Gates a donor to North Dakota’s governor, a former Microsoft executive

Aldevron is headquartered in North Dakota and maintains facilities in Nebraska and Wisconsin — states that are home to academic institutions that have performed key mRNA research — and also states where Gates has significant investments.

North Dakota State University (NDSU) is actively engaged with mRNA research, including research funded by the National Science Foundation.

According to the NDSU Foundation, Aldevron was founded at NDSU in the late ’90s and all of its founders are NDSU alumni. NDSU is also home to Aldevron Tower, an R&D facility.

Gates is connected to North Dakota governor and former Republican presidential candidate Doug Burgum. A tech billionaire, Burgum founded Great Plains Software in the 1980s, which Microsoft bought for $1.1 billion in 2001. He served as senior vice president of the Microsoft Business Solutions Group until 2007.

Gates donated $107,000 to Burgum’s 2016 gubernatorial campaign — the largest single contributor. Burgum and Gates were pictured together during the latter’s 2017 visit to North Dakota and during 1998 congressional testimony, while both attended a dinner party thrown by Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos at Washington, D.C.’s Alfalfa Club — founded by Robert E. Lee — in January 2020.

Burgum has repeatedly defended Gates in interviews.

In a 2017 interview, Burgum said “[Bill] and Melinda [Gates] are doing so many amazing things on education in the United States, on global health.”

In a November 2023 interview with The Atlantic, Burgum said the Gates’ have saved more lives than anyone “probably in the history of the planet” and that Gates is “one of the most misunderstood people that we have in America right now.”

According to Fox Business, in 2022, Gates expanded his footprint in North Dakota through the controversial purchase of 2,100 acres of farmland — spanning two counties. The deal was completed “despite backlash from the community.”

According to North Dakota attorney Sarah Vogel, the purchase was completed via the Red River Trust — described as a “corporate shell” connected to Gates — despite the state’s anti-corporate farming law, which protects family farmers by largely prohibiting corporate farm buyouts.

Vogel noted that North Dakota Attorney General Drew Wrigley — a Burgum appointee — approved the purchase.

Gates bought farmland in mRNA research hubs Nebraska, Wisconsin

Along with North Dakota, Nebraska and Wisconsin are home to Aldevron facilities, to universities conducting significant mRNA research and to Gates-owned farmland.

For instance, University of Nebraska researchers have conducted multiple research studies involving mRNA — including hosting two Moderna clinical trials, and other mRNA research dating back to the 1990s.

Gates completed controversial farmland purchases in Nebraska, using 20 shell companies to buy over 20,000 acres of farmland in the state at over $113 million. According to state Sen. Tom Brewer, If the land was given to a nonprofit — possibly exempting it from property taxes — it would “decimate” the counties involved.

Wisconsin is also home to significant mRNA research, with the University of Wisconsin known as one of the pioneers in the field. According to Biocompare, researchers at the university launched mRNA research in 1990. The university continues to actively pursue mRNA research, including hosting mRNA clinical trials.

While Wisconsin is one of the states where Gates is known to own farmland, little public information is available about Gates’ holdings in the state. However, in 2023, Microsoft completed a $76 million purchase of 420 acres of farmland in the state.

Aldevron maintains research sites on the campuses of the University of Nebraska and the University of Wisconsin.

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Enter Gates

Moderna is also connected to mRNA firms that Gates has invested in. Latypova said these investments appeared “strange” — until the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I think in general Gates has been obsessed with the idea of vaccination, which, for a long time, was not a good business investment … So it’s at a minimum strange that he pursued vaccinations, especially in the Third World, so zealously. It didn’t make financial sense until COVID,” Latypova said.

For instance, Gates maintains significant holdings in Danaher Corporation, a life sciences healthcare company. The Gates Foundation first invested in Danaher in 2022 and, as of the third quarter of 2023, these investments totaled $92.54 million.

In 2021, Danaher purchased Aldevron, a company that manufactures “high-quality plasmid DNA, mRNA, and proteins” — and that produced the DNA used in Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccines.

Last year, Aldevron announced the expansion of its “mRNA production capabilities to include lipid nanoparticle (LNP) encapsulation.”

This is not the only connection between Aldevron — which touts the benefits of mRNA on its blog — and Moderna. In 2021, the two companies announced an “expanded partnership for mRNA vaccine and therapeutic pipeline,” while Kenneth Chien, Ph.D., co-founder of Moderna, was an Aldevron board member.

The Gates Foundation may have been linked to Aldevron as early as 2017 when the foundation and Aldevron both supported research on modified viruses published in the Journal of Virology.

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Bill Gates Investing Heavily in mRNA Technology — Are Taxpayers Helping Him?

Bill Gates has a long history of investing in mRNA technology and firms active in this sphere. But would these investments have been possible without U.S. government — or taxpayer — support of mRNA research?

by Michael Nevradakis, Ph.D.

Bill Gates has a long history of investing in mRNA technology and firms active in this sphere. But would these investments have been possible without U.S. government — or taxpayer — support of mRNA research?

According to Sasha Latypova, a former pharmaceutical industry executive with 25 years of experience in pharmaceutical research and development, Gates’ investments in the mRNA field — and the profits he has reaped — were made possible by U.S. government and military funding of bioweapons research.

Latypova told The Defender that “mRNA is entirely funded and pushed on the market under military contracts and funding. It is represented as ‘defensive’ activity in order to skirt the Bioweapons Convention, which prohibits making offensive bioweapons.”

According to Latypova, “The Pentagon came up with the cover story of ‘pandemic preparedness’ in order to fund on a large scale the making of biological poisons and related systems, including making them at scale.”

As a result of this research, Gates has invested in companies actively pursuing mRNA technology — and continues to invest in those companies today.

One mRNA company Gates has an interest in — Aldevron — has operations in Nebraska, North Dakota and Wisconsin, where research universities have long conducted mRNA research.

Gates also has amassed significant holdings of farmland in these states.

Experts who spoke with The Defender said that Gates may be looking to wield significant influence in those states through his investments and land ownership.

Immunologist and biochemist Jessica Rose, Ph.D., said, “The farmland … could be a part of an ongoing plan for a global control/power grab” by Gates.

She added:

“With regard to modified mRNA injection of plants, animals and humans, it is possible that there could be genetic tags therein. It is also possible that these injections are designed for other purposes, such as population reduction under the guise of ‘vaccination.’

“When small numbers of corporate giants are making billions from products that are ineffective at their promoted task, something is amiss.”

“I think Gates wants to privately lord over a large territory with productive land,” Latypova said.

Gates: mRNA vaccines can ‘change the world’

In a recent interview and a 2022 “TED Talk,” Gates laid out his five-year vision for global health, saying there will soon be “factories worldwide that can make $2 vaccines with even less lead time than we’ve had to here during this pandemic.”

The factories will produce vaccines for all diseases, Gates said.

Heralding the future of vaccines, Gates said more and better mRNA vaccines would make COVID-19 “the last pandemic.”

Gates backed up these statements with recent investments promoting mRNA vaccines, including $40 million in funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation issued in October 2023 to help develop mRNA vaccines in Africa.

But Gates began investing in mRNA vaccine technology long before the COVID-19 pandemic. In January 2018, TIME reported that Gates counted mRNA vaccines — along with gene editing, better vaccine storage and artificial intelligence — among the six technologies that could change the world.

In 2017 and again in 2019, he invested $155 million in BioNTech, the German biotech firm that collaborated with Pfizer to develop mRNA COVID-19 vaccines and boosters.

Gates later sold his BioNTech stock at a significant profit.

In 2015, Gates invested $162 million into CureVac, described by the Gates Foundation as “a leading clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company specializing in mRNA-based vaccine technologies” and which, in 2021, was attempting to develop its own mRNA COVID-19 vaccine.

CureVac, which features a photograph of Gates on its website, maintains a partnership with the Gates Foundation “to develop mRNA-based vaccines against various infectious diseases.”

These investments likely would not have been possible — or profitable — had the U.S. government and military not funded mRNA research.

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Loveless Anger Can’t Be Righteous

“I can understand why you felt that way,” said Ben.

“Well, Dad couldn’t,” said Judah. “What I said grieved him deeply — because he loved you. And his grief made me angrier, because — I’m ashamed to admit it — because I didn’t love you.” Judah paused and dropped his eyes. “In fact, I don’t think I loved Dad, at least not like I should have loved him. I loved me, though it still took a while for me to see this. I still thought my anger toward you was justified, righteous even.”

“I’m sure it was, at least in part,” said Ben.

Judah shook his head. “I’m pretty sure none of it was. You know, I asked Dad once why he wasn’t more angry with you. He said it was because ‘the Lord is merciful and gracious, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love’ (Psalm 103:8). I took this as Dad avoiding coming to terms with what you did and trying to use Scripture to make it look holy. So I reminded him that other Scriptures clearly show that God gets angry over sin, and so should we. To which he said something like, ‘When men get angry, God’s righteousness is rarely seen.’

“I said to him, ‘So, we’re never supposed to get angry. Ben can walk off to only God knows where with all that money you worked so hard for, blow it on whores and whatever else, and we’re not supposed to get angry? We’re just supposed to bow our heads and meekly pray that God brings him back home? I don’t think so!’

“Dad said, ‘I’m not saying we shouldn’t be angry. But the Scriptures say, “Be angry, and do not sin”’ (Psalm 4:4). I wanted to pull my hair out. ‘Tell me what you think that’s supposed to mean, Dad!’ I don’t think I’ll ever forget his answer. He said, ‘Jude, I’ve been trying to figure that out for decades. And, honestly, I don’t know if I’m getting the balance right with Ben. But what I do know is this: if God’s mercy and grace and steadfast love make him slow to anger toward his sinful children — of which I am one — then when my children sin, that’s what I want them to experience from me.’”

Both men were quiet for a moment. Then Judah said, “That’s when I realized loveless anger cannot be righteous anger. It’s also when I realized just how not like Dad I was, not to mention just how not like God I was.”

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