Stuart Rosenbaum
Stuart Rosenbaum is an entrepreneur, executive, philanthropist, and author. He was born in Philadelphia, then relocated to Silicon Valley where he eventually founded several businesses...
Stuart Rosenbaum is an entrepreneur, executive, philanthropist, and author. He was born in Philadelphia, then relocated to Silicon Valley where he eventually founded several businesses...
The deadliest pandemic in history wasn't Spanish. The first case appeared in Fort Riley, Kansas, the site of John D. Rockefeller Sr's 1918 vaccine experiments on American soldiers. Fauci's 2008 study failed to prove it was influenza.
For 15 months, Covid theater was the only show in town. Understandably, people want to move on. Yet, chained to a false past, they never will. Before we can learn from history, we must dismantle false history.
Whoever has set the vision for the United States in the future...has chosen all new things to be tested in California first. If successful there, no matter how outrageous it seems to you, it will be exported to other states.
The only reason that you're not in a medical police state is that Governor DeSantis isn't using many of these laws. They're sitting on the books, dormant, waiting to be abused by a future administration.
"Based on currently available data, patients should be informed of the possible cardiac complications that can arise after receiving a mRNA COVID-19 vaccine."
“Real change is difficult at the beginning, but gorgeous at the end. Change begins the moment you get the courage and step outside your comfort zone; change begins at the end of your comfort zone.” ― Roy T. Bennett
"We need to develop genetic engineering technologies and techniques to be able to write circuitry for cells and predictably program biology in the same way in which we write software and program computers…"
“Every school and college that receives federal money must teach about the Constitution on Sept. 17, the day the document was adopted in 1787.”
Unlike the prescription drugs that most Americans are saddled with, Medicare late enrollment penalties do not have an expiration date; they are for life, or for as long as the individual carries Medicare.