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Friday, February 7, 2025

FDA Lab Uncovers Excess DNA Contamination in Covid-19 Vaccines

 An explosive new study conducted within the US Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) own laboratory has revealed excessively high levels of DNA contamination in Pfizer’s mRNA Covid-19 vaccine.

Tests conducted at the FDA’s White Oak Campus in Maryland found that residual DNA levels exceeded regulatory safety limits by 6 to 470 times.

The study was undertaken by student researchers under the supervision of FDA scientists. The vaccine vials were sourced from BEI Resources, a trusted supplier affiliated with the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), previously headed by Anthony Fauci.

Recently published in the Journal of High School Science, the peer-reviewed study challenges years of dismissals by regulatory authorities, who had previously labelled concerns about excessive DNA contamination as baseless.

The FDA is expected to comment on the findings this week. However, the agency has yet to issue a public alert, recall the affected batches, or explain how vials exceeding safety standards were allowed to reach the market.

The Methods

The student researchers employed two primary analytical methods:

  • NanoDrop Analysis – This technique uses UV spectrometry to measure the combined levels of DNA and RNA in the vaccine. While it provides an initial assessment, it tends to overestimate DNA concentrations due to interference from RNA, even when RNA-removal kits are utilised.
  • Qubit Analysis – For more precise measurements, the researchers relied on the Qubit system, which quantifies double-stranded DNA using fluorometric dye.

Both methods confirmed the presence of DNA contamination far above permissible thresholds. These findings align with earlier reports from independent laboratories in the United StatesCanadaAustraliaGermany, and France.

Expert Reaction

Kevin McKernan, a former director of the Human Genome Project, described the findings as a “bombshell,” criticising the FDA for its lack of transparency.

“These findings are significant not just for what they reveal but for what they suggest has been concealed from public scrutiny. Why has the FDA kept these data under wraps?” McKernan questioned.

While commending the students’ work, he also noted limitations in the study’s methods, which may have underestimated contamination levels.

“The Qubit analysis can under-detect DNA by up to 70% when enzymes are used during sample preparation,” McKernan explained. “Additionally, the Plasmid Prep kit used in the study does not efficiently capture small DNA fragments, further contributing to underestimation.”

In addition to genome integration, McKernan highlighted another potential cancer-causing mechanism of DNA contamination in the vaccines.

He explained that plasmid DNA fragments entering the cell’s cytoplasm with the help of lipid nanoparticles could overstimulate the cGAS-STING pathway, a crucial component of the innate immune response.

“Chronic activation of the cGAS-STING pathway could paradoxically fuel cancer growth,” McKernan warned. “Repeated exposure to foreign DNA through COVID-19 boosters may amplify this risk over time, creating conditions conducive to cancer development.”

Adding to the controversy, traces of the SV40 promoter were detected among the DNA fragments. While the authors concluded that these fragments were “non-replication-competent” meaning they cannot replicate in humans, McKernan disagreed.

“To assert that the DNA fragments are non-functional, they would need to transfect mammalian cells and perform sequencing, which wasn’t done here,” McKernan stated.

“Moreover, the methods used in this study don’t effectively capture the full length of DNA fragments. A more rigorous sequencing analysis could reveal SV40 fragments several thousand base pairs long, which would likely be functional,” he added.

Regulatory Oversight under Scrutiny

Nikolai Petrovsky, a Professor of Immunology and director of Vaxine Pty Ltd, described the findings as a “smoking gun.”

“It clearly shows the FDA was aware of these data. Given that these studies were conducted in their own labs under the supervision of their own scientists, it would be hard to argue they were unaware,” he said.

Prof Petrovsky praised the quality of work carried out by the students at the FDA labs.

“The irony is striking,” he remarked. “These students performed essential work that the regulators failed to do. It’s not overly complicated—we shouldn’t have had to rely on students to conduct tests that were the regulators’ responsibility in the first place.”

The Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA), which has consistently defended the safety of the mRNA vaccines, released its own batch testing results, claiming they met regulatory standards. However, Prof Petrovsky criticised the TGA’s testing methods.

“The TGA’s method was not fit for purpose,” he argued. “It didn’t assess all the DNA in the vials. It only looked for a small fragment, which would severely underestimate the total amount of DNA detected.”

Implications for Manufacturers and Regulators

Now that DNA contamination of the mRNA vaccines has been verified in the laboratory of an official agency and published in a peer-reviewed journal, it becomes difficult to ignore.

It also places vaccine manufacturers and regulators in a precarious position.

Addressing the contamination issue would likely require revising manufacturing processes to remove residual DNA, which Prof Petrovsky explained would be impractical.

“The only practical solution is for regulators to require manufacturers to demonstrate that the plasmid DNA levels in the vaccines are safe,” Prof Petrovsky stated.

“Otherwise, efforts to remove the residual DNA would result in an entirely new vaccine, requiring new trials and effectively restarting the process with an untested product.”

Now the onus is on regulators to provide clarity and take decisive action to restore confidence in their oversight. Anything less risks deepening the scepticism of the public. 

Both the US and Australian drug regulators have been approached for comment.

Maryanne Demasi, 2023 Brownstone Fellow, is an investigative medical reporter with a PhD in rheumatology, who writes for online media and top tiered medical journals. For over a decade, she produced TV documentaries for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) and has worked as a speechwriter and political advisor for the South Australian Science Minister.

https://brownstone.org/articles/fda-lab-uncovers-excess-dna-contamination-in-covid-19-vaccines/

U.S. Chip Curbs Hit China Harder Than Expected As TSMC Treads Carefully, Nikkei Reports

 The recent U.S. export restrictions on China's chip sector are causing more disruption than initially anticipated. Two sources familiar with the matter told Nikkei Asia that Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC), the leading global contract chipmaker, is adopting an extremely cautious approach to ensure compliance with these regulations.

TSMC has been communicating to its Chinese customers, who utilize the company's 16-nanometer or superior production technologies, that it will not be able to fulfill their orders unless they employ chip packaging services from a supplier present on a U.S. "white list" of approved businesses. This move is a direct result of the new export controls set by the U.S., emphasizing the impact of these regulations on the global chip industry.

The cautious approach by TSMC demonstrates the efforts companies are making to comply with the new U.S. export rules, which are causing significant disruption in the chip sector. The situation underscores the challenges faced by companies navigating the complex landscape of international trade regulations. The full impact of these rules on the global chip industry remains to be seen.

This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. 

https://www.investing.com/news/stock-market-news/tsmc-cautious-as-us-export-rules-disrupt-chinas-chip-sector--nikkei-asia-93CH-3857070

America's Electric Grid Is At Risk - And We Need Coal To Save It

 by Emily Arthun via RealClearEnergy,

A recent report from the North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC) sounds the alarm: America’s power grid is becoming dangerously unreliable. The nation is hurtling toward a future where rolling blackouts and power shortages will be the norm rather than the exception. At the heart of this crisis is the closure of baseload coal plants, a move that is leaving our electric system vulnerable to demand surges and extreme weather events, and our people subject to skyrocketing electric bills.

NERC’s latest assessment reveals an unsettling reality: the rapid shift away from coal and other reliable baseload power sources is pushing our electric grid to the brink. More than half of the U.S. faces an elevated risk of power shortages, particularly during peak demand periods in summer and winter. The root cause? The aggressive push to retire coal-fired power plants without ensuring an adequate and reliable replacement.

While renewable energy sources like wind and solar are expanding, they are not yet capable of providing the always-available, on-demand power that coal and other baseload sources deliver. When the sun isn’t shining, and the wind isn’t blowing, grid operators must scramble to fill the gap. Too often, they are left with insufficient options, leading to potential shortfalls that can cripple homes, businesses, and critical infrastructure.

The Reliability Crisis

NERC’s findings make one thing clear: reliability is at stake. Energy demand is increasing exponentially, driven by factors such as electrification, population growth, and the rise of energy-intensive technologies like data centers. At the same time, dispatchable generation—power that can be turned on or off as needed—are disappearing.

This gap leaves the grid exposed to extreme weather events. In recent years, we have seen where coal has been there to keep our power flowing:

  • Winter Storm Uri (2021): Texas experienced widespread blackouts, leaving millions without power and causing over 200 deaths. The cold temperatures experienced in Texas during Uri led to natural gas supply issues and frozen wind turbines creating an insufficient base-load of power.
  • California’s Rolling Blackouts (2020): A combination of heat waves and inadequate power supply forced California to implement rolling blackouts, impacting millions.
  • Christmas 2022 Outages: Severe cold across the Eastern U.S. led to power shortages as demand surged, highlighting the dangers of relying too heavily on intermittent energy sources.
  • January 2024: During a cold snap MISO showed that 38,508 MW of energy from coal led the energy mix, keeping the heat on.
  • January 2025: The country saw an extended cold snap and coal power production was the highest since 2019 reported LSEG.

NERC warns that immediate action needs to be taken to shore up the grid with reliable, baseload power.

Why Coal Remains Essential

Coal has long served as the backbone of America’s electric grid, providing a stable and affordable power source that can be counted on during peak demand. Unlike wind and solar, coal generation is not subject to weather variability. Unlike natural gas, coal is stored on site and in the short term is not susceptible to supply chain disruptions or price volatility.

Despite this, policymakers continue to prioritize the rapid transition away from coal, often without considering the consequences. The closure of coal plants is driven by regulatory pressures, market distortions favoring renewables, and misguided environmental policies that fail to account for the grid reliability crisis.

The loss of coal-fired generation doesn’t just threaten reliability; it also drives up electricity costs for consumers. Without coal’s stabilizing effect on the market, electricity prices become more volatile, hitting households and businesses with higher bills.

Moreover, shifting too quickly to an over-reliance on renewables requires massive investments in energy storage, transmission upgrades, and backup power sources. These costs ultimately fall on ratepayers, making electricity less affordable for millions of Americans.

To avoid a full-blown reliability crisis, we must take a balanced approach to energy policy. This means:

  • Halt Premature Coal Plant Retirements: Policymakers should pause the closure of existing coal plants until replacement generation with equal reliability is available.
  • Invest in Advanced Coal Technology: High-efficiency, low-emission (HELE) coal plants and carbon capture technologies can ensure coal remains a viable part of a cleaner energy future.
  • Restore Market Fairness: Energy markets should recognize the value of baseload power and compensate coal plants for their role in ensuring grid stability.
  • Reevaluate Renewable Integration:Renewables have a role to play, they must be integrated in a way that does not jeopardize reliable affordable power supply This means investing in firm, dispatchable power sources alongside renewables.

NERC’s report should serve as a wake-up call. The U.S. cannot afford to gamble with its electric grid. Reliable and affordable power supply is not just a convenience—it’s a necessity for economic stability, public safety, and national security. Coal has been and should continue to be a key part of our energy mix, ensuring that the American citizen has access to reliable energy , even in the toughest conditions. Policymakers must act now to protect America’s energy future before it is too late. If not, the simple fact is that lives will be needlessly endangered.

Emily Arthun is CEO at the American Coal Council.

https://www.zerohedge.com/energy/americas-electric-grid-risk-and-we-need-coal-save-it

Fetterman says he’ll vote against RFK Jr., Gabbard nominations

 Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.) said he will vote against two of President Trump’s most controversial Cabinet nominees: Tulsi Gabbard, his pick for director of national intelligence, and Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the nominee for Secretary of Health and Human Services.

“I have met with most of the cabinet nominees and have carefully watched their confirmation hearings,” Fetterman wrote Thursday in a statement on the social platform X

“After considering what’s at stake, I have voted against moving forward to the confirmation of Ms. Gabbard and Mr. Kennedy, and will be voting NO on their confirmations.”

Both nominees recently advanced with recommendations from their respective committees in party-line votes.

Gabbard has faced criticism from the right for past comments in support of pardoning Edward Snowden, who leaked classified U.S. government surveillance information. She’s also been criticized for public remarks that appeared to echo the Kremlin’s arguments justifying its war in Ukraine, and for a 2017 visit to Syria for an undisclosed meeting with then-President Bashar Assad after his regime used chemical weapons on its own people.

Kennedy sparked opposition for a host of controversial statements and positions, most notably his skepticism of vaccines. Public health advocates have voiced fears of a sharp decline in vaccine immunizations if he’s confirmed. 

Fetterman represents a state President Trump just won in November’s elections, and he’s signaled a willingness to consider working with Trump on some issues.

The Pennsylvania senator has voted with GOP members to confirm Attorney General Pam Bondi, Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem and Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Scott Turner. 

He did not support White House Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought or Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth.

https://thehill.com/homenews/senate/5132498-sen-john-fetterman-vote-against-trump-cabinet-nominees/

Trump says Gaza will be given to US by Israel

 President Trump on Friday asserted that Gaza will be given to the U.S. by Israel, expanding on his plan for an American takeover of the war-torn region that he suggests involves the permanent relocation of Palestinians.

The controversial proposal stands to upend decades of U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East.

When asked of the proposal on Friday, the president told reporters that Gaza “will be given to us by Israel” and said that his proposal to take responsibility for the Gaza Strip, currently under Hamas control, has “been very well received.”

“We don’t want to see everybody move out and then move back in 10 years,” Trump added.

But leads of regional Arab nations and even some of Trump’s Republican allies appeared lukewarm to the proposal. Trump has suggested Gaza be “cleaned out” but has offered no details on how such a takeover would be logistically implemented.

He doubled down on his push for Palestinians to leave Gaza after he rocked U.S.-Middle East policy Tuesday by announcing during a joint press conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that he would back the resettlement of Palestinians into Egypt and Jordan, despite those countries immediately rejecting such a deal.

Trump also said Friday his plan “would lead to great stability in the area” for “very little money” without, again, providing any details on how.

The president, a day earlier, claimed Israel would turn over Gaza to the U.S. “at the conclusion of fighting” after about 16 months of a war against Hamas and a recently made fragile ceasefire agreement.

His idea about controlling Gaza has also fostered questions over whether a takeover of the region would require American military boots on the ground and violations of international law in resettling an entire population.

Some of Trump’s administration officials have tried to soften the president’s Tuesday remarks.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt on Wednesday insisted Trump has not committed to sending the U.S. military into Gaza, despite the president suggesting the night before that “we will do what is necessary.”

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said Wednesday that the U.S. government is “a very long way” from intervening in the Strip.

https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/5133161-donald-trump-gaza-proposal-israel-takeover/

'Zelensky says he’s open to Trump’s rare earth request: ‘Let’s do a deal’'

 Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky signaled a willingness Friday to work with President Trump to supply the U.S. with rare earth elements in exchange for continued military aid in his war against Russia.

In an interview with Reuters, Zelensky said: “If we are talking about a deal, then let’s do a deal, we are only for it.”

He emphasized that Ukraine is not “giving away” its resources but is offering the U.S. a partnership. 

“The Americans helped the most, and therefore the Americans should earn the most. And they should have this priority, and they will. I would also like to talk about this with President Trump,” he told Reuters.

Zelensky also said that Ukraine and the U.S. are discussing using Ukraine’s underground storage for U.S.-produced gas. 

His comments come after Trump said earlier this week the U.S. should receive “rare earth” elements from Ukraine in exchange for military assistance.

“We’re looking to do a deal with Ukraine, where they’re going to secure what we’re giving them with their rare earth and other things,” Trump told reporters Monday

“I want to have security of rare earth,” he added.

Rare earth elements are a group of materials that are deposited in relatively small quantities around the globe, making the economics of mining them complex. They are used in magnets and batteries, which in turn are used in sectors including health care, power generation, transportation and consumer electronics. 

Zelensky’s openness to the deal is not necessarily a surprise, as Ukraine’s existing “Victory Plan” states that the country would work to supply its strategic partners with “natural resources and critical metals worth trillions of U.S. dollars” including uranium, titanium, lithium and graphite.

These metals are not considered rare earths, and it’s not clear whether they, too, would be part of any deal between the two nations. 

Zelensky shared a map of Ukraine’s minerals with Reuters, and according to the news outlet, about half of a strip of land containing rare earths appeared to be on Russia’s side of the current battle lines.

The Ukrainian president also said he hopes to meet with Trump before the U.S. sits down with Russian President Vladimir Putin because “otherwise it will look like a dialogue about Ukraine without Ukraine.”

https://thehill.com/policy/energy-environment/5133463-zelensky-trump-rare-earth-minerals-deal-russia-putin/

Trump says US doesn’t have ‘very good security’ amid DOGE access concerns

 President Trump on Friday lamented how the U.S. does not have “very good security” when discussing how Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) gained access to sensitive federal information this week.

When asked why DOGE needs access to American’s personal information like Social Security numbers, Trump said, “Well, it doesn’t. But they get it very easily.”

“I mean, we don’t have very good security in our country,” the president continued at a press conference Friday alongside Japan’s Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba.

The statement comes as Musk and his DOGE team face scrutiny in courts and by some Democrats over how much access they have to Americans’ personal data and sensitive federal payment systems as they seek to slash federal bureaucracy.

Reports surfaced last week that DOGE employees accessed critical payment systems and forced out a three-decade veteran of the Treasury Department.

The New York Times reported Thursday the Treasury Department’s chief of staff was pushing to use access to the payment system in order to freeze payments for the U.S. Agency for International Development.

The White House and Treasury Department maintained the administration is conducting a review of the Fiscal Service and that DOGE employees will only be able to observe, not change, payments being made through the agency.

Two DOGE staffers were given “read-only” access to highly sensitive payment systems at the Treasury Department, the agency maintained, but numerous reports suggested one of them had the ability to rewrite the payment system base code.

The Department of Justice agreed Wednesday to limit the number of employees affiliated with DOGE who have access to a sensitive federal payment system.

Under the order, two staffers were permitted to have access to the Fiscal Service but will not be able to edit or make changes to the system, which manages 90 percent of federal payments.

Musk and his DOGE allies pushed forward this week on an aggressive campaign to slash federal bureaucracy and spending. On his first day in office, Trump issued a federal government hiring freeze, and thousands of workers have been offered deferred resignation packages.

https://thehill.com/policy/technology/5133409-trump-says-u-s-doesnt-have-very-good-security-amid-doge-access-concerns/