The genetically engineered microbes we discussed in Part One of this report aren’t just wiping out the natural biosphere to fix nitrogen. In this video we’ll explore the DOD’s Tellus project that offers a blueprint to the microbial architecture of the global bio-surveillance system, and how this design has been implemented and is now being deployed.
There is an active effort to modify the substrate of life on our planet: to recolonize the very soil on the surface of the Earth with genetically engineered microbes. Millions of acres of U.S. farmland have already been inoculated. The soil itself is being re-formatted from a natural ecosystem into a patent-pending, CRISPR-modified, nitrogen-fixing, Roundup-spittin’ machine — with consideration given neither to crops nor consumer.
a period during which solar activity diminishes, resulting in drastic climatic and geophysical changes to our planet. These include increased galactic cosmic rays (GCRs), seismic activity, and volcanism; the latter often results in a global reduction in temperatures (see “the year without a summer” — and much more on the IAF wiki).