Joachim Burghartz is director of the Institut für Mikroelektronik Stuttgart (IMS chips).

Opinion

Chips, Gates and vaccines

Leestijd: 3 minuten

Microchips in vaccines are nigh impossible, but that doesn’t mean that abnormalities found in blood samples from vaccinated people don’t need to be taken seriously, argues Joachim Burghartz.

In February this year, I was asked to provide expert feedback on the question if microchips could be introduced into the human body via injection during a vaccination treatment, and which purpose they could possibly serve. This request related to a pathology conference in Reutlingen, Germany, in September 2021, where two retired university professors in pathology reported on large metallic objects in the blood of several diseased people who had received a Covid vaccination. Those objects were said to be rectangular, measuring up to 500 microns and very thin.

This makes one think of Bill Gates being accused of wanting to implant microchips into the body of people as a means of providing a digital vaccination certificate. That suspicion wasn’t completely pulled out of thin air because the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is known for having funded “a technology that could store someone’s vaccine records in a special ink administered at the same time as an injection.” Gates is known to be a strong proponent of obligatory vaccination to fight pandemics.

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