NBAF: Grand Opening Ceremony May 24th, 2023
Ribbon cutting for sprawling BSL-4 vaccine-for-cattle hawking lab is set for later next month.
Are you interested in any of the following diseases and where their research may be being conducted? You should be. In case the following list is too long, here’s a shortened version:
Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD)
Classical Swine Fever (CSF)
African Swine Fever (ASF)
Rift Valley Fever (RVF)
Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever (CCHF)
Japanese Encephalitis (JE) Virus
Nipah Virus
At the end of this article, you’ll find some previous research on the National Bio-Agro Defense Facility including a deeper look into the above research.
This is, of course, all euphemism for ‘offensive biological weapons development facility where we just so happen to create vaccines for problems we create.’ And what kinds of vaccines, exactly, will they be making?
Lately, much time has been spent looking into how, precisely, mRNA will be making headways into your food supply.
Where else would mRNA experimental gene serum injections for large animals be created?
On May 24th, 2023 (just over a month from today) — the NBAF will open featuring several hundred thousand sq ft of BSL-4 facilities featuring large livestock like cattle.
It’s like building 50 Supercharged Wuhan Institute of Virologies (supposedly a BSL-3 lab) atop one another — right in the heartland of the USA.
Vaccine development is a primary purpose of the sprawling, 48 acre facility. I’m sure, given the recent fad of mRNA proliferation, that those newfangled Animal Killer Death Shots will be developed there.
Agriculture Sectary Tom Vilsack will be on site to cut the ribbon at the official opening of the level-4 National Bio and Agro-Defense Facility (NBAF) in Manhattan, Kansas, May 24, 2023. According to a recent press release Kansas Senator Jerry Moran and former Senator Pat Roberts will also be present. Senator Roberts was instrumental in advocating for the facility to be built in Kansas. The 574,000 square-foot facility’s acquisition cost was $1.25 billion. The cost was fully funded through a combination of $938 million in federal appropriations, $307 million in funding provided by the State of Kansas, and $5 million from the City of Manhattan, Kansas. The biocontainment laboratory facility will provide state-of-the-art infrastructure for developing vaccines, performing diagnostics, and developing countermeasures against large animal foreign animal diseases (FADs) and zoonotic diseases. The 48-acre NBAF campus, with support facilities, contains more than 700,000 square feet of facility space. The Department of Homeland Security in coordination with U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) led the design of NBAF and built the facility to standards that fulfill USDA’s mission needs. The NBAF will replace the Plum Island Animal Disease Center (PIADC) located off the coast of New York, a biosafety level-3 facility that is more than 68 years old. Currently, USDA’s Agricultural Research Service (ARS) and Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) conduct foreign animal disease research, training and diagnostics in this center. ARS and APHIS will transfer their research and diagnostic missions from PIADC to NBAF and will operate the facility jointly.
Read more about the NBAF facilities here:
Putin!! Come blow this thing up!!
Right in the middle of the nation. Great.