PANDEMIC OVERLORDS: CDC launches traveler-based SARS-CoV-2 (COVID) Genomic Surveillance Program – 8 U.S. international airports being used as experimental testing sites
Even though the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) "pandemic" is long over, the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is
still pushing fear and tyranny with its "Traveler-based SARS-CoV-2 Genomic Surveillance Program," which has expanded to eight U.S. international airports.
First started in September 2021, the CDC's Genomic Surveillance Program was created to track travelers, which the federal agency considers to be "an especially important group to consider when tracking new and emerging infectious disease."
After the program was launched in the fall of 2021 at just three U.S. airports, the expectation in the coming months was that the program would be disbanded since COVID ended. Instead of shutting the program down, the CDC instead expanded it nearly threefold.
The CDC
announced that it would be placing "public health professionals" at the eight airports, including John F. Kennedy International in New York; Newark Liberty International in New Jersey; San Francisco International in California; and Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International in Georgia.
"We wanted to achieve several things: to get the platform set up at three airports, gauge the level of participation, and determine if we could detect variants using pooled sampling," said Cindy Friedman, chief of the Travelers' Health Branch of the CDC's Genomic Surveillance Program.
"We achieved our goals and showed proof of concept."
(Related: Did you catch the CDC study
showing that heart disease risk skyrockets by 13,200 percent following COVID injections?)
First it's voluntary; then it becomes mandatory -- at gunpoint
In partnership with XpresCheck, an airport-based company that provides COVID "testing," and Concentric by Ginkgo, a network of more than 60 laboratories with genetic sequencing capability, the CDC hopes to continue probing travelers' nasal cavities and other orifices in search of COVID germs.
The CDC did it with the "omicron" (
moronic) strain and others, and now believes it can do it with whatever further mutations COVID presents, probably around Election Day.
For now, the program is "voluntary," allowing individual samples to be collected from "participating" travelers who are allowed to remain "anonymous." Precisely what the CDC is doing with the samples after it collects them remains unknown.
"It started voluntary in China, too, until it wasn't," warned someone on X. "Then they welded apartment buildings shut, forced people to get vaccinated at gunpoint, and hauled everyone else into isolation concentration camps where they were only allowed to be released if they paid a bribe. They even killed every pet in Shanghai."
This same X account, by the way, noted ties between Donald Trump and his running mate JD Vance and the Rothschilds, Rockefellers, BlackRock and Peter Thiel.
"Vance's companies deal with gene therapies, mRNA, and young blood," this person added.
"There are so many reasons why I refuse to fly anymore, but if I were still flying and they made this mandatory, I'd be done for sure," wrote another.
Someone named "Jo Christiansen" (@JoChristianse13) retold the ugly story of what Andrew Cuomo did to New York during the COVID "pandemic."
"Back when Cuomo was trying to introduce contact tracing in New York state, he put the National Guard at JFK on the pretext of them asking travelers what their movements were," Christiansen wrote.
"I saw them there as I came through, but I never saw them approaching travelers and the contact tracing was never instituted. I don't think anybody downloaded the app."
"These psychos collecting airplane toilet wastewater for testing is just sick," wrote another about the CDC's weird obsession with human bodily fluids, which it eagerly wants to collect from wherever in order to "test" it for "COVID."
If the CDC is in charge of it, you can be sure it has nothing to do with improving the health of you or your family. Learn more at
CDC.news.
Sources for this article include:
X.com
CDC.gov
NaturalNews.com