- From: George Artem <georgeartem@gmail.com>
- Date: Mon, 14 Jun 2021 21:20:54 -0400
- To: Moses Ma <moses.ma@futurelabconsulting.com>
- Cc: Public-Credentials <public-credentials@w3.org>
- Message-Id: <2459F964-D4F0-4A9D-B6EF-73393F722285@gmail.com>
Respectfully, take a look at the VAERS data and give the experimental mRNA injection passport use case a rest. Politicization aside, the world should take a collective pause on emergency use authorization of these untested gene therapies. Smart people like yourselves should be urging restraint. Thank you for your consideration, George Sent from my iPhone > On Jun 14, 2021, at 8:16 PM, Moses Ma <moses.ma@futurelabconsulting.com> wrote: > > > See: https://www.wsj.com/articles/fake-covid-19-certificates-hit-airlines-which-now-have-to-police-them-11618330621 > > Airlines are battling a scourge of passengers traveling with falsified Covid-19 health certificates. > > The documents are often the Covid-19 test results required by many countries on arrival. The International Air Transport Association industry body says it has tracked fake certificates in multiple countries, from France to Brazil, Bangladesh and Afghanistan. Border control authorities and police forces have also reported arrests of people selling documents in the U.K., Spain, Indonesia and Zimbabwe, among others. > > The problem is hitting international flights more than domestic ones, which typically don’t require certification at the moment. Airlines that are more dependent on cross-border travel, particularly those operating in Europe, are growing increasingly alarmed as they look to the summer, when they still hope demand will start to return. > > The proliferation of fake health certificates is exposing a logistical blind spot, as airlines rush to navigate post-pandemic travel standards and retool their systems to ease compliance—and spur demand. Airlines say their staff aren’t equipped to handle and police all the new health certifications needed…
Received on Tuesday, 15 June 2021 01:21:30 UTC