Transhumanist Technocracy Marches On – mRNA Cancer Vaccines, AI Stargate

Transhumanist Technocracy Marches On – mRNA Cancer Vaccines, AI Stargate

JAN 22, ANA MARIA MIHALCEA, MD, PHD

Link

After yesterdays great news of WHO exit, the AI Stargate announcement of mRNA cancer vaccines that can be created by AI in 48 hours surfaces by Larry Ellison of Oracle. Interesting names, CIA was the creating engine for Ellison’s Oracle and the human potential investigations of CIA Stargate research eventually lead in its dark side to psychotronic weapons and psychic warfare applications, the basis of MIND WARS. We now find a revival of the terms in a new version.

Here is more information on Oracle origins:

Larry Ellison’s Oracle Started As a CIA Project

Vox simply says that Oracle was founded in “the late 1970s” and “sells a line of software products that help large and medium-sized companies manage their operations.” All of which is true! But as the article continues, it somehow ignores the fact that Oracle has always been a significant player in the national security industry. And that its founder would not have made his billions without helping to build the tools of our modern surveillance state.

“Recognizing the potential demand for a commercial database product, [Ellison] founded the company that became Oracle in 1977,” Vox writes, conspicuously omitting the whole “because CIA wanted a relational database” part of the history.

Which isn’t to say that Oracle’s work with the US government should necessarily be frowned upon. The CIA needs databases, just like any large organization. But not mentioning just how reliant Oracle has been on government contracts since its inception is downright strange and seems to feed this narrative that Ellison simply created a product that companies wanted and private enterprise did the rest.

Oracle has pulled in billions of dollars each year working for governments at all levels for all manner of projects, the most high-profile of late being the disaster that was the Oregon health insurance exchange. But it’s the company’s philosophy behind how national security databases should work which would surprise someone who’d only read about them on Vox.

Ellison has always been a big believer in the federal government maintaining large national databases. And he was able to be much more public about it in the months after the September 11th attacks. In fact, Ellison argued that we needed just one large national security database, one with national ID cards and mandatory iris scans, naturally.


 

Author: Survivalist