“It’s possible someday that this ‘invisible’ approach could create new possibilities for data storage, biosensing, and vaccine applications.” — from MIT’s unveiling of its quantum dot “tattoo”
I will be following this up with a deep dive into a mind-blowing patent I uncovered about drones administering drugs and vaccines and controlling the populace through monitoring our health.
But first, we have to talk about luciferase and clear up a few misunderstandings.
What you’re about to read is a little different from my usual essays. It veers off into science fiction and some pretty weird stuff. However, I think we can all agree that lately science fiction has been coming true right before our eyes.
It was way back in the 1980s (I can’t believe how old I am!) that I had some ideas for a science fiction novel. Ideas about tiny drone fireflies burrowing into people’s brains and genetically altering them—yes, I know, I have a wild imagination. About luciferase used as a conduit to travel back and forth between worlds. About rearranging matter and the flow of energy. Some of those ideas are now coming true.
I can almost hear the cries of dismay.
“What, are you crazy?”
“You’ve finally lost it, Karen!”
“Nobody’s using luciferase for that.”
“It’s a conspiracy theory!”
Please. Before you sign off in a huff, hear me out.
So, what was going on forty years ago? Well, I was married to a Slovenian pop star and living between London and a village in communist Yugoslavia. It was a dark time for me, trapped in an abusive marriage and unable even to talk about it. Seven years is what it took to realize that the prison was of my own making and the only way out was for me to free myself.
In those years before I got the courage to leave, I sought refuge in a Bayswater cafe called Le Relais Basque. Opening the door and crossing the threshold, I felt as if I had entered a magical world of tantalizing mysteries where the horrors beyond its walls couldn’t touch me. It was there, writing furiously with pen on paper, hour after hour, that the idea for Luminaria was born. Once I moved back to Los Angeles, I transported the cafe to a seedy street off Hollywood Blvd. and made it the central point of the book.
Le Relais Basque was frequented by Middle Eastern diplomats and other, questionable characters. Sometimes, I sat with a Kurdish warlord who’d been on Iraq’s ten most-wanted list and had escaped over the mountains into Turkey with a million pounds in a suitcase. He was short and squat, with a pock-marked face, a luxuriant moustache, and large, soulful eyes. He always wore cowboy boots and thought that eating a Big Mac was the height of status. It was amusing, and yet, I felt sure that if you dropped him and a Wall Street executive down in Watts with no money and only their wits about them, within a week, he’d be running the gangs while the suit would be dead. He inspired the character of Ariyan Barzani in Luminaria, which was finally published during the height of the pandemic in 2021, by Terror House Press. Each chapter starts with one of my drawings. Here’s the one about Ariyan.
Back then, I’d read some articles about the bioluminescence of fireflies being used to probe for and identify life in outer space. I can’t find those articles now. But there are plenty of recent ones talking about luciferase being used to as a conduit to identify information inside our bodies, such as vaccine status or our general medical health, and relaying that information to AI outside our bodies.
Here is a scientific explanation of luciferase and luciferin:
Luciferase is an enzyme that catalyzes a light-producing biochemical reaction when it is in the presence of oxygen and a naturally occurring substrate called luciferin. Because of the light-emitting phenomenon, the luciferase-luciferin enzyme-substrate combination is the basis behind one of nature’s most common forms of bioluminescence.
Historical references to Lucifer give it that added air of mystique:
In Latin, Lucifer means “Light Bringer.”
In Roman folklore, it was the name of the Morning Star or the planet Venus.
Its archaic meaning was a match struck by rubbing it on a rough surface.
In Christianity, Lucifer is associated with Ezekiel 28:17:
“Your heart became proud on account of your beauty, and you corrupted your wisdom because of your splendor.”
Lucifer was God’s most magnificent angel. When he sought to usurp God’s throne, he was cast out from heaven and fell to earth. Taking on the form of a snake, he tempted Adam and Eve and they succumbed, opening the door to sin and sealing off the Garden of Eden with the Tree of Life inside.
The Angel of Light became the Angel of Death. Satan. The Devil.
If you are a believer in the Book of Revelation, there are a lot of reasons to associate Lucifer with luciferase, the Mark of the Beast, Covid-19 vaccines, digital IDs and humans being microchipped.
It sounds crazy, right? And because it sounds crazy, fact checkers have used these ‘conspiracy theories’ about Satan controlling our government and Bill Gates wanting to microchip everyone to take attention away from the actual truth that they are, indeed, using luciferase in the manufacture of vaccines and in identifying people who have been vaccinated.
I can find no evidence that luciferase is in the Covid-19 vaccines. But who cares? That’s not what’s important. What’s important is following the trail of how luciferase is actually being used and how it will be used in the near future.
You can read Reuters fact-checking effort here:
Social media users are claiming that a patent for “fusion proteins containing luciferase” filed by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security is proof that the department is planning to use the COVID-19 vaccine as the “mark of the beast”.
You can read the patent here
I read the whole thing and have pulled out a few key points.
These ‘fusion proteins’ are described thus:
“In one or more embodiments, the biotherapeutics and compositions described herein may be administered prophylactically, therapeutically,” or in “an alternative embodiment…as a DNA composition.”
Over and over, luciferase is described as part of a method for certifying vaccine expression in vivo.
“The antigen, immunogen or vaccine described above may comprise an intact fusion protein or may be in the form of one or more immunologically active fragments of such a fusion protein.”
Luciferase is used to develop DNA vaccines as shown in this NIH article:
Okay, so, let’s move on to Bill Gates and quantum dot tattoos.
Again, the media employs the same sly methods to fact check away any focus on quantum dot tattoos and luciferase.
Here’s USA Today:
Fact check: Bill Gates is not planning to microchip the world through a COVID-19 vaccine
It’s kind of funny because Elon Musk does want to microchip us. But the press doesn’t seem interested in that story and implications it means for losing our freedoms.
What Bill Gates wants to do is mark us all with a quantum dot tattoo, and yes, it will have luciferase in it.
You can go back a few years to find a number of articles mentioning luciferase in quantum dots.
Check out this 2006 article from Nature:
Bioluminescent quantum dots
“The beauty of this Luc8 (Renilla reniformis luciferase) is that it is very tolerant of chemical modifications, and this makes it very easy to do the conjugation and retain the luciferase activity.”
Here’s a 2009 article from the NIH:
Biocompatible near-infrared quantum dots as ultrasensitive probes for long-term in vivo imaging applications
Biocompatible near-infrared quantum dots delivered to the skin by microneedle patches record vaccination
Longitudinal in vivo imaging using a smartphone adapted to detect NIR light demonstrated that microneedle delivered QD patterns remained bright and could be accurately identified using a machine learning algorithm 9 months after application…. These findings suggest that intradermal QDs can be used to reliably encode information and can be delivered with a vaccine, which may be particularly valuable in the developing world and open up new avenues for decentralized data storage and biosensing.
Smithsonian: This Spiky Patch Could Invisibly Record Vaccination History Under Skin
When they put it like this, it sounds almost mythical. People have become used to tattooing their skin already. Many see it as a spiritual process. A way to express on their bodies what they feel inside. They’ve used this type of language to make it appealing:
The human body is an extraordinary record keeper. Tattooed into its skin are the scars of old wounds; archived in the molecules of the immune system are the traces of past infections.
But when that history gets translated into written medical records, things can quickly get dicey. Every lost sheet of paper or inaccurately tallied statistic can raise a person’s risk of receiving inadequate care—an especially pressing issue in low- and middle-income countries, where health care resources are often scarce or inaccessible.
The consequences go far beyond a missed injection: Inconsistent recordkeeping is thought to play a large role in the 1.5 million deaths that occur due to under-vaccination each year.
Now, a team led by MIT scientists has come forward with a bold proposition that could write a legible vaccination history back into the body’s repertoire. Solving medicine’s record-keeping riddle, they argue, might just involve injecting patterns of invisible nanoparticles under the skin. Like QR codes, these designs could be scanned and interpreted by smartphones, and someday allow health providers to archive and access patients’ past vaccinations without the muss and fuss of external records.
Here’s a creepy 2019 Scientific American article:
Along with the vaccine, a child would be injected with a bit of dye that is invisible to the naked eye but easily seen with a special cell-phone filter, combined with an app that shines near-infrared light onto the skin.
According to the Scientific American story, the project came about following a “direct request from Microsoft founder Bill Gates himself, who has been personally involved in efforts to eradicate polio and measles through vaccinations.”
And here we have the announcement where Bill Gates and MIT unveil quantum dot.
The invisible “tattoo” accompanying the vaccine is a pattern made up of minuscule quantum dots – tiny semiconducting crystals that reflect light – that glows under infrared light.
“It’s possible someday that this ‘invisible’ approach could create new possibilities for data storage, biosensing, and vaccine applications that could improve how medical care is provided, particularly in the developing world.”
Oh, yes, the concern that the biomedical security state has for the “developing world” is commendable! Especially since they can be used as testing grounds for drugs and new tracking and controlling devices literally implanted in our bodies by corrupt corporations and NGOs.
But don’t think for one moment that this quantum tattoo is only planned for far off “developing nations.” Once they have tested it out on those expendable children in Africa (I’m sorry, I meant to say those children they care so much about), they will implant it in children everywhere. It’s all part of the biomedical security state I have been writing about in my three-part series.
And lest you think people will not go along with it, just today I read of a study of over 15,000 citizens, conducted in 21 countries across the world showing that people who have received COVID-19 vaccines “express discriminatory attitudes toward unvaccinated people.”
Across six countries—Germany, India, Indonesia, Morocco, South Africa, and the United Kingdom—the unvaccinated were found to be disliked among vaccinated people as much as people with drug addiction, and significantly more so than people who had been in prison, or people with mental illness.
It’s become a moral issue. It’s about trusting the state to take care of you and if you don’t, you are endangering the lives of those around you.
Don’t want your quantum dot tattoo? What’s the big deal, everyone has a tattoo these days. I cringe when I see my grandkids wearing fake tattoos. The next step is to make them readable by those who seek to control us.
I could never have imagined all those years ago, sitting in that cafe, that some of the ideas forming in my mind about luciferase would one day become a reality. And hey, maybe one day we will even find out that genetically altered fireflies can be used to travel to other worlds. Okay, that might be stretching it. But you never know….