As 33,000,000 people now know, a man named Jordan Trishton Walker was secretly interviewed by a Project Veritas reporter a few days ago. A video of the encounter was posted on Twitter and Project Veritas’ website on January 25th at 7:37 pm EST. Just before it was released, One Twitter user tweeted, “I have seen the material and the video that will come out from Veritas, and it is explosive!” He was right. The day after the video dropped, a second video was posted, this one of Walker’s reactions to the first video. Walker assaulted James O’Keefe and his crew in an effort to obtain and destroy an iPad containing the video of his interview.
This was a normal response, considering the circumstances. Walker, Pfizer’s director of research and development – strategic operations and Mrna scientific planning, had admitted on video that Pfizer was engaged in experiments that he described as “directed evolution”. To anyone who has ever heard of the coronavirus, “directed evolution” sounds a lot like “gain of function”. In general terms, gain of function research is when a pathogen is intentionally made more dangerous. Some scientists, however, look at it differently. For instance, Dr. Thomas Briese, Columbia University, described gain of function as a “proactive” approach to understanding what will happen in nature. That is exactly what Walker said in the video. When pressed on the point, Walker denies they are doing gain of function but then seems to contradict himself by adding, in reference to gain of function, “They’d rather we not, but we do these selected structure mutations to try to see if we can make them more potent.” How is that not gain of function?
In the context of Pfizer research, Walker then states, “there better not be any more outbreaks”. That sounds like there has been an outbreak, and the outbreak was connected to Pfizer research. What does he mean by that? At another point in the interview, he hints that this is how the covid “pandemic” was started, “I suspect [this] is the way the virus started in Wuhan, to be honest. Like, it makes no sense that this virus popped up out of nowhere.” Does he suspect? Or does he know?
A background check of Walker performed by Brian O’Shea reveals that prior to working at Pfizer, Walker worked for Boston Consulting Group, a 25,000-employee business consulting firm. Their specialty sounds very much like the kind of talk we hear coming out of the World Economic Forum (WEF): sustainability, diversity, and social impact. Walker worked in their healthcare division. While there, and just before the so-called pandemic became world news, BCG sent Walker on a business immersion Chinese language course. Why? Was he dealing with Chinese clients or contractors? Right after this, he went to work for Pfizer.