It would seem that noone is answering this because it's so preposterous. There's no such thing as an aerosolized vaccine, and a vaccine would not be infectious.
I hear you. Apparently that was what made this product so unique. According to Haslam they were trying to protect their servicemembers in the Far East from the many bat viruses that are circulating. So they made a product that would spread easily rather than having to inject bats. I know it sounds preposterous but we are talking about DARPA here.
It would seem that noone is answering this because it's so preposterous. There's no such thing as an aerosolized vaccine, and a vaccine would not be infectious.
I hear you. Apparently that was what made this product so unique. According to Haslam they were trying to protect their servicemembers in the Far East from the many bat viruses that are circulating. So they made a product that would spread easily rather than having to inject bats. I know it sounds preposterous but we are talking about DARPA here.
Wow, this is huge news! I've not heard of this explanation until just now. Everything about the "pandemic" continues to get more and more weird.
It is surprising that there is not more coverage. Maybe Eleanor is correct.