There are a lot of interesting connections listed in this article, but Luciana Borio connects to way too many globalist elite organizations. This really paints a dark picture of what they are up to with these mRNA vaccines which we heard reported does alter DNA contrary to what was disclosed. And the connection to the CIA, Council on Foreign Relations, and Gate’s CEPI are especially alarming. And we know these globalist elites are eugenicists and fond of finding ways to get rid of useless eaters, so pay special attention to the paper she was co-writing on manipulating the poor to take the experimental gene therapy. And what further gives me pause is that they are just compounding these experimental gene therapies on test subjects and we have no long term data for a single product, not to mention the combination of all these different untested gene therapies and extra doses together. Does this seem scientifically or morally responsible?
However, while Nelsen has been given much of the credit for creating Resilience, he revealed in one interview that the idea for the company had actually come from someone else – Luciana Borio. In July of last year, Nelsen revealed that it was while talking to Borio about “her work running pandemic preparedness on the NSC [National Security Council]” that had “helped lead to the launch of Nelsen’s $800 million biologics manufacturing startup Resilience.”
At the time of their conversation, Borio was the vice president of In-Q-tel, the venture capital arm of the CIA that has been used since its creation in the early 2000s to found a number of companies, many of which act as Agency fronts. Prior to In-Q-Tel, she served as director for medical and biodefense preparedness at the National Security Council during the Trump administration and had previously been the acting chief scientist at the FDA from 2015 to 2017.
Borio is currently a senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign Relations, a consultant to Goldman Sachs, a member of the Bill Gates-funded vaccine alliance CEPI, and a partner at Nelsen’s venture capital firm ARCH Venture Partners, which funds Resilience. Nelsen’s ARCH previously funded Nanosys, the company of the controversial scientist Charles Lieber. Around the time of her conversation with Nelsen that led to Resilience’s creation, Borio was co-writing a policy paper for the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security that recommended linking COVID-19 vaccination status with food stamp programs and rent assistance as a possible means of coercing certain populations to take the experimental vaccine.