Virtual ghost
Complex paradigm
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2008
- Messages
- 22,108
Record day in Mississippi.
+3400
Just two days later new record.
+4400
Record day in Mississippi.
+3400
We are showing record cases here, if we weren't in an election year i am certain our country would have had another lock down, but fear of riots have prevented our prime minister from making that call.
Island wide curfew at 9pm. Tourist showing up in record numbers. Hospital close to collapse and there is so much vaccine hesitation. I cant convince several family members, and the owner of the company i work for is in hospital for covid, also refused the vaccine because not enough data . Some times smart people are so stupid. Sometimes I wonder if all this information isn't healthy. We are too informed but not with the right information. without having to study or really get educated. I feel covid fatigue i don't want to think about it any more, i don't want to have to wear a mask every day. I don't want to have this sense of impending doom. My anxiety shows no signs of letting up so made an appointment with a therapist.
Record day in Mississippi.
+3400
Just two days later new record.
+4400
One day later
Again new record: +5000
This seems to be explosive growth.
French virologist and Nobel Prize winner Luc Montagnier called mass vaccination against the coronavirus during the pandemic "unthinkable" and a historical blunder that is "creating the variants" and leading to deaths from the disease, LifeSite News reported.
"It's an enormous mistake, isn't it? A scientific error as well as a medical error. It is an unacceptable mistake," Montagnier said in an interview translated and published by the RAIR Foundation US.
"The history books will show that because it is the vaccination that is creating the variants," the report said.
Many epidemiologists know it and are "silent" about the problem known as "antibody-dependent enhancement," Montagnier said.
"It is the antibodies produced by the virus that enable an infection to become stronger," he said in an interview with Pierre Barnerias of Hold-Up Media earlier this month.
While variants of viruses can occur naturally, Montagnier said that vaccination is driving the process. "What does the virus do? Does it die or find another solution?
"It is clear that the new variants are created by antibody-mediated selection due to the vaccination."
Vaccinating during a pandemic is "unthinkable" and is causing deaths, the winner of the 2008 Nobel Prize for Medicine said.
French virologist and Nobel Prize winner Luc Montagnier called mass vaccination against the coronavirus during the pandemic "unthinkable" and a historical blunder that is "creating the variants" and leading to deaths from the disease, LifeSite News reported.
"It's an enormous mistake, isn't it? A scientific error as well as a medical error. It is an unacceptable mistake," Montagnier said in an interview translated and published by the RAIR Foundation US.
"The history books will show that because it is the vaccination that is creating the variants," the report said.
Many epidemiologists know it and are "silent" about the problem known as "antibody-dependent enhancement," Montagnier said.
"It is the antibodies produced by the virus that enable an infection to become stronger," he said in an interview with Pierre Barnerias of Hold-Up Media earlier this month.
While variants of viruses can occur naturally, Montagnier said that vaccination is driving the process. "What does the virus do? Does it die or find another solution?
"It is clear that the new variants are created by antibody-mediated selection due to the vaccination."
Vaccinating during a pandemic is "unthinkable" and is causing deaths, the winner of the 2008 Nobel Prize for Medicine said.
Mass vaccination during pandemic a historic blunder: Nobel laureate Luc Montagnier
I don't need to quote or @ anyone since it is obvious what Im referring to... Well, I no longer take a high amount of money as holding any meaning towards merit. However, I would not ever thought that I would start to think the same way about a Nobel Prize, but it looks like that I was wrong, it looks like that shouldn't be taken much seriously either...
Well, you can be excellent in your field and still hold false or highly questionable opinions in another (actually, even in your field). Just look at James Watson, the co-discoverer of the doublehelix structure of DNA. Another Nobel laureate. He thinks black people are genetically set up to be less intelligent than white people and has suggested aborting fetuses if a genetic screening were to show they are homosexual.
Well, he also piggybacked off of a lot of work by Rosalind Franklin and downplayed her importance.
I know, but work ethics are a seperate issue, I think.
I tend to see the components of a person as more integrated than compartmentalized. That this man takes credit off of others implies that he is insufficient possibly in intellect as well as work ethic. If he piggy backs off of work ethic, why not intelligence? The underlying principle influences all aspects of a person. I suspect he is not as intelligent as his image or else he would not have a psychological need to downplay another demographic to establish personal superiority. All of these traits are interconnected.It kind of fits with the sort of personality that would say things like "blacks are genetically inferior", I think.
I tend to see the components of a person as more integrated than compartmentalized. That this man takes credit off of others implies that he is insufficient possibly in intellect as well as work ethic. If he piggy backs off of work ethic, why not intelligence? The underlying principle influences all aspects of a person. I suspect he is not as intelligent as his image or else he would not have a psychological need to downplay another demographic to establish personal superiority. All of these traits are interconnected.
I tend to see the components of a person as more integrated than compartmentalized. That this man takes credit off of others implies that he is insufficient possibly in intellect as well as work ethic. If he piggy backs off of work ethic, why not intelligence? The underlying principle influences all aspects of a person. I suspect he is not as intelligent as his image or else he would not have a psychological need to downplay another demographic to establish personal superiority. All of these traits are interconnected.
Oh, is that the same Luc Montagnier, a retired octagenarian HIV researcher, who claimed that...
a) AIDS can be cured by eating a healthy diet
b) believes in the magical "water memory" theory at the basis of homeopathy and
c) made false claims about the DNA structure of SARS-COV2 supposedly proving the virus escaped from a lab?
You know, the guy whose Wikipedia entry states "He has been criticised by other academics for using his Nobel prize status to "spread dangerous health messages outside his field of knowledge"". That one?
If bold is true then you can kinda just forget about the natural herd immunity. What then leads us to vaccines, masks and lockdowns.
Also the idea was that you vaccinate a country fast, so that the virus doesn't have the time to adapt. Therefore having half of people vaccinated and half unvaccianted is indeed dangerous because it opens the space to easy mutations. Thus far we still don't have a variant that is clearly skipping the vaccines but if the current situation continues we will probably get it soon (if the vaccine process isn't finished). As the one of the lines here says "Variants can occur naturally", what means that we need to get the virus out of the system pretty much any way we can. Since by now it is obvious that this will not end by itself before world is completely devastated, plus once you allow this thing to get so diverse that a single vaccine can't cover it that is basically game over for the world we knew. Since in various countries you can't do proper lockdowns (that are the last line of defense). However as long as the virus is around people just wouldn't spend normally and economy will deteriorate (especially in countries that have pay to play healthcare, where people save for pandemic induced medical bills and are preparing for the job loss).