Push Back Downunder

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Push Back Downunder

Push Back Downunder

@pushbackdu

Anti Uni Party | Anti Usury | Private Central Bankers and their Epstein Class friends are the problem

Cooktown, Queensland Inscrit le Temmuz 2023
639 Abonnements133 Abonnés
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David
David@Justtdavid_·
you could literally be depressed for a year and the only thing people will notice about you is how easily you get irritated.
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DepressedBergman
DepressedBergman@DannyDrinksWine·
John Carpenter on being called "P0rn0grapher of violence" by the critics & how the movie industry turned against him because of "The Thing" (1982): "Two weeks before 'The Thing' (1982) comes out, they released this other movie called 'E.T' (1982) & there's the burst of love all around this movie. I guess the country was going through a recession & there were tough times. Audiences wanted an up/cry & 'E.T' gave it to them. Two weeks later, out comes my movie, 'The Thing' (1982). And my movie is exactly just the opposite of E.T. It is not an up cry. It is a downer. It is the grimmest thing you have ever seen. There's a transformation scene where the dogs suddenly turn into this horrible creature, and during the first preview one audience member jumped up and ran into the bathroom and threw up. The executives thought we had a hit. Unfortunately, they were wrong. I was criticized heavily for the gore. The critics called me a p0rn0grapher of violence. I've been called a lot of names before but I got called the most names on that film. Here I thought I had made this really great movie, right? But even during the preview stage I knew something was wrong because I had this sixteen-year-old ask me what happened at the end—which one of them was The Thing? I told her she had to use her imagination. She told me she hated that. So I realized I was in deep trouble with that film. And I was right. The industry turned against me because they thought I had gone too far with the gore. I think it probably changed my career." ("The Directors take one", Robert J. Emery, 2002)
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Christophe Bord
Christophe Bord@christophe_bord·
Cancer en phase terminale : J'adore, on a le droit de demander qu'on vous tue à l'hôpital mais on n'a pas le droit de tenter de se soigner avec des molécules comme l'#ivermectine ou le #fenbendazole. Que pourrait-il arriver de pire que de mourir ? Rien que ça, le voyant rouge devrait s'allumer chez toute personne sensée... Mais non. Ils vous prescrivent comment vous avez le droit de mourir, mais vous interdisent des soins potentiels, ou même de tenter avec des protocoles expérimentaux de vous en sortir. Il y a l'art et la manière de mourir académiquement. Et pour eux il vaut mieux mourir ainsi que guérir hors les clous. En tout cas c'est la forte impression que ça donne.
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Bella
Bella@BellaBaddie__·
YouTube is basically unusable now without Adblocker
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Push Back Downunder
Push Back Downunder@pushbackdu·
@j_fishback He killed two of my workmates with aneurysms within 6 months of each other. There were only 5 in my workplace. And only 3 got vaccinated. He’d also given my dad dementia like brain fog
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.@Fimiye·
The first rule of Twitter is you do not tell people in real life about your Twitter.
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Róisín Michaux
Róisín Michaux@RoisinMichaux·
One thing is becoming clear: whatever is happening on a national level, the international community (UNAIDS, WHO, UNFPA, UNDP, CoE, OECD etc) are *not* letting go of the sex-erasure/gender identity thing. If anything, they're digging in.
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Martin Zizi
Martin Zizi@MartinZ_uncut·
Hantavirus - cruise ship - and false narratives galore! My scientific and medical opinion as a scientist who did research on Hantavirus is that an inquiry into Dr Bix is warranted Please share massively - accurate info - 1. First and foremost we studied Hantavirus in my lab for many many years and published about it.. so what follows is ACCURATE by someone who did THIS! It is a zoonosis, monitored by many Defense depth, and I was one of those army scientific officers (I was CSO of BE DoD actually, not the copy machine guy!) Type my name and Hantavirus... and you'll see, non classified peer-review research. 2. This woman (Dr Birx) is ‘guilty as charged’ because she was one of the architects of the SARS2 debacle where she forced with her friend (prof Neil Fergusson, Imperial College, London) the policy of ZERO-Covid aka as a suppression policy ZERO covid for a zoonosis? It was NOT possible, not even a policy.. only a ploy to bring about a technology that was NOT ready to the market (RNA vaccines). One can NEVER eradicate (= zero covid) a zoonosis when 600 + mammalian species (cattle, all our pets, zoo animals, deers,... even minks...) share a virus with us and may play 'ping-pong' - that is getting it from us, and giving it back to us! 3. Now she is at it again with the same old LIES and misconceptions Hantaviruses, human-to-human contamination is very rare! 1 - For the EU strains, one gets infected crawling in the woods, and literally inhaling rodent poop/urine (a bit like snorting coke LOL) -The operational army personnel is at risk because that is part of their training and job! - It has essentially no lethality... but one can get sick, and can get complications IF NOT TREATED, like a bacterial colonization of our lungs 2 - For the US Strains (sin Nombre, Andes), there is a slight increase in human-human transfer. - but it remains RARE, - and requires continuous contact with SYMPTOMATIC people for a while like in a family, or like in a CONFINED room with the HVAC of that cruise ship for exemple (where they kept people in THEIR CABINS for a while - which was the ultimate STUPIDITY!) - just passing by someone who coughs or giving a hug - like in the case of a flu, will NOT do it. - mortality nearly only when NON treated.. that is an important point- very important. Why NO PCR to find out? The PCR testing can NEVER b used for a fishing trip. Its is because - and it is known for age- , it has a very low PRE-test predictive value. After SYMPTOMS however, in order to ascertain and/or to differentiate between different pathogens, it is perfectly legit So systematic PCR will just create FAKE cases, like the 80% false positives obtained for SARS2 during COVID Contagion? Hantaviruses have a long incubation period ( a few weeks) but CAN only be contagious with symptoms.... This appear fun general after 15-18 days on average, and are FLU-like. So before any SYMPTOM -> NO contagion Vaccines? NO matter what they tell you, Hantaviruses are ZOONOSIS - so offering a mass protection (useless as I just explained) via a vaccine is - USELESS - INEFFECTIVE... This is true for ANY zoonosis. Because to really mitigate such transmission, vaccinating humans ONLY would be useless! So vaccines NON needed, and besides especially NOT those RNA-based ones Treatments exist! - First of all, we have -when confronted with symptoms- treat those.. like for any flu-like syndrome - if and when bacterial surinfection arises, antibiotics are in order - HANTA-specific molecules do also exist - Ribavirin is an enzyme blocker of the enzyme of the hantavirus... But there is BETTER! ANY medication/drug which interferes with the acidification of late endosomes will PREVENT hanta to reach the biochemical interior of the cell ... and here we find HYDROXYCHLOROQUINE (HCQ) - yep! and it has been published See here: Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Biology pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC80… Chloroquine, an Anti-Malaria Drug as Effective Prevention for Hantavirus Infections The author list is Ironic - this come in tempore non suspecto from a lab of one Birx Friends - also responsible for the SARS2 debacle in EU and in Belgium :) And i want you all to understand the next sentence. This bug is a NON PROBLEM (see image below), it is pure media manipulation In Belgium - for example - we have each year between 150 and 350 cases of Hantavirus patients. We do not loose them, and NO one has ever heard about it.. because it is a NON problem! In the US, with the ANDES strain... one has more chances to die from a lightning strike than for an Hantavirus infection.. in the US roughly 30 cases a year and 10 deaths, lightning strikes 20 deaths per year and several hundred 'cases" per year too. (And no.. GoF research of this germ is not an easy act... it is NOT a new Hanta, the serology, not the PCR, will prove it...) So i hereby request that an inquiry into Dr Birx statements be made, her full list of conflicts be researched, and that HHS refers her to DOJ for the spread of FALSE information, with ill intent .. as outlined in this post. Prof dr Martin ZIZI, MD-PhD former CSO BE DoD former UN bioweapon inspector @RFKJr_Official @SecKennedy @NIHDirector_Jay
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Sense Receptor@SenseReceptor

FFS, they're doing it again: Deb Birx, former Covid Task Force Coordinator, calls for "widely available" PCR "testing" for hantavirus, hints it should be used in schools "Because we're not testing populations... we don't really know whether there are subclinical cases" "There could be more human-to-human transmission than we actually see" "It's never good to track viruses through symptoms, we should be tracking viruses through blood tests like PCR, we learned that with Covid" "Many universities were able to open and schools were able to open because they provided weekly testing" "We need to make testing more widely available to those who need it"

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BowTiedTamarin | Video & Audio 🧙
Lost track of how many boomers I've met that have plenty of money, own the house, but the household situation is incredibly dysfunctional. to the point where a 1-2 hour visit is physically uncomfortable to be around them Many variations of this. spoiled kids hate them (who might still live at home at 40), live as literal hoarders, allowing insane spousal behavior, bizarre pet situations, orienting entire personality around vices
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Elizabeth🦒
Elizabeth🦒@oceana_roll·
@SKP765 It’s so upsetting! This was my passion, as I assume it was for most people in our spot. I hope we can recover quickly.
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Elizabeth🦒
Elizabeth🦒@oceana_roll·
No one tells you what to do if your career completely collapses around you in your late thirties
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Serfs Up!
Serfs Up!@Serf78862·
@oceana_roll I just finished welding school with a certification in structural steel stick welding, after years ago earning a BA Interdisciplinary Studies: International Relations, & working as a land title due diligence researcher & senior legal assistant for problem-solving title problems.
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interrobang
interrobang@interro_9·
I told my parents i was going to become a lawyer at age 9 apparently, and then i just grew up with that in my head my entire life. No plan b. And i did it, at age 25 i finished school and at 27 i was called to the bar. The big dream came true. Then i got diagnosed with MS just after, and everything flipped upside down. I managed to work for 2 years until my health got worse, and eventually I had to go on medical leave. Its been 5+ years now, im in my mid 30s and cant return to that career. All my peers are partners and managers and climbing high. I'm really no where, on paper. I spent most of my life getting to that point and right when the rife began i had to jump off. So i definitely know the feeling, or at least a version of it. The biggest takeaway I've had is seeing how much personal identity is mixed up with profession. If im not [career title], what am I? We like to think we're more than our jobs but once you lose it for good, you see how lost you feel and realize a lot of what you thought was you was in that title. Its a painful process. The uncertainty is the killer, its good and dandy to be open to change but when you don't know where you'll land, it can be a very anxious time. All the while your life just keeps rolling. Time keeps passing. That in itself can add to the anxiety. At some point you have to revert to that childlike state where you believe, somehow, things will work out for you, and then just live each day with that belief. It took me a while to internalize that and some days i still have to grapple with the uncertainty. The best you can do is just embrace the unknown and focus on how to make each 'today' the best it can possibly be. Those tend to add up to something valuable if you do it enough days in a row.
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Paris
Paris@goodyhilton·
If you look around you'll see that most people are kinda ugly and they are doing fine, getting married and having jobs and living normally. It's not weird to be ugly it's weird and harmful to obsess over it
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Sall Grover
Sall Grover@salltweets·
As we approach the Giggle v Tickle decision, it’s important to remember that the Australian Human Rights Commission argued in a court of law that men who claim to be women need pregnancy protections. I shit ye not. They actually said this.
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DC74
DC74@decas1974·
@theiaincameron Explains why I couldn’t swim in the ocean even during a Melbourne heatwave
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Iain Cameron
Iain Cameron@theiaincameron·
People living in Melbourne, Australia live closer to Antarctica than they do to Darwin in North Australia.
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