"Aachen" or "Archon?" (I was just looking at a bunch of the "Archon stuff" yesterday, ha!) ... I tried to Google "Aachen agenda" but came up with a bunch of stuff about a festival in Germany. No idea. But, Google would hide anything useful, so ...
Here's the most relevant, original excerpt from the Trojan Horse article (Oehler -- I had bookmarked it when it first came out, long before I made a Substack account). This is chilling. It is hard for me to imagine that it's a hoax, given the specificity of the information. Also, they aren't writing it in a form that is particularly easy to understand unless you have a pretty decent idea as to what they're talking about. It legitimately sounds, to me, like two engineers trying to get the word out as discreetly as possible.
"The original Moderna insider tip from Dec. 2020, from two anonymous engineers working there, goes like this:
I'm an industrial engineer at Moderna and the other one of us is a process development engineer. I'm sure the same thing is happening with Pfizer-BioNTech. It was hard to put things together based on the small quantities of additions happening in manual step (highly unorthodox for a continuous process production). The explanation we got was highly sensitive trade secret adjuvants being added. Digging in deeper showed how sensitive it actually was.
Most people's understanding of this novel vaccine type is that it works as follows:
Make mRNA coding for S protein
Make lipid nanoparticle delivery system
Profit
How it actually works from what we've uncovered:
Make mRNA coding for S protein
Make mRNA coding for mutant versions of CYP19A1 and CDKN1B in smaller amounts
Make sure that while delivery system for (1) mostly ends up in liver, most of (2) ends up in the gonads
Make sure form and quantity of additive upregulating LINE-1 reverse transcription activity makes it hard to detect among legit adjuvants
Effects from (2) integrated by (4) are recessive; mildly oncogenic effects in vaccine recipients unlikely to be noticed for many years
(5) recessive but since most of population vaccinated, in next generation female offspring have premature ovarian failure"
Five years ago, I'd have laughed at this and said, "No f'ing way they'd get that past FDA." Now ... Not so much.