The team of scientists behind the AstraZeneca Covid injection are scrambling to develop a new “vaccine” to supposedly tackle the bubonic plague.
Bubonic plague is an infection spread mostly to humans by infected fleas that travel on rodents.
Called the Black Death, it killed millions of Europeans during the Middle Ages.
The flu-like symptoms include fever, headaches, and vomiting, as well as swollen and painful lymph nodes occurring in the area closest to where the bacteria entered the skin.
While many would assume the Black Death was confined to the history books, the Oxford University scientists behind the AstraZeneca Covid “vaccine” are now rushing to prepare for another bubonic plague pandemic.
Claims of “superbug” strains emerging in distant corners of the world have reignited calls for mass global vaccination efforts.
Among the reasons being touted to justify a mass vaccination campaign are “climate change” and the specter of bioterrorism.
The UK’s Telegraph reported:
“Scientists have called for the UK to add a Black Death jab to its stockpile as the risk of a superbug strain rises.
“And now the Oxford team says a trial of its vaccine on 40 healthy adults which started in 2021 has yielded results which show it is safe and able to produce an immune response in people.
“The man behind the trial, Prof Sir Andrew Pollard, director of the Oxford Vaccine Group, told The Telegraph that the results of the trial are to be submitted to a journal for peer review within weeks, with further clinical trials expected.”
“There are no licensed plague vaccines in the UK,” Pollard told the outlet.
“Antibiotics are the only treatment.
“There are some licensed vaccines in Russia.
“The risk in the UK is currently very low.
“Previous historical pandemics that had high mortality were associated with initiation from fleas on rodents but were driven by person-to-person spread.”
Government military scientists recently called for a vaccine to be approved and manufactured in bulk quantities.
They argue that the plague still exists in pockets of the world and has the “potential for pandemic spread.”
Scientists at Porton Down’s Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (DSTL) wrote in a paper in the journal NPJ Vaccines that vaccines need to be expedited “to prevent future disastrous plague outbreaks.”
They insist that this is compounded by the rising issue of antimicrobial resistance which is creating superbug strains of plague that cannot be easily treated by antibiotics.
The Oxford Vaccine Group has been trialing a bubonic plague vaccine since 2021.
The trial has included a group of 40 healthy adults.
The group’s leader, Professor Pollard, says the vaccine has proven a success, and further clinical trials are expected.
Experts from the Oxford Vaccine Group were responsible for the creation of the AstraZeneca Covid injections.
The AstraZeneca “vaccine” was recently subject to a global recall after serious side effects were acknowledged.
AstraZeneca claimed the withdrawal was due to commercial rather than health concerns, as newer vaccines designed for emerging variants enter the market.
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