Five Years to Raccoon City!

Five Years to Raccoon City!

Tim O’Connor – Center for the Preservation of Humanity – 8/11/2022

Raccoon City is a fictional place – kind of. Humanity is being hurtled towards Raccoon City becoming a very real place. And it is intended to go worldwide.

Now if you know what Raccoon city is, you can skip this paragraph. For those who don’t know what Raccoon City is, it is not a city of trash pandas. It is home to the Umbrella Corporation. The Umbrella Corporation is involved with genetic experimentation and created a great number of monsters of a wide variety. The story lines vary between the different editions of the movies and the video games; however, they always involve biological creations of the Umbrella Corporation.

The franchises title is Resident Evil. In the first movie, there is a deep underground lab operated by the Umbrella Corporation in Raccoon City. A vial of T-virus breaks open and infects lab workers. The lab workers die and are reanimated as flesh eating zombies. There is a team that goes into the Hive (the underground compound) along with a woman named Alice, a worker, who has amnesia. The team is basically trapped in this makeshift prison by an Artificial Intelligence which activated all of the safety protocols in order to prevent a wider outbreak of the virus.

We are getting closer to living in Raccoon City daily. The Medical-Industrial-Military-Corporate Complex created our latest global disease panic. Thankfully, coronavirus, nor the jabs these monsters created to vaccinate us with, reanimate the dead. I’m absolutely 100% sure this same cabal is working on it though. But, the fact remains, there is a combine of interests which are involved in all manners of gain of function research, including individual-specific and race specific bioweapons. So, the world has that aspect of Raccoon City going for it.

How about the reanimation part? Well, like I started with, we are getting closer and closer…. At Rice University, researchers noticed a dead wolf spider and thought it would be great to turn it into a claw on a string. They reanimated the spiders legs by pressurizing it with air. The artificially reanimated spiders are able to lift about 130 times their own weight. These spider corpses were named necrobots. The researchers observed that the spider broke down after about 1,000 uses, so they plan on coating it with a more durable substances. But, why would crackheads in labcoats decide to stop there:

“The necrobots have a wide range of potential applications, according to the statement. The team has already shown that the spider grippers can be used to move fragile components in electrical circuits without damaging them, which hints at their usefulness for assisting in the assembly of microelectronics and other small-scale construction projects. And if the scientists can replicate their work with other species, that could further extend the range of projects that could benefit from a necrobot's delicate touch, the team reported in the study.” [emphasis mine]

An experiment at Yale, though, promises even more fun than spider corpses. This experiment was conducted on pigs. The Yale researches killed some pigs, let them sit for an hour, and then used a concoction called OrganEx to basically reanimate them on a cellular level. In other words, the cells which had not yet destroyed themselves came back to life as if they were not dead. It allowed the tissues of the kidneys, liver, and heart to not suffer organ death.

What exactly is in OrganEx is unknown to me; however, it looks like a whole bunch of anti-bodies from mice and rabbits. The OrganEx concoction was mixed with the blood of the animal and pumped through the animal, which reanimated the dead cells.

Who funded this groundbreaking zombie-creating stepping stone? US taxpayers did:

“The research was funded by the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, National Institutes of Health, and National Institute of Mental Health.

“This work was supported by the NIH BRAIN Initiative grants MH117064, MH117064-01S1, R21DK128662,T32GM136651, F30HD106694, and Schmidt Futures.”

Before I start ranting about the ethical implications of this, I would like to refer the reader to my treatment on chimeras (Page 4). If you are hesitant to see my treatment, please look at the former human being who had a heart beating in his chest which was grown in a pig with human cells inside of it. The things name was David Bennett Jr who died two months after having the pig grown human heart transplanted into his body. He died the day he had the transplant as far as I am concerned.

Now that we understand that chimeric pigs exist, growing human hearts, you can realize my full horror at this Yale discovery. So, let me also note the convenience the Yale researches cite as their moral justification as well as their take on the ethics of this:

[Scientific American]: “Do you foresee a point at which you would say that these experiments have gone too far?

“VRSELJA [One of the Yale researchers]: We are working on cell recovery, and we have always had a ground-up approach. And for these things to happen, cells need to be alive. But with all the work that was done in recent years, in terms of bioethics and developing guidelines and approaches, there’s clearly societal involvement and interest in this. I think it’s up to a broader community of scientists and ethicists to guide this to a point where it becomes reasonable to do something.

You just want to make sure that, in the end, you address the underlying issue, which is the organ shortage, and you want to do it in the best way.” [emphasis mine]

Ethics? Who needs ethics when we can reanimate organs? Why let those trifling ethics stand in our way is what Vrselja is saying. In will pop the bioethics mouthpieces to justify further research into reanimating dead things. And why would Vrselja or any of the rest of these demonic frankenfools need anyone else’s input besides ‘scientists’ and ‘bioethicists.’ I mean its not like humanity as a whole should have a say as to whether these types of procedures continue to be researched at our expense. It’s all very incremental so as to not raise alarms too quickly. But sooner or later the Yale reanimation technique will be used to frankengineer never dying humans and animals with customizable and swappable organs. A little nanobot infusion here to monitor the organs, a couple more to monitor the synthetic fluid to keep the blood flowing and the cells alive, and AI driven ‘repair’ stations to swap the broken pieces out.

First off, pigs are dirty and we, as humans, are not even supposed to eat them. That is God’s rule, not mine. God also had this deal where he flooded the whole earth for exactly this type of thing in Noah’s times. Mixing the genes together is not what God want’s mankind to engage in. His wrath will be furious against those who are tinkering around with genetic splicing and creating chimeras.

Ethically, the question has nothing to do with when life dies by heartbeat, as opposed to electrical activity in the brain (Yale performed similar experiments restoring blood circulation in the brain back in 2019). The question is at what point are human beings no longer humans and classified as chimeras or cyborgs. I’d say that as soon as anyone chips themselves with anything transmitting either in or out, they are no longer human. I’d go further to say that the humanity of an individual is destroyed (rendering it something other than human) when organs from a different species are transplanted into a human being, even if that organ is one which is human but grown in a different species. For all intents and purposes, that person dies at that point – any ‘life’ which is displayed after that moment is non-human.

Think the real-life madmen who are doing their best to create a real-life Hell called Raccoon City will stop? Not without our insistence.

Now, this is kind of jokey but it is oddly coincidental. It’s also widely considered a conspiracy theory; however, it is highly odd. So this section is mostly for fun. Some claim that the Raccoon in Raccoon City is an anagram for Corona, and it almost is, but there is an issue with an extra ‘c.’ More compelling; however, is a Shanghai, China biotech company called RLSW (800 km, 478 miles, from, Wuhan). It’s compelling because the logos for RLSW and the fictional Umbrella Corporation are identical save for the colors. The Umbrella Corporation’s logo is red and white, while RLSW’s logo is turquoise and white. It is bizarre that there is a real-life company which mimics Raccoon City’s Umbrella Corporation.

‘Conspiracies’ aside, the Resident Evil franchise is incrementally being made a horrific reality. That is not a conspiracy theory. Resident Evil is a brutal picture of a dystopia that I never want humanity to even consider creating in reality, yet, here we are…. All for the organ transplant industry – to Hell with living for God, like we are supposed to, right? Wrong.

Let’s start calling and writing our ‘elected’ leaders up (especially at the state level because they are more responsive) and demanding that this type of crap is stopped right now. Why? Because my intent is to preserve humanity as God made us, with intact DNA. I don’t hate transplants, I hate the idea of humans turning themselves in to something other than human and losing their birthright in the process.

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