₿oogaloo

 
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  • in reply to: Debt Rattle October 21 2021 #90572
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    @phoenixvoice
    I hope the Ivermectin does the trick. If it does not, the FLCCC recommends fluvoxamine for the long covid “brain fog” symptoms. If fluvoxamine is not available, they say fluoxetine (prosac) is the next best substitute. But hopefully Ivermectin solves everything.

    in reply to: Debt Rattle October 21 2021 #90552
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    Raul, I just canceled my Paypal monthly automatic payment. I am done with Paypal. They are deplatforming the FLCCC, so I refuse to work with them any longer.

    I just sent my first donation to your bitcoin address.

    Another suggestion might be to set up to take donations through Revolut. That is a fantastic service with no fees.

    in reply to: Debt Rattle October 21 2021 #90542
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    I am not buying this story that the Expose is pushing that the vaccines cause AIDS.

    AIDS was a disease that dramatically lowered T4 cells counts and made patients susceptible to rare forms of pneumonias that only appear in severely immuno-compromised patients. Patients did not die from AIDS. They died from the pneumonia that followed decimation of their immune systems, and particularly T4.

    That is not what is happening here. As van den Bossche explains in practically every one of his videos, there is a tradeoff with the vaccines. They boost the highly specific immune response to the spike protein antigen, but that comes at a cost. The cost is a reduction in the effectiveness of the body’s innate and generalized immunity. That is NOT the same as saying that the vaccines are causing AIDS. The Expose is peddling junk science.

    in reply to: Debt Rattle October 20 2021 #90385
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    @sumac
    For 30%, the brainwashing was complete before the propaganda even started. For 20%, the outcome was equally clear — they would resist the government no matter what — it did not matter whether the measures were temporary or permanent, ratonal or arbitratary, supported by data or purely speculative. For the 50% in the middle, they sense something is wrong, but are subject to the spell. These people might be reached, one at a time, by science and rational argument. But most will still find security in the group, and will not want to make waves.

    in reply to: Debt Rattle October 20 2021 #90383
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    @Germ

    The news about Russia is not too surprising. It’s already cold there. Cases are rising. Deaths are at a daily all time high. This is what you get with no Ivermectin, no promotion of Vitamin D, and a low (30%) vaccination rate.

    I disfavor the vaccines because I think that Ivermectin is the better and safer choice. But you need to choose one or the other. The vaccines have a terrible safety profile, but at least they bring down the hospitalization rate over the intermediate term.

    in reply to: “Mistakes” #90377
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    @Willem83

    Taking too much zinc will deplete your copper over time. No problem taking zinc as long as you take copper with it. I think I recall the ratio is 60:1. There are videos over at Youtube that address this topic.

    in reply to: “Mistakes” #90365
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    I had a Zoom call this morning with two old friends that I have not seen in 15 years. The three of us have always been at odds over various matters. Lots of banter, debate, teasing and trash talking — typically about political matters, but sometimes it seems like we would go out of our way just to find something to argue about.

    So I figured the vaccine issue was bound to come up.

    When it did, I explained that there are no vaccine mandates in Korea because of the high voluntary compliance rate. I also explained that the health authorities here announced that everything would go back to normal once we hit the 85% target. So then they asked: “Are you in the 85%? Or the 15%?” At this point I had not figured out what camp they would fall into, so I said “I’m one of those 15% holdouts.”

    And that got them fired up.

    “What’s wrong with you?”
    “Don’t you want inflammation of your endothelial lining?”
    “Don’t you want the prions?”
    “Don’t you want the micro-clotting?”
    “Don’t you want the myocarditis?”

    And when I mentioned my three year supply the Ivermectin, we all started whinnying with laughter.

    I was a bit surprised that they were as up to speed on the data as they were. This is the first time in as long as I can remember that we all agreed on such a hot button topic.

    The agreement ended when the subject turned to Bitcoin . . . and then we were back to our old selves.

    in reply to: “Mistakes” #90362
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    All the best to you, Dr Day. May you find peace in your vegetable garden until this mass hypnosis lifts.

    in reply to: “Mistakes” #90355
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    TDub, of course one strategy is to keep taking zinc, but to take it with the right amount of copper to keep them in the right proportion.

    Another alternative is to save the zinc for when you start feeling symptoms, and then to take it with quercetin and lecithin (quercetin to help the zinc enter the cells where it can interfere with viral replication, and lecithin to increase the absorption of quercetin).

    Having the extra zinc in your system doesn’t really help if the zinc cannot get into the cells.

    in reply to: Debt Rattle October 19 2021 #90287
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    The naturalnews.com article looks suspect.

    Hows does one lose 5% of one’s immune’s system in a week? Or any other percentage? How exactly is that measured? What exactly is being measured? The article does not say. I have never heard of losing immunity by percentages. And to say this “appears” to be the same as AIDS? This looks like pseudo-science.

    in reply to: Debt Rattle October 18 2021 #90269
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    In light of Paypal’s decision to deplatform the FLCCC, I plan to either terminate my Paypal account or suspend all payments for a year. I am waiting to hear back from them before I decide which it will be.

    But this means that my TAE donations will now be arriving at the bitcoin address. This is a switch I should have made a long time ago.

    in reply to: Debt Rattle October 14 2021 #90001
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    I presume you are referencing crypto-currencies

    Only Bitcoin. The only one that is decentralized, with no pre-mine, unconfiscatable, and already widely adopted. You are looking for a monetary revolution? If this isn’t it, then what are you waiting for? Pitchforks and guillotines? This is it. The revolution is here. There is going to be a battle for a few years to control the onramps and offramps, but eventually that will fail as centralized power structures begin to crumble.

    You need to take a trip down the rabbit hole.

    in reply to: Debt Rattle October 14 2021 #89997
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    @TheTrivium4TW
    I hear you, but the antidote to our monetary slavery has arrived:
    1HYLLUR2JFs24X1zTS4XbNJidGo2XNHiTT

    in reply to: Debt Rattle October 14 2021 #89994
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    @shinzonbeta
    Thanks for the link about nattokinase. If I have to get the clot shot (and I probably will need to at some point because my work requires that I travel), I need to also have the antidote.


    @John
    Day
    I know you do not want to fight. But part of me would like to see you scare the bejesus out of them by sending them a letter calling them out on the sudden change of position and reserving all of your rights.

    in reply to: Make It Make Sense To Me. I Dare You. #89911
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    @ John Day
    Your consolation prize is that you have become a much better writer since July. Good piece today!


    @aspnaz

    I can understand why people would support mandatory vaccination if it meant that we could all go back to normal, including going on holiday. But what makes people think that is ever going to happen? Wishful thinking? It is hard to imagine Hong Kong tolerating the huge spike in cases that will follow leaky vaccines..

    in reply to: Make It Make Sense To Me. I Dare You. #89906
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    The data are really confounding, and the epidemiology of this disease is really hard to understand:

    Cases spiked in low-vaxxed India, India deployed Ivermectin, the cases came down, and many Ivermectin proponents declared victory. Case numbers have remained at a low baseline.

    Cases spiked in highly-vaxxed Israel, and that seemed to discredit the vaccine narrative. But now cases are coming way down. If the vaccines enhance transmission, why are case numbers down?

    Cases spiked in highly-vaxxed England, and that also seemed to discredit the vaccine narrative. Cases have since come down off the peak, but the new baseline is very high, especially compared to highly-vaxxed Israel. Why such a big difference?

    The delta wave hit the US, but New York and LA were only mildly affected. How did the two largest population centers dodge the bullet?

    Cases spiked in highly-vaxxed Singapore, and now seem to be coming down again. But why?

    Cases spiked in low-vaxxed Indonesia, Indonesia deployed Ivermectin, and now the new baseline is much lower than it was before the spike.

    Remember when the Maldives and Sechelles were the first to open up once they reached high vaccination rates? Vanden Bosshe predicted the spikes that followed, but the spikes were short lived and case levels have returned to baseline. Why?

    Does this make any sense to anyone? Maybe this just comes in waves, regardless of vaccination, regardless of Ivermectin, and (mostly?) regardless of social distancing?

    in reply to: Debt Rattle October 12 2021 #89847
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    Could someone comment on whether AsraZeneca is the same or similar in regard to this particular danger?


    @vlad
    Pfizer, Moderna, AZ and J&J are are the same in that they all instruct the body’s cells to produce the spike protein. The body then produces an immune response to that spike protein. In that sense they are all “spike protein” vaccines.

    In the beginning, there was some concern about the mRNA delivery mechanism in the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines. Some believed that the AZ, J&J and Sputnik platforms were safer because they used an existing adenovirus delivery platform. But now the long term safety concerns have shifted. The concern is not so much the delivery mechanism, but the payload of what is being delivered. The problem is the spike protein, which binds to the ACE2 receptors throughout the body and interferes with the proper functioning of multiple organs.

    The Chinese vaccines are different. They do not instruct the body to make any spike protein at all. Instead, they try to produce an immune response by injecting complete (but inactivated) viral particles into the body.

    in reply to: Debt Rattle October 11 2021 #89716
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    Do people really believe there was no flu last year?

    Yeah, pretty much, I do believe that. For the first time in years I did not get sick at all — not even a cold. This is a big deal for me because I never get “just a cold”. It’s always a cold (or flu), followed by sinus infection, followed by bronchitis and weeks of coughing. Usually multiple times a year. But since February 2020 I have not been sick at all. And lots of people I know have had the same experience. Masks, sanitizer, distancing, regular hand washing, and more sleep have all made a huge difference to me — like night and day. I really do believe that the flu all but disappeared in Korea last year.

    in reply to: Attack on Red Blood Cells #89374
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    @Michael Reid

    Ha! If everything goes to hell, that might be the only OTC anti-viral product you can buy.

    Seriously, they claim that there is data indicating that using povidone-iodine nasal drops in the nasal passages may reduce the risk of hospitalization. I am not sure how compelling the data is, but a bottle of 10% povidone-iodine where I live costs about a dollar. I have it in my medicine cabinet, and will try that if and when I ever develop symptoms. Can’t hurt.

    in reply to: Attack on Red Blood Cells #89372
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    John Day knows which nasal spray is best. Also include regular mouthwash.

    Mouthwash: The FLCCC recommendation is that it should contain cetylpyridinium chloride or chlorhexidine. The former is more common.

    Nasal drops: The FLCCC recommendation is to use 1% povidone-iodine nasal drops if you can find them. They can be hard to find. It is easier to find 10% povidone-iodine solution. You can use this, but you must dilute it down to 1% with distilled or boiled water.

    in reply to: Debt Rattle October 5 2021 #89313
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    I agree that the new McCullough video is worthwhile. It’s not as good as the last one that somebody linked to, but still worthwhile.

    in reply to: Debt Rattle October 5 2021 #89308
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    Exactly what is a Digital Dollar beyond what already exists – sans paper and coin?

    Tree Frog, presumably a digital dollar would have an additional advantage that you would trade 24/7 without currency exchange fees, bypassing the banks, and with much lower remittance fees. That’s the whole reason the USD “stable coin” cryptocurrencies were invented — to let people trade into a USD equivalent outside the banking system. A digital dollar would eliminate the risk that one of these stable coins might implode one day (there is not enough transparency about what backs these stable coin USD equivalents). Having said that, nobody is going to save in a digital dollar as a long term store of value. But if it gives you a chance to give the banks the bird, I am all for it.

    in reply to: Debt Rattle October 5 2021 #89288
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    Boogaloo: What if Bitcoin does what Facebook did? Repeatedly? Cash?

    John Day, I am not sure what you mean by that question. Bitcoin is only a protocol — it is not a company. It cannot really do anything. There is no phone number to call, no door to knock on, nobody to arrest or threaten or intimidate. It is nameless and faceless. Doing anything to change the protocol requires nearly unanimous consent, which is nearly impossible, even for non-controversial actions.

    Other cryptocurrencies like ETH or ADA are more centralized. They work a little bit more like companies — like Facebook. They are platforms, not protocols. They have leaders who are easily identifiable. They are a lot easier for authorities to target, and a lot easier to regulate. They are the Wall Street version of a crypto asset. For that reason they may be a good speculative buy, but make no mistake: They are operating within the status quo system.

    If you want to opt out of the system, you have to go 100% decentralized — and the only option available is Bitcoin.

    in reply to: Normalcy Migration #89216
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    How ya gonna mine or spend your bitcoin when the power is out?

    I don’t think the internet will permanently shut down. If it does, our problems are even bigger than I realized. Until it does, migrating to Bitcoin is one of the most important acts of resistance available to us. Decentralization is the only antidote to totalitarianism. It is the only way to vote against the Empire.

    in reply to: Debt Rattle September 30 2021 #88916
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    @absolute galore

    Another issue to think about is just how much is on the line regarding vaccination in general.

    If, in a years time, the data clearly indicates that the risks of these vaccines clearly outweigh the benefits, this will further embolden the “opposed to all vaccines” crowd. That would be unfortunate — because a science-based approach should consider each vaccine on its own merits, its own risk-benefit analysis. Good luck with that if these Spike protein vaccines turn out to be the long term disaster that we fear. How could the establishment admit that they were wrong about these vaccines without destroying their credibility? Hard to imagine at this point.

    in reply to: Debt Rattle September 30 2021 #88915
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    John Day, I appreciate that you are taking the moral high ground, but at the same time I wish that more would fight this evil menace in the courts, advancing legal arguments supported by real science.

    Any chance you might open your own practice? Or has the medical establishment now made that too expensive, too complicated, too risky?

    in reply to: Debt Rattle September 30 2021 #88906
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    I do not share the optimism of some here that the “narrative” is turning around.

    A lot has changed. They have stopped talking about herd immunity from the vaccines. That is a huge step forward. Yet there is still great faith that booster shots will turn out to be the answer. That will take some time to play out.

    If booster shots end up conferring some form of long-lasting protection, then vaccine passports are here to stay.

    If it turns out that booster shots wear off in a few weeks, then maybe the vaccine passport plan gets scrapped before the end of the year.

    If it turns out that booster shots extend protection for six months each time, then vaccine passports are here to stay for at least another year. It will take time to see whether the cumulative detrimental costs of repeated vaccination with S-protein vaccines outweighs the benefit. The costs may come in the form of increased rates of short term side effects, increased long term side effects, or ADE (or some other form of enhanced disease).

    Here in Korea things are better than Western countries in some respects, but worse in others. There is no vaccine mandate, and I have not heard of employers imposing vaccine mandates, but the rules say that evening meetings in public places can only have two adults, or up to four as long as two are vaccinated (doesn’t matter which two) . When things are relaxed, there can be gatherings of up to six, as long as four are vaccinated. This is a way to put indirect pressure on people, as this is very much a group oriented society.

    Now there is discussion about a vaccine pass to enter public places like sporting events. The bizarre thing is that there is a recognition and admission that this will not stop the spread of the virus, or even prevent severe disease in the long run. The officials admit that the purpose is to create incentives to get vaccinated by intentionally making it more “inconvenient” if you are not. That is the purpose: To increase the vaccination rate as an end in itself. There is a bit of mass psychosis here that many Koreans see increasing the vaccination rate compared to other countries as some source of pride — as if there is a competition.

    Another bizarre thing: The officials are quite open that they will just follow the lead of other countries, especially the US and UK. If the trend is vaccine passports, they will be rolled out here too. If the US and UK accept the Pfizer, Moderna, AZ and J&J vaccines, then those same vaccines will be recognized here too. If the trend is to ignore Ivermectin, they will ignore it here too. There is no original thought, no leadership. Which is really disappointing because there are a lot of smart people in this country who should know better.

    in reply to: Debt Rattle September 28 2021 #88702
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    A small bit of good news to report today. I had a meeting with two fully vaxxed professional colleagues. I expected, with trepidation, that “the vaccine” question might come up — and in fact it did. I was determined to stick to my guns, and I did. But instead of focusing on politics, I focused on science. Though my colleagues were initially flabbergasted that I had not received the vaccine yet, when I explained that I am pro-vaccine, and would be first in line to receive the right vaccine at the right time (first choice — lived attenuated vaccine (Covi-Vac); second choice — inactivated virus (Sinovac or Sinopharm); third choice protein subunit (Novovax); fourth choice adenoviral vector (AZ, J&J, Sputnik); fifth choice mRNA (Pfizer or Moderna)), their reaction was “Hmm. I wish that I had talked to you before I got vaccinated.”

    I think this is the way forward. We need to undertand the science, and be better able to engage with the science than the charlatan politicians pretending to rely on the science. This is difficult, very difficult, but worth it. There is great harvest awaiting — people genuinely hungry for the truth, for understanding, not politics. Although we hesitate because we are not sure we fully understand the science, the people we seek to reach are in the a same boat. If you scratch the surface, there are huge numbers of people out there who are consciously aware that the official story does not add up, but who seek to engage and undertand on a scientific level, not an ideological or religious level. We need to reach them where they are, not where we wish they were. Even though we do not understand all the science and we are not experts in the field, I am convinced that this is the only way to reach many of them.

    in reply to: Spartacus #88237
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    @VietnamVet

    Isn’t the solution a more decentralized government? I am all in favor of the institution of government, but I prefer more at the state and local level, rather than the Leviathan that Washington has become.

    Yet because of American history, anyone who suggests that the federal government should be weaker and the States should be stronger will be accused of being a Confederate KKK sympathizer — this is another Jedi mind trick of the elite. The last thing they want is for a meaningful choice that varies from state to state.

    in reply to: Debt Rattle September 26 2021 #88223
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    I watched the new Malone/vanden Bossche video last night. It is well worth the two hours.

    A key to understanding van den Bossche’s argument is that nobody who gets infected has a pure single strain of the virus. This is critical, and this is something that I missed before. When we refer to the “Delta variant” this does not mean that 100% of the virus in the infected person is Delta. Rather, the initial innoculum that causes the infection will be a mixture of millions of viral particles. Some will be Delta. Some will be other strains. They are all competing against each other in the same person. The effect of the vaccine is that a higher percentage of the particles that replicate and get passed on from a vaccinated person will be the particles that can evade the vaccines. The vaccine has a concentrating effect. There will still be non-Delta virus replicating in a vaccinated person, but at a much lower level.

    In contrast, viral replication in unvaccinated people does not favor one strain over another, and has a more diluting effect, which is a good thing on a population-wide basis, as it helps to counteract a single strain from becoming dominant.

    His theory for why kids are starting to get sick now where they did not before: High viral pressure means that kids might be exposed once, and successfully clear the virus without developing disease, but with a lackluster immune response that produces only low level of antibodies. On second exposure, the presence of the low level antibodies from the first exposure might enhance the disease.

    Malone clarified that ADE, strictly speaking, is a phenomenon where low levels of non-sterilizing antibodies might make it possible for the virus to take over macrophages — white blood cells that the virus ordinarily would not be able to attack. That does not seem to be what is happening here. However, there does seem to be some other enhancement mechanism that results in the higher viral loads in vaccinated people. This is not necessarily ADE because it does not involve macrophages. ADE is just one subcategory of enhancement.

    Those were some of the key points I took away, but I should probably watch the video again with pencil in hand.

    in reply to: Debt Rattle September 21 2021 #87850
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    @chooch @phoenixvoice

    All this talk about bovine ivermectin brings back memories of the early stages of the pandemic. I recall that John Day posted one of the early small studies from China that indicated chloroquine phosphate might be effective. This was around March 2020 when bodies were piling up everywhere. The only thing I could find was chloroquine phosphate for the aquarium. The bottle has a warning in capital letters on the label “Not for human consumption.” Not long after that, a couple in Arizona died from chloroquine phosphate overdose. Fortunately I never had to take it, but I recall thinking to myself at the time “I’m not going to just sit here and die.” I still have the bottle, but I no longer keep it in the medicine cabinet.

    in reply to: Debt Rattle September 22 2021 #87849
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    By the way, today I received a delivery of nitazoxanide and dutasteride from our friends down in India (I already stockpiled enough Ivermectin to treat the extended family and half the neighborhood).

    Although self-medication involves some degree of risk, I have no intention to sit at home and wait for my lips to turn blue.

    in reply to: Debt Rattle September 22 2021 #87848
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    Most of our discussion criticizing “the vaccines” has emphasized that, regardless of whether the delivery platform is m-RNA or adenovirus, they all program the body’s cells to produce the spike protein antigen. Part of the risk surrounding these vaccines is the unknown variable of how much spike protein the body generates, or where, or how long it takes the body to clear.

    But the Chinese vaccines, Sinovac and Sinopharm, do not work that way. They both use inactivated virus. They do not rely on a mechanism that requires the body to produce spike protein. The problem with using inactivated virus is that the vaccines do not work as well. But the advantage of these vaccines is NOT having spike protein attacking your endothelial lining and other cells. If I had to take a vaccine, I would take one of these rather than Pfizer, Moderna, AZ or Janssen. But sadly, because of politics, this is not an option where I live.

    The ideal vaccine would be a live-attenuated virus vaccine. These vaccines have a better response rate than the inactivated virus vaccines, and more long-lasting protection. But the only live attenuated virus vaccine in clinical development for Covid that I am aware of is the Codagenix vaccine called Covi-Vac, which completed a Phase I clinical trial of only 48 patients. I hope this works.

    The last category is the protein subunit vaccine. These are different than the mRNA, DNA and Adenoviral vector vaccines because they do not program your body to make the spike protein. They still rely on the spike protein: They just inject it directly. I am trying to find more information about what what part of the spike protein they rely on, or whether they do anything to the spike protein to make it less toxic. It is hard to find meaningful information about these. Novovax would be the first. SK also had a product in clinical trials in Korea. All things being equal, if I had to take a vaccine, and I cannot get Sinovac or Sinopharm, I think I would prefer a subunit vaccine rather than Pfizer, Moderna, AZ or Janssen. An least then I would know how much spike protein is involved, and presumably there would be a lower risk of auto-immune disease. But it is hard to find meaningful information …

    in reply to: Debt Rattle September 21 2021 #87752
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    @chooch Why not just order from overseas like many of us here have already done?

    in reply to: Debt Rattle September 18 2021 #87521
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    @sumac.carol

    Perhaps an important variable is timing. I read that Canada got a late start on its vaccination drive, with only 3% fully vaccinated as of beginning of May. Then Canada suddenly zoomed up near the top of the list. So it may be the case that you are still in the sweet spot of vaccine effectiveness. Once you get six months out from reaching 70% fully vaccinated, when vaccine effectiveness plummets (and ADE possibly kicks in), the numbers may reverse.

    in reply to: I Am Afraid #87438
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    I do not think the situation is as dark as many are making it out to be. Rather, this is a combination of:

    1. Incompetence
    2. Centralized power
    3. Propaganda
    4. Regulatory capture
    5. Social media echo chambers
    6. Wishful thinking
    7. Hubris
    8. Law of unintended consequences
    9. Debt servitude (intimidating people from speaking out)

    That al adds up to something dark and bleak, but I do not think that anone who knows better is trying to cull 90% of the world’s population. But I have been wrong before . . .

    in reply to: Debt Rattle September 16 2021 #87345
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    @Oroboros

    I am not sure any of this helps your argument that Sars-COV2 does not exist. In fact, it undermines the argument from the previous video. It seems to say that coronaviruses with spike proteins have existed, and have been known, for a long time, and that people have been trying to patent the sequences — it does not say that they do not exist. In fact, all corona viruses have a spike protein. The spike protein is the part of the virus that makes the “corona” — this has been known for a long time.

    Whether products based on the gene sequences of these viruses are classified as vaccines, or therapies, or bioweapons, or whatever, and whether they qualify for patents, is an entirely different question.

    Your line of reasoning seems to follow the contradictory “kitchen sink” reasoning of climate change deniers, who simultaneously argue, with a straight face, that (i) global warming is not happening at all, (ii) global warming is happening, but it is attributable to non-human factors, (iii) there is insufficient evidence to determine whether global warming is happening; and (iv) global warming is happening, but that is a good thing because it will offset global cooling expected from a decrease of solar activity.

    in reply to: Debt Rattle September 16 2021 #87341
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    @Oroboros

    I don’t think this guy knows what he is talking about. He is not a virologist. He admits that this is not his specialty. He complains that he cannot buy an isolated sample of SARS-COV2 virus for testing like he would test glyphosate. She asks hims if this is normal, if he could buy, for example, an isolated sample of measles virus, and he says he does not know.

    The virus was sequenced by the Chinese in January 2020. I recall a Chris Martenson podcast sometime shortly after that where a lab in Europe took that sequence and built the entire virus from scratch, according to the published sequence.

    This “never been isolated and purified” argument is not a valid criticism, and seems to be pushed by people without the right credentials.

    in reply to: Debt Rattle September 16 2021 #87340
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    @mister roboto

    Exactly why I will be voting straight-ticket Republican in November 2022 for the first time in my life with no qualms whatsoever about doing so.

    Why note vote for Vladimir Putin as a write in candidate instead?

    “I do not support mandatory vaccinations.” -Vladimir Putin

    https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/vladimir-putin-says-he-opposes-mandatory-covid-vaccinations-2476077

    in reply to: Pandemic Brooding #87251
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    @ezlxa1949
    Yes, but if you order it from overseas, will it clear customs in Australia?

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