates Foundation, Tencent, Aviva, and a Global Virome Project linked to EcoHealth Alliance and USAID. The grand prize went to POD (participatory one health disease detection) led by Open Dream in Thailand, with Matt Parker connected to Salesforce; Jane Sexbot (a child sex‑education chatbot) was another project. Founding members include the Skull Global Threats Fund, tied to Jeffrey Skoll, and its leadership connected to Google, Salesforce, the WEF, and CFR, underscoring the convergence of tech, pharma, and policy elites in shaping surveillance, data analytics, and predictive health, framed as preventing pandemics but described as moving toward surveillance, eugenics, and transhumanism. They warn that post‑COVID agendas are being advanced behind distractions about variants, urging pushback and accountability.

Possible Podcast

Bill Gates on possibility, AI, and humanity
Guests: Bill Gates
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Bill Gates sees a future where progress accelerates through science, policy, and everyday choices. The conversation hinges on a trifecta: big impact, new learning, and enjoyment. He notes the foundation touches climate, global health, malnutrition, AI, and education, and that breakthroughs can save millions for less than a thousand dollars per life. He emphasizes the scale of climate urgency: over 50 billion tons of emissions and a goal to reach zero cost to achieve zero emissions. On Netflix, Gates contrasts The Future with Bill Gates and his earlier film Inside Bill's Brain. He recalls meeting Lady Gaga and how the health footage anchors a broader mission, joking that audiences may come for spectacle but stay for global health. He highlights rapid innovation across climate, health, and nutrition, and explains that the pace of product development now often surpasses expectations, aided by networks of experts and online tools. Turning to climate specifics, he outlines several paths beyond emissions cuts. Cows contribute a minority of emissions but offer several levers: vaccinating gut bacteria to reduce methane, altering feed, or a drug that changes the microbiome, plus a skin implant that burns methane. He notes cross-breeding for higher productivity while keeping adaptability. Chicken production is already cheaper in places like Ethiopia, empowering women and benefiting children. The aim is affordable, scalable solutions that remove carbon-heavy inputs while expanding solar, wind, storage, and nuclear where needed. He argues for fusion energy's promise, predicting progress within a six-year horizon if priorities align. AI is framed as a force multiplier, accelerating discovery in materials, biology, and medicine, and boosting education through personalized tutoring and data-driven teaching. He cautions that grid reliability will challenge the transition, and suggests renewables and geothermal, plus space-based concepts, as options. The aim remains a zero-green-premium future, with policy and investment guiding the scale-up of clean electricity alongside nuclear research. In health, the talk covers eradication versus burden reduction, with polio campaigns in Afghanistan, Gaza, and Somalia, and the fight against malaria and Guinea worm through affordable vaccines. Gates envisions AI-assisted ultrasound at point of care and cheaper vaccines reaching mothers who never see a doctor. In education, he praises Khan Academy and Kigo, cites New York school, and argues for longer school days and parental involvement as AI becomes a classroom partner.

The Rich Roll Podcast

The Clean Meat Revolution | Rich Roll Podcast
Guests: Bruce Friedrich
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Rich Roll welcomes Bruce Friedrich back to discuss the advancements in the plant-based and clean meat sectors since their last conversation. They highlight a recent conference organized by the Good Food Institute (GFI), which focused on networking between industry leaders, scientists, and investors to accelerate innovation in these fields. Friedrich emphasizes the importance of collaboration across various sectors, including crop sciences and therapeutics, to enhance the development of plant-based and clean meat technologies. Friedrich shares that GFI has significantly expanded its staff and initiatives, aiming to create a pipeline of scientists interested in plant-based and clean meat research. They have launched the first college courses on these topics at institutions like Berkeley, Stanford, and Penn State, recognizing the interdisciplinary nature of the field, which requires knowledge in chemistry, biology, and engineering. The conversation shifts to the growth of the plant-based food market, noting a 17% increase in the sector and a 23% rise in plant-based meat sales. Friedrich discusses the inefficiencies of traditional animal agriculture, highlighting that it takes nine calories to produce one calorie of chicken and even more for beef. He argues that plant-based and clean meat offer more sustainable solutions to feeding the growing global population while addressing climate change and health concerns. Friedrich explains clean meat, which involves growing animal cells in a lab without raising and slaughtering animals, presenting it as a more efficient and ethical alternative. He mentions the potential for clean meat to eliminate antibiotic use in livestock, which contributes to the rise of superbugs. The discussion also touches on the regulatory landscape, with Friedrich expressing optimism about the FDA and USDA's roles in overseeing clean meat production. He notes the need for significant investment in research and development to advance these technologies further. Friedrich concludes by envisioning a future where plant-based and clean meat are mainstream, contributing to a world where everyone is well-fed, healthy, and mindful. He encourages listeners to engage with GFI and support the movement towards sustainable food systems.
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