A landmark decision was made in the Tennessee Senate on Thursday as lawmakers passed HB1894, a bill that would redefine the term "Drug" within the state's legal code to include food products containing vaccines or vaccine materials.
During the discussion in the Senate, proponents of the bill cited research from the University of California Riverside, where scientists have been investigating the feasibility of using edible plants, such as lettuce, as vehicles for mRNA vaccine delivery.
Survival Beef Company CEO: "No Lab-Grown Meat, No mRNA Jabs, and No 'Beef Crumbles' Ever" The Gateway Pundit previously reported that researchers at the University of California were awarded a $500,000 grant from the National Science Foundation to develop technology that infuses experimental mRNA COVID-19 vaccines into spinach, lettuce, and other edible plants.
The team of nanobiotechnology experts is currently working on successfully delivering DNA containing mRNA BioNTech technology into chloroplasts, the part of the plants that instruct its cells' DNA to replicate the vaccine material.
The researchers are tasked with demonstrating that genetically modified plants can produce enough mRNA to replace COVID-19 jabs and infuse the plants with the right dosage required to eat to replace vaccines.
Experimental mRNA vaccines will be edible, Juan Pablo Giraldo, an associate professor in UCR's Department of Botany and Plant Sciences who is leading the research explained in a press release published by the university on Sept. 16.
Last year, Rep. Thomas Massie revealed that taxpayer money is being used to develop "Transgenic edible vaccines," transforming edible plants like lettuce and spinach into factories for producing mRNA vaccines as alternatives to mRNA shots.
The Tennessee State Senate has also taken a definitive stance against the controversial topic of “chemtrails” by passing SB 2691/HB 2063.
The bill, which aims to ban the intentional release of chemicals into the atmosphere for geoengineering purposes, was sponsored by Representative Monty Fritts (R-Kingston) and Senator Steve Southerland (R-Morristown) and won approval in the Senate. Read more here.
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