Historic: The City Council of Hesperia, California Became the First City to ‘Opt-Out’ of San Bernardino County’s Agenda 21 Plan

Hesperia, located in the high desert of Southern California, became the first city to opt-out of San Bernardino County’s Agenda 21 program. The voluntary program was installed into the county with grants through the San Bernardino Council of Governments (SBCOG). The objective behind the plan is ‘Sustainable Development,’ which is rationing, cataloguing and controlling all assets and charging people for the use of the assets. It is a backdoor method to bring socialism into the local county government. Citizen activists who began their mission five years ago were successful in their bid to have the Hesperia City Council rescind the county-wide ‘Vision Statement’.




Bioweapon? Scientists Sound the Alarm Over DARPA Plans to Spread Viruses Using Insects

A team of scientists issued a stern warning in a report about a dangerous US government program called ‘Insect Allies’ that, instead of engineering the DNA of seeds, would use bugs to swarm and infect plants with genetically modified viruses to pass along the new ‘resilience’ genes.  The Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Project Agency (DARPA) claims that their ‘Insect Allies’ are a countermeasures against potential natural and engineered threats to the US food supply. However, the researchers point out that DARPA’s creations can be used as an entirely new class of bioweapons that would prompt other nations to seek similar weapons, and is likely to violate the Biological Weapons Convention, a treaty banning the development, production, and stockpiling of biological and toxin weapons. By 2020 or 2021, DARPA plans to test the virus-infected insects that cannot be controlled on crops inside greenhouses at undisclosed locations.

A team of scientist sounds the alarm in a new Science Policy Forum report about a mysterious US government program that is developing genetically modified viruses that would be dispersed into the environment using insects. The virus-infected or ‘Frankenstein’ insects are being developed as countermeasures against potential natural and engineered threats to the US food supply. The program is operated by the Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Project Agency (DARPA) could be viewed as an attempt to develop an entirely new class of bioweapons that would prompt other nations to seek similar weapons, they cautioned.

The researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology and the University of Freiburg both in Germany, and the University of Montpellier in France suggest DARPA’s program could likely breach the Biological Weapons Convention, the first multilateral disarmament treaty banning the development, production, and stockpiling of biological and toxin weapons.

Dubbed the “Insect Allies” program, DARPA began modifying insects in 2017, with the plan to produce more resilient crops to help farmers deal with climate change, drought, frost, floods, salinity, and disease, said Gizmodo. The technology at the center of the program is an entirely new method of genetically modifying crops. Instead of modifying seeds in a lab, farmers would send swarms of insects into their crops, where the genetically modified bugs would infect plants with a virus that passes along the new resilience genes, a process known as horizontal genetic alteration. Hence the technology’s name—Horizontal Environmental Genetic Alteration Agents (HEGAA).

For HEGAA to work, Gizmodo explains that DARPA labs develop a virus that is inserted into the chromosome of a target organism. Scientists would use leafhoppers, whiteflies, and aphids genetically altered in the lab using CRISPR, or a variant of a gene-editing system, to carry the virus into crops. Each plant would then be infected by the insect, triggering the intended effects of protecting crops from natural and or human-made threats.

However, the lead author of the report, Richard Guy Reeves from the Department of Evolutionary Genetics at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology, says DARPA’s Insect Allies program is disturbing and an example of dual-use research in which the US government, in addition to aiding farmers’ crops, is also developing a biological weapon.

Insect Allies is reportedly backed by $27 million of funding. According to Gizmodo, there are four academic research teams currently working on the project, including researchers at the Boyce Thompson Institute in New York, Pennsylvania State University, Ohio State University and the University of Texas at Austin. DARPA maintains that “all work is conducted inside closed laboratories, greenhouses, or other secured facilities,” and that the insects have built-in lifespans to limit their spread. By 2020 or 2021, DARPA is planning on testing the virus-infected insects on crops inside greenhouses at undisclosed locations.

Reeves said the use of insects as a vehicle for genetic modification is a horrible idea because they cannot be controlled and indicates that traditional overhead sprays to deliver HEGAAs is the safest bet. DARPA says insects are the only practical solution, as overhead spraying of HEGAAs would require increased farming infrastructure — something that is not available to all farmers.

The report specifies how there is currently no global regulatory framework to support this new way of transporting HEGAAs to crops, which if not supervised correctly, could lead to potential mishaps.

The scientists of the report interpret DARPA’s insect program as “an intention to develop a means of delivery of HEGAAs for offensive purposes,” such as conducting biological warfare.

These genetically modified bugs could be implanted with a dangerous plant-killing disease that the Trump adminstration could unleash over farmland in Venezuela, Syria, Iran, North Korea, Russia, and or even China, that would decimate the countries’ food supply.

The introduction of this potentially dangerous technology, the scientists argue, would usher in an entirely new class of biological, insect-dispatched weapons that could be considered weapons of mass destruction. Scientists warn that this technology would spur rival nations to develop similar insect programs.

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