We keep finding out new things that were paid for by Dr. Faucistein. We now know he was helping to fund the Chinese military and organ harvesting. Shocked? Why? Anyone who helps torture helpless puppies is not above anything. In Chinese military camps, organ harvesting is an everyday occurrence. That we already knew, but we didn’t know we were helping pay the bill for it. Dr Antony Mengele Faucistei is not above anything as we have learned.
The First Hospital of Jilin University, until 2000 it was known as The Affiliated Hospital of the First Military Medical University of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) in Changchun, China. This is one of the organ harvesting sites we are now finding out about. the laboratories of pathobiology and zoonosis research at Jilin University are associated with the Chinese military.
Megan Sykes of Columbia University in New York published a scientific article in October of 2021. That scientific study was funded by Anthony Fauci’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) grant AI045897 and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Shared Instrumentation Grant 1S10RR027050 for the CCTI Flow Cytometry Core.
Between 2006 and 2018, Yong-Guang Yang received $6.6 million in NIH funding, most of which from Anthony Fauci’s NIAID.
According to his publication record, Yong-Guang Yang officially began working with The First Hospital of Jilin University in 2010, research supported by grants from Anthony Fauci’s NIAID to Yong-Guang Yang (AI064569) and Megan Sykes (AI045897).
n a 2011 study, also funded by Anthony Fauci’s NIAID, Yong-Guang Yang worked with Chunfeng Wang of Jilin University, a collaborator (2014 and 2020) with the PLA’s Institute of Military Veterinary Medicine, a center reportedly connected to China’s biowarfare program.
Around 2012, Yong-Guang Yang began training Chinese scientists from The First Hospital of Jilin University in his Columbia University laboratory, using NIH funding to do so.
Yong-Guang Yang also conducted a scientific study with the PLA in 2018, funded by NIH grants AI079087 and HL130724.
By 2019, Yong-Guang Yang became an official member of the Laboratory of Organ Regeneration and Transplantation, The First Hospital of Jilin University; the International Center of Future Science; and China’s National Joint Engineering Laboratory of Animal Models for Human Diseases, all while he maintained his affiliation with Columbia University.