Plandemic
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Plandemic

Indoctornation

Mikki Willis, Mikki Willis

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eBook - ePub

Plandemic

Indoctornation

Mikki Willis, Mikki Willis

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About This Book

USA Today Bestseller The incredible true story of the most banned documentary in history. Researching the controversy arising after the release of the viral phenomenon known as Plandemic, the most seen and censored documentary in history, an investigative journalist sets out to disprove and debunk claims made throughout the film.Instead, the journalistopens a Pandora's box to witness firsthand an underworld of corruption, lies, and the darkest of unsolved mysteries. The result? A fascinating behind-the-scenes account about the making of Plandemic and Plandemic: Indoctornation; an exposé of the truth behind the origins of COVID-19; an alarming examination of individuals, such as Dr. Anthony Fauci and Bill Gates, and organizations like the CDC, NIH, WHO, and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, among others, driving the global vaccination agenda; and a look at the tech giant and mainstream media forces doing their utmost to silence and suppress the veracity of these findings. Investigative filmmaker Mikki Willis focuses his unflinching lens on two key subjects: virologist Dr. Judy Mikovits, who speaks frankly about the machinations for control and profit corrupting individuals and institutions tasked with overseeing public health; and Dr. David E. Martin, whose research and shocking data corroborate allegations of conflicts of interest. The US media and fact checkers condemned the two documentaries as "dangerous conspiracy theory."Today, the two-part bombshell is being hailed globally for warning the world of the crimes against humanity that are just now being uncovered. From the death of his brother and mother due to bad medicine, to his awakening at Ground Zeroon 9/11, Mikki Willis describes in detail the incredible life experiences that led him to risk his career and safety to create the Plandemic series.

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Information

Publisher
Skyhorse
Year
2021
ISBN
9781510765559
CHAPTER ONE
The Origins
I am a firm believer in the people. If given the truth, they can be depended upon to meet any national crisis. The great point is to bring them the real facts.
—Abraham Lincoln
Xiaohongsan, China
The Wuhan Institute of Virology
December 2019
images
Researchers in full hazard gear moved quietly beneath the fluorescent lights of the giant concrete building that housed the Wuhan Institute of Virology. White space suits. Giant green gloves. White plastic boots like a child would wear for puddle jumping. Overall, the effect would have been comical . . . if the lab hadn’t been filled with deadly pathogens.
The researchers were used to the air of danger that pervaded the facility. Just one of the invisible particles that they handled every day could wipe out an entire city. Incidentally, there was a city of eleven million people surrounding them. The responsibility was heavy—and to some, they weren’t up to the job.
The world had heard of SARS in the early 2000s. In 2012, there was the report of another coronavirus outbreak (this one called MERS, or Middle East Respiratory Syndrome). But while the world was distracted by a virus associated with camels, few knew that a potentially deadly SARS strain had been detected in China in 2013. This pathogen—code-named WIV1 (and named for the Wuhan Institute of Virology)—attracted little attention except from the US and Chinese researchers funded by the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) and Anthony Fauci. By 2015, Dr. Ralph Baric of the University of North Carolina and Dr. Zhengli Shi of Wuhan had performed research that had concluded ominously that the Wuhan coronavirus was “poised for human emergence.”
If it was going to happen anywhere, Wuhan seemed a likely place. As early as 2016, American researchers found that China was suffering from a “shortage of officials, experts, and scientists who specialize in laboratory biosafety.” The greatest concern was that lab researchers who were accidentally infected through lax safety protocol could then inadvertently spread rare diseases throughout their community. Still, that nation’s leaders seemed intent on pressing forward with ever more biomedical research.
When the Wuhan Institute of Virology first officially opened in 2017, scientists around the world warned that operations at the $44 million lab were a recipe for disaster. The SARS virus had escaped from a major lab in Beijing multiple times, and despite the government’s promises of unparalleled safety in Wuhan, the risk to the rest of the world was obvious: Wuhan would be home to more than 1,500 virus strains. Could a deadly virus escape right under the noses of the researchers?
Early indications were not good. According to the US State Department, American Embassy officials in Beijing recorded at least two official warnings about the lab’s insufficient safety measures in early 2018. However, it wasn’t just the Americans raising alarm. Although Chinese media have historically been slow to admit the failure of government projects, even the propagandistic national press reported that security inspections had discovered several incidents and accidents at the lab in Wuhan.
One security review in particular concluded that the lab had failed to meet national standards in several categories, especially as it concerned the handling of the bats that had been captured for study of the coronaviruses they carry. Researchers admitted to investigators that there had been bat attacks that left them splattered with bat blood or bat urine on their skin. That kind of bat-to-human contact was exactly the kind of interaction that the outside world feared. Even a less-noticeable bat interaction with another lab animal could cause a chain reaction of infection—one that could potentially cripple the entire world.
Still, in the face of a moratorium making much of that kind of research off-limits in the US, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) continued to funnel money to Wuhan to study coronaviruses in bats. More alarming, the study also funded research into mechanisms that would make bat-derived coronavirus deadlier to humans. The NIH grants to the EcoHealth Alliance, which funded research in Wuhan, would continue up through April 2020. This wasn’t random.
In 1999, the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) under the leadership of Dr. Anthony Fauci began funding research into recombinant coronaviruses. Their specific aim was to create “infectious, replication defective, coronavirus.” In short, they sought to use coronavirus as a technology that could infect humans without a high risk of transmission. This work, done at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, resulted in US Patent 7,279,327: “Methods for Producing Recombinant Coronavirus,” filed in 2002 before Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) existed.
Research into coronaviruses had been heavily funded as a means to harness the highly manipulatable virus for several potential applications in both medicine and bioterrorism. In the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) jumped to file patents on the gene sequence of the coronavirus itself. Although naturally occurring phenomena cannot be patented, any scientific procedure used to study one can. Patenting coronavirus meant that the CDC could control future study—and future vaccines. Based on the number of coronavirus patents that arose in the late 1990s, they foresaw a busy—and potentially profitable—future for that viral family.
All that was likely swirling in the mind of lab director Wang Yanyi in December 2019. An unexplained wildfire of pneumonia had been spreading across the Wuhan metropolitan area for weeks, and doctors had traced it all back to a coronavirus. Yanyi and his team had been tasked with finding out if this coronavirus was a long-buried strain that had resurfaced, or if it could be something new—and therefore much more dangerous.
The results of their initial research were disturbing: This virus did have 96 percent genetic similarity to a strain of coronavirus that had been isolated from bats nearly twenty years before. However, beyond that, it appeared to be something entirely novel.
Samples of the virus reportedly collected from patients arrived in Wuhan on December 30, 2019, and the lab’s scientists had reported the viral genome sequence by January 2, 2020. The news of the novel coronavirus was reported to the World Health Organization (WHO) on January 11. According to a Stat News Report article released on January 11, Chinese national media reported the first official death from the virus.1
On July 9, 2021, Organic Consumers Association reported that Dr. Ralph Baric, the NIAID, and Moderna entered into a Material Transfer Agreement to start making a new coronavirus vaccine on December 12, weeks before the “pathogen” was isolated.2
Lab director Yanyi and the rest of the world now knew what they were dealing with. But where did it come from, and how did it start infecting humans? That was probably a less important question than this one: Was it too late to stop it?
Ojai, California
The sleepy mountain town of Ojai, California, couldn’t be farther away from a Chinese coronavirus research lab. About an hour and a half up the road from Los Angeles, Ojai is far removed as well from the hustle and bustle of Hollywood. Getting there involves a slow and steady journey up a winding mountain road, a drive that requires a literal change of pace. As you motor through the natural arches of centuries-old trees, sparkling lakes pop out from behind the bends. Charming farmhouses are nestled in the greenery. Then, suddenly, there is a small town seemingly dropped into the forest out of nowhere.
Spanish-style adobe buildings with wooden signs line the one narrow thoroughfare of commerce in the city. Vegan restaurants live happily alongside coffee shops, tax preparation firms, lawyers, and design studios. Tucked away on a small side street, at the top floor of a dark and nondescript commercial building, was the office of Elevate Productions.
Elevate was the brainchild of Mikki Willis, his wife, producer Nadia Salamanca, and an international team of collaborators. The road to its creation was a rocky one for Mikki, who experienced the deaths of his brother and mother just a few years before coincidentally finding himself at the World Trade Center on 9/11.
Although his experiences were ones that might have turned another man bitter, Mikki ultimately found a deep sense of connection and meaning in the experiences. Frustrated that the news media did not seem interested in telling the positive stories of humans working together in 9/11 rescue efforts—focused as they were on the tales of tragedy and terror—Mikki abandoned a promising career as a hotshot Hollywood director to tell stories about the good in life—and to encourage others to do the same.
“Before my experience at the World Trade Center, I was driven to obtain all the material fetishes we’ve been wired to see as symbols of success. All that stuff they strive for in Hollywood,” Mikki told me in an interview. “But there I was, standing on the rubble of what was an international symbol of power just moments before . . . watching exotic cars being flipped and crushed by rescue vehicles, while body parts lay scattered around me. . . . Suddenly my life goals felt insignificant.”
He continued, “It was a snap to grid moment for me. I could no longer do the work I was doing before. I was living someone else’s dream. If I was going to remain in ‘the business,’ I’d have to be involved in something more meaningful.”
In 2005, that declaration took the shape of what would come to be called the Elevate Film Festival. “It was more of a guerrilla filmmaking competition than a traditional film festival,” Mikki explained. “The object of the game was to challenge filmmakers from around the world to produce a short film in a micro amount of time. We gave each filmmaker a small budget, then sent them out into the world to find stories that would lift the human spirit.
“Tired of all the negative news and depressing narratives, our goal was to inspire artists and storytellers to focus on the upside of humanity—all of the innovators, heroes, and great things happening around the world.”
What started as a small gathering in a local yoga studio rapidly attracted audiences of up to 6,000 people, filling arenas such as L.A.’s Nokia Theater. As director of the festival, Mikki was tasked with developing each film assignment. One such film assignment was a documentary about urban farmers. “Most of the farmers were immigrants—some legal, some not— and they had developed a beautiful garden, right in the middle of the most industrial areas of South Central Los Angeles. They turned a concrete jungle it into an incredible oasis where they were growing and selling organic food to benefit the entire community,” he explained.
Just as the gardens were in full bloom, the owner of the land, a real estate mogul, decided to sell the entire block. “We created a short film titled South Central Farmers, then blasted it out to help raise awareness. Overnight, media and thousands of people showed up to stand in solidarity with the farmers and families who relied on the gardens to survive. It was my first experience of producing a piece of media that caused people to take right action. It lit a fire in me!” Mikki explained.
“I began to pay attention to things that I had always avoided,” he continued. “Like politics. Though I was deep into my thirties, I had never voted. Barack Obama was the first candidate to inspire me enough to take that leap. I was so enamored by his hypnotic presence that I teared up the night he was sworn in. I was certain that this beautiful family man would deliver on his promise of ‘Hope and Change.’ By the end of his first term, it was clear that he was like all the rest. A politician. I didn’t think I’d ever vote again.”
Then, along came Bernie Sanders. “People who I love and trust swore that he was different,” Mikki said. They sent links to videos of Bernie dating back decades. His message was consistent. He took me back to my childhood. He spoke about single mothers and how those on the bottom need to be lifted up. I remember thinking, ‘I wish we had him when I was a child!’”
Ever intent on sharing solutions with his friends and fellow activists, Mikki began to promote Sanders online and became active in various Internet groups related to the campaign. When he heard that Sanders would be making a campaign stop in Ventura, CA—a short drive from Ojai—Mikki set out to attend his first political rally. He wouldn’t be attending just as an observer, though. He intended to film the proceedings. After asking for and receiving permission from the Sanders camp, Mikki showed up on the big day with his camera in tow.
Prior to the rally, he filmed a press conference hosted by celebrities. “An old RV pulls up and out steps Rosario Dawson and Shailene Woodley,” he recalled. “I was behind my camera when Rosario looked directly at me. Her eyes got big, and she mouthed the words, ‘Oh my God,’ then waved to me. I looked over my shoulder to see who she was waving to. There was no one behind me.”
“She came right up to me and said, ‘I love you,’ then gave me a big bear hug. I figured she had me confused with someone else, but I wasn’t about to reject that hug. I said, ‘I love you too!’ And I meant it. I had always admired her onscreen, and I’d seen her on video speaking at Bernie rallies. I just wished that I was whoever she thought I was.”
As it turned out, Dawson knew exactly who Mikki was. He had been making home movies and posting them on his Facebook page. One of those videos even reached 100 million views—and one of them was Dawson.
In the one-minute clip, Mikki is seen in the car with his sons, Azai and Zuri. Speaking directly to his cell-phone camera, Mikki explains that Azai had received two of the same birthday gifts at his party, so the duo went to the toy store to exchange one of them. Azai’s choice? A doll made in the likeness of “Ariel” from The Little Mermaid.
“How do you think a dad feels when his son wants to get this?” Mikki asked in the video, posted on YouTube on August 23, 2015. Smiling big in the background, Azai chimes in, “Yeah!” Mikki responds, “Yeahh! I let my boys choose their life. . . . We say, ‘Yeah! Choose it. Choose your expression. Choose what you’re into. Choose your sexuality. Choose whatever.’ And you have my promise, both of you, as we sit in this car—this hot car in this parking lot—you have my promise forever to love you and accept you no matter what life you choose.”
Mikki had been recording sweet moments with his sons almost since their birth, but there was something special about that clip. The video went around the world, and Mikki was invited on major TV shows to talk about his favorite subject: fatherhood.
He soon learned, however, that his message was being misconstrued. It was the line “choose your sexuality” that was at the center of the brewing storm. “I didn’t expect my sons, who were only two and four at the time, to understand what those words meant. It was a message intended to reach them once they were mature enough,” Mikki explained. “I simply wanted my boys to know that the world and their personal choices could never dilute my love for them. What I wasn’t aware of at that moment in time was the emerging agenda to erase gender identities.”
“Let me make this point crystal clear,” he continued. “I am about personal freedom. It’s not my job to judge others for the way they live their lives, so long as they are not doing harm to others, or our environment. How can I expect to live free if I don’t grant that right to others? Be who you were born to be. If your choice is to live as a straight person—do your thing. A gay person—cool. Gender fluid— you do you. But let us be wise enough to recognize the potential hazards of allowing any new ideology the power to erase our nature. After all, in my humble opinion, it’s our separation from Nature that’s at the root of every issue we’re currently dealing with.
“To me, the term ‘sexuality’ refers to the style in which we choose to express our uniqueness as beings capable of procreation. My sons are boys,” he said. “One day they w...

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