Dissecting âDisease Xâ And The Pandemic Agreement
(TLAV) At the World Economic Forumâs recent annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland, a panel called âPreparing for Disease Xâ caught the eyes of researchers who are skeptical of the organization and their claimed mission of helping humanity and the planet. The panel included the World Health Organizationâs Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus; Shyam Bishen, member of the WEF Executive Committee; and Nisia Trindade Lima, Brazilâs Minister of Health, among others.
ââDisease Xâ is a placeholder for unknown disease,â Tedros explained to the panel. âYou may even call COVID as the first Disease X, and it may happen again.â
WHO Director-General Tedros referenced the WHOâs Pandemic agreement discussions, stating that countries need to unite against a âcommon enemyâ.
âThis is a common global interest, and very narrow national interest can get in the way,â Tedro stated. âOf course, national interest is natural, but itâs the narrow national interest that can be difficult and is affecting the negotiations even as we speak.â
The WHOâs 194 member nations are slated to meet in May to adopt some version of the WHOâs pandemic treaty and the International Health Regulations (IHR). Recent drafts of the proposed treaty indicate that it poses a threat to national sovereignty and decision making. Fears of loss of sovereignty have led some nations to push back against the agreement.
On Monday the United Nations noted that the Pandemic Agreement may not be finalized in May as planned. The news came from a WHO âInformal Sessionâ on the agreement and IHR. During the session Tedros stated that time was âvery shortâ to find consensus. Tedros specifically blamed âconspiracy theoriesâ for the lack of progress on the agreement.
âThe IHR working group are operating amidst a torrent of fake news, lies, and conspiracy theories. There are those who claim the pandemic agreement and IHR will cede sovereignty to WHO and give the WHO Secretary the power to impose lockdowns or vaccine mandates on countries,â Tedros stated. âYou know this is fake news, lies, and conspiracy theories. You know these claims are completely false. You know the agreement will give the WHO no such powers. We cannot allow this historic agreement, this milestone in global health, to be sabotaged by those who spread lies.â
Tedros claimed the agreement âwill not and can notâ cede the sovereignty of member states over to the WHO. However, the language of the most recent draft makes it clear that member nations are expected to be bound by the provisions within the agreement. As you will see in a moment, documents from the 2017 G20 meeting make it clear the IHR are intended to be followed by member nations of the WHO.
What is Disease X?
The phrase âDisease Xâ has been going viral since the announcement of the WEF panel. The corporate media and the fact checkers have already done their part to assure the masses that itâs only âright wing extremistsâ who are worried about the talk of this unknown pathogen that could allegedly be â20 timesâ more deadly than the COVID-19 panic.
One of the reasons the internet is ablaze with talk of âDisease Xâ is because the public remembers the Event 201 exercise which took place in October 2019 and simulated a coronavirus pandemic sweeping the world 5 months before the world learned of what they would later call COVID-19. As TLAV has extensively reported, many elements of the Event 201 exercise became reality in 2020. Between 2020 and 2022, many people were banned from social media platforms for asking questions about Event 201.
Interestingly, Event 201 is also considered to be a test for âDisease Xâ, and, as noted by WHO Secretary Tedros, COVID-19 could be considered the first Disease X. Now, after the WEF panel discussing the allegedly upcoming âDisease Xâ, onlookers are wondering if the world should be prepared for another scamdemic.
So, where did the use of this phrase begin and what does it mean for 2024? This is a brief rundown of some of the various discussions of âDisease Xâ.
WEF 2017
In January 2017, the World Economic Forum announced the creation of the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations, or CEPI. The launch of CEPI at the 2017 WEF meetinginvolved the Wellcome Trust, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation â both of whom had major roles in the response to COVID-19, providing hundreds of millions of dollars in funding.
At the WEF 2019 meeting â one year before COVID-19 emerged â there was also discussion of âDisease Xâ on a panel titled âDisease X: Confronting a New Era of Biological Threatsâ. The panel was moderated by Jeffrey M. Drazen, Editor-in-Chief of the New England Journal of Medicine, and included panelists Seth F. Berkley, CEO of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, and Jeremy Farrar, Director of Wellcome Trust, with closing remarks by Wang Chen, President of the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences.
G20 2017: 5C Health Emergency Simulation Exercise
The G20 held a pandemic simulation exercise known as â5C Health Emergency Simulation Exerciseâ in Berlin, Germany in May 2017. The name â5Câ refers to the five C-topics around which the exercise revolved: communication, collaboration, contributions, coordination and compliance. The simulation involved a fictional novel respiratory virus, the Mountain Associated Respiratory Syndrome (MARS) virus.
At the same meeting, the G20 released a statement titled âBerlin Declaration of the G20 Health Ministers: Together Today for a Healthy Tomorrowâ, which made it clear that the World Health Organization expects member states to comply with the International Health Regulations (IHR).
In the Berlin Declaration, under the section focused on âcomplianceâ it calls for stronger tools to force compliance from member states. It reads, âHowever, countriesâ compliance with the IHR and with temporary recommendations issued under the IHR needs to be enhanced.â The document also states that âcountries not fulfilling their obligations might be perceived by the international community to be violating international law and thus risk reputational damageâ.
As the G20 noted in their declaration, the IHR were passed by the WHO in 2005 and went into effect in 2007. They are considered an âinternational legal instrumentâ that is binding on all WHO Member States.
âWe acknowledge that efficient global health crisis management can only be ensured through compliance with the International Health Regulations (IHR). We will act accordingly within our obligations under the IHR and support the leadership and coordination of WHO in the event of health crises of international concern,â the document states.
It also says the signatories âaffirm WHOâs central role as health cluster lead in particular within the United Nations (UN)â. All âstakeholdersâ are expected to be âinvolved in preventing, preparing for and responding to current and future health crises, guided by the leadership of WHOâ.
Further, the document states that the âinternational community needs to fully support the WHO in order for the organization to be able to fulfill its roleâ.
It is these sorts of statements which have stoked fears of the WHO interfering with the sovereignty of member states.
2018: WHO Research Development Blueprint
In February 2018, the WHO launched the â2018 R&D Blueprintâ to focus on diseases which are claimed to represent the highest likelihood of causing a future pandemic. Around this time the WHO added Disease X to the shortlist as a placeholder for a âknowable unknownâ pathogen. The WHO said the name ârepresents the knowledge that a serious international epidemic could be caused by a pathogen currently unknown to cause human diseaseâ. The WHO called for more financing and preparedness for the apparently inevitable future pandemic.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, former director of the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told CNN âexperience has taught us more often than not the thing that is gonna hit us is something that we did not anticipateâ.
October 2018: The Trudeau Institute War Game
In addition to Event 201, previous simulations of pandemics have also been touted as preparation for the future event known as âDisease Xâ. One such simulation took place in October 2018 in Saranac Lake, New York, at a gathering organized by the Trudeau Institute and the State University of New York Upstate Medical University titled, ââTranslational Immunology Supporting Biomedical Countermeasure Development for Emerging Vector-Borne Viral Diseases.â
At this gathering a group of biomedical scientists conducted a âwar gameâ for the fictional Disease X. The attendees included basic scientists, physician-scientists, science support professionals, and organizations and institutions with âexperience and expertise in identifying and working to solve major global health problemsâ.
Keynote speakers included representatives from the International Vaccine Institute (IVI), Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI), and the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH).
The scientists concluded that the key to preventing a âglobal health disasterâ resulting from Disease X is to pull âexisting public health organizations together in a coordinated, vigorous and sustained effortâ to deliver a âsafe and effective vaccineâ. They called for âleveraging pre-developed vaccine platforms such as injectable formulations of DNA, self-replicating RNA, recombinant proteins and viral vectorsâ.
March 2020: COVID-19
After the WHO declared COVID-19 a pandemic we continued to see references to Disease X from numerous scientific journals and health organizations. In March 2020, The Lancetpublished a study titled âDisease X: accelerating the development of medical countermeasures for the next pandemicâ. A couple months later a paper titled âThe Next Pandemic: Prepare for âDisease Xââ was published in the West Journal of Emerging Medicine.
2021: Disease X Medical Countermeasure Program
By 2021, John Hopkins Universityâs Center for Health Security launched the Disease X Medical Countermeasure Program. The program was said to âleverage technologies and vaccine platforms most suitable to the viral families that are likely to cause future catastrophic disease outbreaksâ.
2022: WHO Updates Their âResearch & Development Blueprintâ
In November 2022, the WHO announced the launch of a global scientific process to update the list of âpriority pathogensâ to guide global investment, research, and development (R&D), especially in vaccines, tests, and treatments.
The WHO convened over 300 scientists to consider the evidence on over 25 virus families and bacteria, including âDisease X.â The scientists made recommendations for which priority pathogens needed further research and investment.
2023: Disease X Act of 2023
In June 2023, Congresswoman Lori Trahan of Massachusetts introduced the âDisease X Act of 2023â calling for expanding âthe priorities of the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) to specifically include viral threats that have the potential to cause a pandemicâ. BARDA was created in 2006 as a response to the claims of anthrax attacks in the United States. The agency has been compared to the controversial Department of Advanced Research and Projects Agency, or DARPA.
Trahanâs bill calls for establishing a Disease X Medical Countermeasures Program at BARDA by allowing the HHS to award contracts, grants, and cooperative agreements to âpromote the development of Disease X medical countermeasures for viral families with pandemic potentialâ. The bill also calls for directing BARDA to âaccelerate and support the advanced research, development, and procurement of countermeasures and products to address Disease X threatsâ.
May 2024: The WHO Pandemic Agreement
With only 3 months until the WHOâs official meeting to vote on the Pandemic Agreement, the clock is ticking for the Predator Class and their biomedical agenda. Will they succeed in forcing the agreement down the throats of skeptical nations? If so, will Disease X magically appear? Will the agreement actually lead to the loss of sovereignty?
The language in the agreement appears to be clear that nations will be expected to follow the guidelines and recommendations of the WHO during a claimed pandemic. Whether nations will comply and how exactly the WHO could enforce such measures remains to be seen, but the 2017 G20 Berlin Declaration specifically mentions peer pressure from other nations. This could come in the form of public statements or even financial pressure.
One thing is for certain: those who are paying attention need to know that 2024 is going to be a big year for the Predator Class as they finally attempt to cement their collectivist philosophy in a binding international agreement. Do whatever you can to spread the word and resist their attempts to strip nations and individuals of the right to decide how to respond to claimed health threats.
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