DarthOne
☦️
...maybe?Isn't it the spike protein that causes the clotting?
Look, I’m pretty much being forced into this shit kicking and screaming.
...maybe?Isn't it the spike protein that causes the clotting?
...maybe?
Look, I’m pretty much being forced into this shit kicking and screaming.
Well yes... But we don't actually have the technology to do that...So if they gene-mod people's cells to make those spikes themselves, and put then on the outside membrane, the cells will stick to each other.
From the article...Metal flakes? Well, @Vaermina there's your "magic" right there!
The material has not yet been identified and experts in Japan doubt that the fragments could pass down needles. The government released the batch numbers so that people would know if they had been injected from the potentially contaminated vials.
Well yes... But we don't actually have the technology to do that...
From the article...
TV: 14 Israelis who got 3rd shot later infected with COVID-19
Limited data not enough to draw conclusions on booster's effectiveness; ministers said to fight over potential lockdown, restriction exemption for shulswww.timesofisrael.com
Australian truck drivers have blocked a major highway in the north-eastern state of Queensland in a protest against vaccine mandates and tough border restrictions, causing traffic to back up for several kilometres.
The action marks a series of ongoing protests from Australians frustrated with state government COVID-19 lockdowns and mandated restrictions based on emergency public health orders.
The drivers parked their prime movers at 5:30 a.m. on the southbound lanes of the M1 highway at Reedy Creek in the Gold Coast portion of the arterial on Monday. The highway is used by tens of thousands of Queenslanders each morning.
A banner was unfurled and covered the front of both vehicles, reading: “Truckies Keep Australia Moving, Not Politicians.”
One driver named Brock, who did not give his surname, said the drivers were protesting the Queensland government’s strict health orders that prevented all individuals from entering the state, except for essential workers.
Those deemed essential workers need to be involved in skilled construction, farming, or healthcare, and must prove that a Queensland resident cannot do their job. Further, they need to prove they have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.
News footage showed federal One Nation Senator Pauline Hanson and her advisor James Ashby at the protest.“End all lockdowns, people go back to work, and kids go back to school,” Brock told Nine’s Today show.
“That’s all we want out of it; we’ve had enough of it.
“We’ve had a lot the support mate, the people that showed up today is amazing. We appreciate everyone that’s come down,” he added, saying the police had been lenient about the protest, and he respected what they did.
“But it’s all about choice at the end of the day. If you don’t want to get the vax, don’t get the vax. If you do want to get it, get it. But just don’t keep locking up people.”
Acting Chief Superintendent Rhys Wildman of Gold Coast police said the truckers faced criminal charges.
Wildman said the M1 was blocked for 45 minutes, and emergency vehicles were held up, which was a “great concern.”
“There’s a bigger picture in this around putting lives at risk, which is really, really disappointing,” he told ABC Gold Coast. “We are investigating, and obviously, action will be taken against those particular drivers at a later time.”
The truckers’ rally comes a day before a planned Australia and New Zealand-wide protest on Aug. 31, that has been circulating on social media for weeks.
Frustrations have begun boiling over in Australia over the COVID-19 lockdowns—which state government say are caused by the low vaccinations in the country—with protests against government-mandated lockdowns ramping up around the country in recent weeks.“Block every hwy [highway] entering into every state all at the same time & take back Australia,” one post on Facebook read, while warning people to stock up on enough food for a couple of weeks while truckies aim to block supply routes across the country.
On the weekend of Aug. 21, rallies were held in Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, Brisbane, Perth, and Coolangatta-Tweed Heads.
Over 1,000 residents in the Coolangatta-Tweed area—which saddles the state border between Queensland and New South Wales—held a rally complaining that the hard domestic border was affecting their livelihoods. Residents in the region regularly cross between the state border to access services.
The Queensland government implemented the hard border in response to an outbreak of the Delta variant of COVID-19 in the Greater Sydney area—about 800 kilometres away—with sporadic outbreaks in the regions.“I was working [across the border], and now my source of income has been cut off, so I’m forced to be dependent on the government,” one rallygoer from Pottsville in northern NSW told the ABC.
“It’s really, really distressing, and we’re angry—we’re angry about our government.”
The northern NSW area, closest to Queensland, has had no active cases except for sewerage samples, as well as a man and his two teenage children found travelling to Byron Bay from Sydney last month.
The Federal Employment Minister Stuart Roberts said the health orders were tough but said the truckies should not have held the action on the Gold Coast and inconvenienced thousands.
The move also comes as Queensland becomes the first state to trial vaccination of international seafarers arriving at local ports. The International Transport Workers’ Federation backed the move.“Vaccination seems to be the way for us to be able to get through this, to get back out of lockdown and to get ourselves back to the freedoms that we love here in Australia,” he said.
“The rest of the world is doing it. Sure, there is carnage left, right, and centre, but there is carnage left, right, and centre here.
“International seafarers are the backbone of the economy, but a growing number of COVID outbreaks on vessels arriving in Australian ports highlights the need for urgent action to protect the health of these workers, reduce the risk of community transmission, and strengthen supply chain resilience,” ITF Australia co-ordinator Ian Bray said.
Yes, but the science of that is much much different from what you described.Pfizer claims to - that's kind of the whole point of their "vaccine". It uses RNA to make your cells produce the spikes, so that the immune system will react to them.
You seem to be forgetting that would kill the person...If there are largish fragments, there are probably also smaller ones, and the metal might also be dissolved.
Worth noting though, that this is not the same product here. But we are looking at questions of what is possible.
He's either A) making it up or B) using something he doesn't understand the science of in a way that causes it to either mess up or ping on something completely normal that he doesn't realize always existed.Unless you want to insist that Captain X is just making things up?
What in the actual fuck?
That doesn't explain the DoD stepping in.They don't want idiots running up to steal stuff then selling spoiled vaccine for money.
With no joke or sarcasm meant...That might be a function of the government already having bought assloads of the vaccine and it being classified as a national security purchase or some-such type of thing, so they 'own' the spill and have to clean it and DoD has the resources on-hand that EPA or someone-else who'd normally do clean-up doesn't?That doesn't explain the DoD stepping in.