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Patriot Pony

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EDITOR’S NOTE—This section is reserved as an editorial and may not necessarily reflect the policy of this publication.

Story problem time:

The United States funds 25 biolabs all in Ukraine and neighboring Russia invades Ukraine and destroys those labs. You embrace Ukraine and cheer on their heroic stance against the big boy Russia. You wave the Ukraine flag and proudly claim their president is a hero.

Now, lets explore this scenario. Most people understand that Communist China and the US are not allies...picture China and Mexico forming a partnership where China funds 25 biolab locations in Mexico near the US border. US then invades Mexico and takes out said bio labs...would we be waving the Mexican flag or the US flag? Would we be praising the Mexican president?

The US funded biolabs in Ukraine isn’t a conspiracy theory. It’s a fact. Republican Senator Mitt Romney called Democrat Tulsi Gabbard’s factual comments “treasonous.” Gabbard called for him to apologize and resign.

The Romneys, Bidens, Pelosis and many other US political families have a lot to lose if their Ukrainian unscrupulous deeds are exposed. ***** Jussie Smollet was released on bail. He said he’s not suicidal. This could suggest he gave law enforcement all the details they needed to level up to who was behind his ridiculous fake hate crime. The cackling vice president could be a little nervous. ***** Arnold Schwarzenegger compares Russian invasion of Ukraine to Jan. 6. ***** Durham

WHO's push for new pandemic treaty stokes fears of global governance

By Aaron Kliegman Just The News

Negotiations have begun to establish a globally binding agreement to combat future pandemics, raising concerns that such an accord would undermine national sovereignty and centralize too much power in the hands of the World Health Organization (WHO), the United Nations' health agency.

In a recent open letter, the World Council for Health, a coalition of scientists, doctors, lawyers, and civil society advocacy organizations, lambasted the idea as dangerous and illegitimate.

"The proposed WHO agreement is unnecessary, and is a threat to sovereignty and inalienable rights," the council wrote. "It increases the WHO's suffocating power to declare unjustified pandemics, impose dehumanizing lockdowns, and enforce expensive, unsafe, and ineffective treatments against the will of the people."

Prominent health experts such as Drs. Pierre Kory and Astrid Stuckelberger have endorsed the council's open letter and been outspoken against the treaty under discussion.

The agreement would effectively create one world government under the guise of creating a standardized global pandemic response, according to Stuckelberger, a member of the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Geneva and Lausanne.

"This pandemic committee wants everything in a standardized way," she said. "One health, one government, one emergency all the time." WHO constitution gives it broad authority to adopt global regulations concerning standards and procedures to prevent the spread of disease, including quarantine and certain pharmaceutical requirements.

Others argue a pandemic treaty can address the holes exposed by the world's response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

"If the world was able to pass a strong pandemic treaty, it would turn a crisis into an opportunity —a historic, once in a lifetime opportunity," said Georgetown University Professor of Global Health Law Lawrence Gostin in an interview. "We're attempting to solve all the major gaps in pandemic response."

Gostin and other supporters of such a new, "transformative" agreement note pandemics don't recognize borders and argue the only way to fight them effectively is for the world to collaborate in better ways.

WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has criticized nations for adopting "'me-first' approaches that stymie the global solidarity needed to deal with a global threat," referring to COVID-19.

In a recent article, Gostin similarly condemned "nationalistic leaders" for "taking a stance of 'my country first.'"

The treaty they're pushing is expected to include measures to improve information sharing between countries.

Gostin, who is director of the WHO's Collaborating Center on National and Global Health Law, added the treaty would require prompt reporting of outbreaks (which China (Continued on page 16)

From the 45th President of the United States

Speaker Robin Vos, of the Great State of Wisconsin, just said there was ‘widespread fraud’ in the 2020 Presidential Election, but that the State Legislature cannot do anything about it. Wrong! If you rob the diamonds from a jewelry store, if you get caught, you have to give the diamonds back, votes should be no different. There is already a very powerful resolution in the Wisconsin State Assembly that calls for the decertification of the 2020 Election and reclaiming of Wisconsin’s 10 electoral votes. There is so much fraud, as Vos knows, that this should be done quickly and easily. The highly respected Special Counsel, Michael Gableman, has exposed so much already, including election bribery with Mark Zuckerberg’s $8.8 million, horrific fraud stealing votes from the elderly in nursing homes, and rampant ballot harvesting and phantom votes. Far more votes than is needed for the Republican candidate, me, to win. Our Country would not be in the mess it’s in if Republicans had the courage to act. We would be energy independent, no inflation, the Ukraine desecration would not be happening, our economy would be strong, there would have been no surrender in Afghanistan, and so much else. Speaker Vos should do the right thing and correct the Crime of the Century— immediately! It is my opinion that other states will be doing this, Wisconsin should lead the way!”

World awakening and silent war

The United States allocates an additional $800 million to help Ukraine in the field of security. The latest armed drones will be delivered to the country in the near future. In total, 9,000 antitank complexes, 800 air defense systems, 20 million pieces of ammunition will be transferred to Ukraine

***** Putin said that "the global dominance of the West is ending." He also said that the Russian economy currently generates enough income and announced that the minimum wage, living wage, public sector salaries, social benefits and pensions will be increased in the Russian Federation. According to him, "the US is trying to convince its citizens that their difficulties are the result of Russia's actions, but this is a lie"

***** Putin: "A network of dozens of laboratories operated in Ukraine, where military biological programs were conducted under the guidance and financial support of the Pentagon" ***** Ukraine legalizes cryptocurrencies. Zelensky signed a bill on virtual assets

***** NATO has no plans to send troops to Ukraine ***** A powerful earthquake of magnitude 7.3 occurred off the coast of Fukushima in northern Japan. An alarm went off at the Fukushima-1 nuclear power plant. Later, an earthquake of magnitude 5.6 also occurred in the northeast of the country. More than 700,000 private homes in Tokyo are de-energized. The probability of a tsunami remains ***** The United States is putting pressure on India, China, Egypt because of Russia, Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov says ***** The International Court of Justice of the United Nations has ruled that Russia must immediately stop the military operation in Ukraine ***** The Russian LDPR Party is ready to submit for discussion an initiative on a referendum for the return of the death penalty

***** The NATO countries believe that the alliance forces should not be present on the territory or in the airspace of Ukraine ***** The US Federal Reserve: The war in Ukraine will lead to an increase in inflation and a slowdown in the economy ***** The International Criminal Court is deeply concerned about Russia's use of force in Ukraine ***** The European Court of Human Rights has suspended the consideration of all cases related to Russia

***** According to the deputy mayor of Mariupol, as a result of the Russian bombing, the city drama theater, in which civilians were hiding, was damaged. According to his estimates, there were from 1,000 to 1,200 people there. The number of victims is currently unknown, the BBC reports. The Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation said that this is another lie and Russia has nothing to do with the destruction of the drama theater ***** Former Australian Spe(Continued on page 16)

(Continued from page 15)

came under fire for not doing with COVID-19), mandate investigations into the origins of outbreaks; and "try to embed equity in the pandemic response so we won't have huge disparities in vaccine distribution between rich and poor."

Skeptics worry an agreement could require countries to send a certain amount of its vaccines abroad, arguing it's fine to share surplus vaccines but the priority must be helping a country's own people first.

Others are concerned the treaty could supersede certain state and national laws and possibly require some form of health passports or digital IDs.

However, at this point there's no actual document with specific items to be included in the agreement. The treaty is an idea being negotiated, and it's unclear what a preliminary —let alone final —version would look like.

"The devil is in the details," said Dr. Jeffrey Singer, a practicing general surgeon and a senior fellow at the Cato Institute. "If the treaty involves cooperation between countries working together, especially sharing information, that's a good thing. If it involves everyone having to listen to a central authority, that's not a good thing." "When you have distant organizations trying to control things, there are always unintended consequences," he said. "Pandemics act differently in different communities. The WHO's main role should be information, and let us use that information as we need to locally."

A major complaint of those opposed to the treaty idea is that it will give the WHO greater authority to declare a pandemic using a looser definition, forcing countries to impose certain restrictions in a uniform, global manner.

"Historically, the WHO leadership has failed the people," wrote the World Council for Health in its open letter. "Among many examples, it approved the injurious H1N1 (swine flu) vaccine for a controversially declared pandemic. Equally, the WHO failed during the Covid-19 chapter as it encouraged lockdowns, suppressed early preventive treatments, and recommended product interventions that have proven to be neither safe nor effective."

"The WHO cannot be allowed to control the world's health agenda," the letter continued. On the other hand, University of Virginia law professor Margaret Riley, who teaches health law, noted that "done well, a treaty of this sort might help the WHO be more effective."

Critics, including Republican lawmakers in the U.S, have scrutinized the WHO for being under China's influence.

Whatever the treaty contains, one major issue for supporters is how to enforce compliance.

"Unless such a treaty includes mechanisms for real cooperation among major powers, it is unlikely to have a significant effect," said Riley. "But it is a start."

Gostin added that "we're going to have to find better ways to get compliance, including incentives."

In December, the 194 member countries of the World Health Assembly, the WHO's decisionmaking body, agreed to "kickstart a global process to draft and negotiate a convention, agreement, or other international instrument under the Constitution of the World Health Organization to strengthen pandemic prevention, preparedness, and response."

The decision established an intergovernmental negotiating body to draft what both supporters and opponents of the idea are calling an international "pandemic treaty."

Negotiations for the treaty began last month, and the next meeting will be held by August to discuss progress on a working draft. The goal is to deliver a progress report to the World Health Assembly in 2023 and adopt the agreement by 2024.

Earlier this month, the Council of the European Union authorized the opening of negotiations for a global pandemic treaty, signaling the E.U.'s support for the initiative.

The U.S. will take part in the talks and has expressed support for them, but has signaled it will oppose a legally binding treaty with the force of international law. India and Brazil have also expressed concerns.

The White House and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, which is run by Dr. Anthony Fauci, didn't respond to requests for comment.

Noting that in the U.S. the concentration of power in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) "led to mistakes," Singer argued that big organizations should just focus on updating health experts around the world with the latest good information.

(Continued from page 15)

cial Forces Commander Riccardo Bosi on Ukraine: "Ukraine is the center of the deep state. It's the head of the snake and Vlad's taking the head off."

"Ukraine has been the center of the globalists for decades and decades...The CIA has been working in the Ukraine for 70 years."

"Ignore all the chatter about nuclear war and Russia's attempts to take over the globe. Completely the opposite. Do your own research and stop watching the mainstream media." ***** Biden in a conversation with Xi Jinping said: "The US does not seek a new cold war with China, a change in China's system or the revival of alliances against China, the US does not support "Taiwan independence" and does not intend to seek conflict with China."

***** Italians, along with Bulgarians, went to rallies against NATO, as well as against the supply of weapons to Ukraine. The protesters blame NATO and the United States for the conflict in eastern Europe. Citizens condemn the North Atlantic Alliance for interfering in the politics of other states. ***** During the special operation, Florida authorities arrested 108 people suspected of sexual crimes. Among them is Xavier Jackson, an employee of the Disney amusement Park. In his spare time, he sent nudes to minors. During the work, the police managed to identify three more criminals, ***** Most of the videos shown over the past two weeks with Zelensky's participation were either recorded a long time ago or filmed on a green screen background. He claims that he has been in Ukraine all this time and is not going to leave the country. ***** The Hunter Biden laptop became a real issue last week. The New York Post was booted from Twitter for exposing this before the 2020 election. Now the Post contacted former senior intelligence officials who signed a 2020 letter saying Biden's laptop and his emails, which the NPC wrote about, were "Russian disinformation.” None of them apologized. Most declined to comment. Some, like James Clapper, have not changed their point of view."

Former intel chief: FBI 'for sure' committed crimes investigating Trump-Russia collusion

By John Solomon Just The News

Former acting Director of National Intelligence Ric Grenell, who began the declassification of documents that unraveled the discredited Russia collusion narrative, tells Just the News he is certain from evidence he saw that the FBI committed crimes while investigating former President Donald Trump.

During an interview on the John Solomon Reports podcast, Grenell said FBI officials had every reason to know the evidence of collusion was faulty or false and proceeded to mislead the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court and the Congress through lies and omissions.

"Political appointees and the leaders of the FBI and DOJ purposefully manipulated the truth," he said. "The people in the middle management. I've talked to them. I've talked to FBI agents, they knew that this was a phony exercise. but allowed this information to go to the FISA courts and to the media and to everywhere else, and they saw people manipulating it," he also said.

After three years of investigation, Special Prosecutor John Durham has secured a single conviction, against Kevin Clinesmith on a charge the former FBI lawyer doctored evidence to submit to the courts. Durham has also indicted former Clinton campaign lawyer Michael Sussmann and former Steele dossier source Igor Danchenko on charges of lying to the FBI probe. Both have pleaded not guilty and are awaiting trial.

"Do you have any doubt there are more crimes to be prosecuted by Durham?" Grenell was asked Tuesday.

"Yeah, I have no doubt," he answered.

Asked further whether he saw evidence that the FBI violated laws during the probe, he added: "For sure." vealed by a Justice Department inspector general report in 2019, must be viewed in the context of a much larger, troubling trend of government and media institutions betraying Americans' trust.

"For the political people at DOJ and FBI, that's where they need to be held to account," he said. "We hear a lot about, you know, manipulative politicians and political appointees manipulating the powers of government. But I've never seen it more rampant than in Democratic administrations, because the media allows them to get away with it."

Grenell's comments closely track those of his successor as DNI, John Ratcliffe, who told Fox News he delivered more than 1,000 documents to Durham and was confident more prosecutions are forthcoming.

"I would expect there to be quite a few more indictments because of that," Ratcliffe said last month. "There was not a proper predicate to begin that investigation. John Durham has said that publicly already."

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