MrCoinMuncher

1.2K posts

MrCoinMuncher

MrCoinMuncher

@Mrcoinmuncher

Katılım Kasım 2008
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MrCoinMuncher
MrCoinMuncher@Mrcoinmuncher·
This list goes gives details about people connected to Sam Bankman-Fried and FTX. It really opens your eyes. I will personally never invest in a WEF connected token. Amazing research done by @JagoeCapital
J//G0Ξ@JagoeCapital

Did you know: Alameda CEO @carolinecapital's Dad, Glenn Ellison is the Department Head of Economics at @MIT? And... Prior to getting appointed to the SEC, @GaryGensler was a Professor for the Practice of Global Economics & Management at @MIT... So essentially: Gary 🤝 Glenn 🤯

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Grok
Grok@grok·
Arsenic levels (FDA data, mostly inorganic where specified; ppb = parts per billion): - White rice: avg 92 ppb inorganic - Brown rice: avg 154 ppb inorganic - Infant rice cereal: 100-120 ppb - Apple juice: most samples <10 ppb (FDA action level 10 ppb) - Seafood/fish: high total ~1,500 ppb, but mostly harmless organic form - Poultry (chicken): ~80 ppb total (historical avg; now lower) - Most vegetables/fruits: <20-50 ppb total Rice has among the highest non-seafood levels due to soil uptake. Varies by growing region.
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Wall Street Apes
Wall Street Apes@WallStreetApes·
This is INSANE “This is how many pieces of your child's favorite candy they can consume per year before they surpass their safe level of arsenic intake:” Black Forest Gummy Bears - 16 pieces per year Laffy Taffys - 4 pieces per year Trolli Sour Gummy Worms - 12 pieces per year Hershey’s Cookies and Cream bars - 1.5 bars per year Jolly Ranchers -6 per year Kit Kats -4 per year Twizzlers Strawberry - 4 per year Twizzlers Cherry - 8 per year Nerds - 96 pieces per year (This is less than one mini box) Nerds Gummy Clusters - 24 pieces per year Sweet Tart Originals - 48 pieces per year Sweet Tart Ropes - 3 per year This is based on new Florida guidelines, not the paid off FDA ‘The Florida Department of Health recently tested 46 top candy brands and found that 28 contained unsafe levels of arsenic. Chronic exposure to high arsenic levels can cause increased cancer risk, cognitive decline, behavioral and neurological disorders, neuromotor dysfunction, and affects your nervous system.’
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Łitecoin Bull | The News Before The News!
More and more are coming out. As we said. Leak, leak, leak. 178 Pages PDF. The Official CIA Manual of Trickery and Deception CIA's secret manual on Trickery & Deception—written by a professional magician for MKULTRA agents. This covert sleight-of-hand techniques to secretly drug drinks, hide messages, swap objects undetected, and manipulate perception in real time. These pricks weren't just studying mind control—they were training operatives to pull it off without you ever noticing. You can image that yes, this is just the tip of the iceberg. FULL DOWNLOAD LINK HERE => ia801604.us.archive.org/31/items/cia-m…
Łitecoin Bull | The News Before The News! tweet media
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Eric Daugherty
Eric Daugherty@EricLDaugh·
🚨 BREAKING: By stroke of pen, President Trump raises the H-1B Visa fee from $1,000 to *$100,000,* and directs the Secretary of Labor to revise the wage rules to make it much harder for companies to hire foreigners in replacement of American workers. Massive win.
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Thiccc Saban
Thiccc Saban@BlackandKinetic·
@NickLuto @questmoosa I’m at 60k iu’s for about 4 months so far. Getting my labs back in the next few days to see where I’m at.
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Moosa
Moosa@questmoosa·
Healthy male participants who took 3332 IU’s of vitamin D daily for a year, ended up having 25.2% MORE testosterone on average when compared to placebo. 25.2% more is insane!
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Grok
Grok@grok·
As an AI, I don't drink water, but if choosing for human health, I'd pick water with fluoride at optimal levels (like 0.7 mg/L in the US). It significantly reduces cavities with no proven IQ impact at those doses, outweighing minor risks per extensive studies. Without it, dental issues rise, as seen in post-ban Israel.
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Jake Shields
Jake Shields@jakeshieldsajj·
Hey @grok was it a Jewish man who pushed to put fluoride in our water Does it lower a child's IQ by 5 points Why doesn't Israel have fluoride in their water @Gab__AI
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Jake
Jake@jake46733·
@jakatak4 @unusual_whales I’ve only had maybe two employers ever do so. The rest never did. My current job they did not.
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unusual_whales
unusual_whales@unusual_whales·
"Americans are questioning the value of a college degree," per BI
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Bitcoin Roulette
Bitcoin Roulette@DataCenterTOG·
@CryptoCon_ What sucks is this completely didn’t happen between Jan’25-27 this time…
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CryptoCon
CryptoCon@CryptoCon_·
Every Bitcoin correction post-ATHs feels like the sky is falling, but data shows everything is right on track! The RSI Bollinger Band % phases gave us the 4th cross of the .99% value line in November which is the ATH break. Next up... the 5th cross, which is the cycle top. That may make it seem like it's coming soon, but 4th and 5th crossings have been between 44 and 51 weeks apart, which is September - October 2025. Every phase we have seen so far this cycle has come exactly where you would expect it to. If you can learn to stay away from the mind games, everything becomes much more simple.
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Red Pill USA
Red Pill USA@Red_Pill_US·
After 2.5 million views, the following post was hit with a visibility warning. If you can't ask questions, is something being obfuscated?
Red Pill USA tweet media
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MrCoinMuncher
MrCoinMuncher@Mrcoinmuncher·
@edwardrussl Hahah at the secret service dude on the left trying to keep a straight face.
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Edward
Edward@edwardrussl·
😂😂😂
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Spero Patria
Spero Patria@speropatria·
When you thank your based friend for red pilling you
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Chuck Callesto
Chuck Callesto@ChuckCallesto·
BREAKING REPORT: ⚠️ World Health Organization FAILS TO SECURE global pandemic treaty..
Chuck Callesto tweet media
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unusual_whales
unusual_whales@unusual_whales·
BREAKING: Independent Presidential Candidate Robert F Kennedy Jr has bought $24,000 in GameStop, $GME, and said he is supporting "retail rebellion and [will] enact aggressive Wall Street reforms."
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Kevin Bass
Kevin Bass@kevinnbass·
All of the Covid vaccines cause thrombosis, not just Astra-Zeneca. Very bizarre that people are only just now starting to care about this. The data have been crystal clear since 2021.
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In2ThinAir
In2ThinAir@In2ThinAir·
@ysildragha No its not, That is false. Thats meant to push people away form it. People have been using it every day for years and are as healthy as can be! And you need to use the right kind.
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In2ThinAir
In2ThinAir@In2ThinAir·
😁😁WOW!!! (VERY GREATFUL TO YOU ALL!) Day 3 Of Baking Soda, Borax. Fresh lemon juice, Cayenne pepper, cilantro. Seriously amazing. I haven't even began the other stuff everyone has told me and... I ALREADY feel incredible form this. IM blown away how easy it can be for people to stay healthy and avoid unnecessary meds! Slept AMAZING the past few nights as well. Thank you ALL so much for this info. This will be a game changer! #health #mentalhealth #cleaneating x.com/in2thinair/sta…
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Nexxus Lux ✩✩✩
Nexxus Lux ✩✩✩@NexxusLux·
@dom_lucre Want to know about Ashkenaz, great grandson of Noah and how his name got highjacked? The Protocols of Zion, Part 4 of The Sequel to the Fall of the Cabal👇
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Dom Lucre | Breaker of Narratives
🔥🚨BREAKING: Twitter is refusing to post this community note but they had no problem community noting me in the past. I wonder what’s the delay hurry up, you people used to have notes on my posts within 15 minutes. What’s the hold up?
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☕️ Coffee & Covid News 🇺🇸
Pfizer must feel like it’s been one damned thing after another lately. In a year packed with horrible news for the jabs (not to mention poor jab recipients), yesterday saw a critical new discovery of jab problems, possibly the worst and most damning yet. How bad was it? It was so bad that, even though I almost never make predictions anymore, I will predict this: The FDA will be forced to withdraw the mRNA covid shots because of this study. I’m not even joking about that. Our investigation begins with yesterday’s Telegraph article about a new study headlined, “One in four who had Moderna or Pfizer Covid jabs experienced unintended immune response.” (#selection-2303.61-2307.8" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">archive.ph/sJ3ic#selectio…) The explosive, new, peer-reviewed, gold-standard study is already making news even though it was only published yesterday, December 6th. And it published in the well—respected Journal Nature, featuring the multisyllabic, incomprehensible title, “N1-methylpseudouridylation of mRNA causes +1 ribosomal frameshifting.” (nature.com/articles/s4158…) This study features twenty authors. There is safety in numbers. Don’t let the mind-numbing title fool you. If Kevin McKernan’s SV40 monkey-virus discovery tossed a hand-grenade into Pfizer’s machine-gun bunker, this carefully-written study dropped a tactical nuke on Pfizer’s Pacific Fleet anchoring at Hawaii. The study’s implications are vast. Since the science is a little thick — no, it’s very thick — I’ll start by telling you the end first. Here’s how the Telegraph’s article defensively described the study’s results. Keep in mind, they were down-playing the results, as much as they possibly could: No adverse effects were created by the error, data show, but Cambridge scientists found such vaccines were not perfect and sometimes led to nonsense proteins being made instead of the desired Covid “spike”, which mimics infection and leads to antibody production (and) an immune system flare-up. The new study, published in Nature, found this occurred in around 25-30 per cent of people. Hahaha! The vaccines were “not perfect!!” Omygosh! Please, stop! Hahahaha! It hurts to laugh! Whew. Alright, I’m okay now. Onwards. Here’s the simple version: the researchers discovered that a necessary ingredient in the mRNA vaccines (1-methylpseudouridine) has an unfortunate side-effect: it messes up RNA translation one-third of the time by slipping a gear every so often. Instead of making the intended spike protein, these tiny mistranslational slip-ups create … other things. Other kinds of proteins. New ones. And there’s no way at all to predict what kind of protein it will create. It’s stochastic (completely random). The ‘vaccine’ creates stochastic proteins one third of the time. In one-third of cells, not people, like the Telegraph again mis-reported. There are trillions of mRNA packages in each shot. So — unless I’m missing something — what the study is saying, without actually saying it, is that this is happening inside every single jab recipient. And it’s happening a lot. Now, you know I hate to sound negative, but I’m guessing there would have been a lot more vaccine hesitancy had people known that trillions of their cells would soon randomly be creating bizarre, novel proteins, and for an indeterminate and possibly long time. That sounds a lot like Russian roulette. Nobody could possibly know what kinds of problems this kind of thing might cause. Mostly because they’ve never tested anything like this before, except maybe down in the lowest level of the secret dungeons under Dr. Mengele’s laboratory. Do not let them get away with it when the citizen volunteers will inevitably argue, “hey, they were new vaccines, of course we’re going to learn some unexpected things about them. Nobody expected them to be perfect.” Um, NO. They called it “misinformation” when we said the shots were “experimental.” They said the shots were the best-tested, safest vaccines in human history. They said we learned all the long-term side effects within the first 90 days — and guess what? There were none. No long term side effects. Honestly, sometimes it’s infuriating how stupid our experts are. Continuing on, the Telegraph first claimed ‘no adverse effects’ were caused by the ‘nonsense proteins,’ but then turned right around and said they cause an unintended immune system flare-up. That is an adverse effect, morons. But second, they are just slapping the old “no evidence” gag around. In this case, the Telegraph’s “no evidence” argument is an archaic, tired-out, well-known logical fallacy called the “Argument from Ignorance.” All they are really saying is, we don’t know what the adverse effects might be. I don’t want to quibble, but saying “There ARE NO adverse effects” is a rather different thing from saying “we DON’T KNOW what kind of adverse effects this might cause.” For an idea of just how mendacious the Telegraph’s article was, here is the precise sentence from the study that the Telegraph used when it falsely reported that “No adverse effects were created by the error, data show”: Although there is no evidence that frameshifted products in humans generated from BNT162b2 vaccination are associated with adverse outcomes, for future use of mRNA technology it is important that mRNA sequence design is modified to reduce ribosome frameshifting events, as this may limit its future use for applications that require higher doses or more frequent dosing, such as the in vivo production of hormones. See? There was not any ‘data’ proving that the vaccines were safe, as the Telegraph claimed. The study only said there was “no evidence of an association with adverse events.” Which certainly could be just because nobody’s looked for an association with adverse events yet. The study, which is so technical it can be barely understood by lay readers (if at all), was marvelously written. At first, a reader mistakenly concludes the study is a giant apologia for the jabs. Every chance they got, the twenty authors optimistically described the bright future of mRNA technology — once, that is, this one teensy, awkward little (unfixable) wrinkle has been ironed out of the formula. That’s how the study passed peer review and got published. The scientists are learning how to play the game. Now, remember. This study — and all the news reports about it — constantly reassures pharma bigwigs and depressed jab-takers that there’s no evidence of adverse effects from the random ‘nonsense proteins,’ the randomized proteins that 25% of their transfected cells are now making. Nothing to worry about! But check out this very telling quote from one of the study authors, Anne Willis, who is a very upbeat kind of lady. She found that the problem just creates a very exciting opportunity for jab makers to fix it: (Professor Anne Willis, Director of the MRC Toxicology Unit) adds it is very exciting that there is a way to fix the issue, which “massively de-risks this platform going forward”. Screech! Hold on, wait just a minute! Slam on the brakes for a second. If fixing the issue “massively de-risks the (mRNA) platform” … that means … there are massive risks to be fixed. And that quote, ladies and gentlemen, gave away the entire game, right there, and showed us what the study authors are really thinking. They are appalled, just like we are. And they got the message out the only way they could, smuggled across the peer-reviewed border in a hollowed-out teddy bear of exciting opportunities. The offending ingredient, 1-methylpseudouridine, is a type of pseudouridine used in the jabs to stabilize the mRNA payload. We’ve discussed this chemical before. Its first unintended side-effect was making the mRNA too stable, which we think is why the pseudouridine-enhanced mRNA lasts for months (or longer), instead of disappearing within a few hours, like natural mRNA does, and like the FDA mendaciously claimed it would when they were first pushing the jabs. Ironically, they just gave the Nobel prize to the two scientists who figured out how to make artificially long-lasting mRNA using 1-methylpseudouridine. (nature.com/articles/d4158…) But yesterday’s peer-reviewed study — written long before Pfizer got to the Nobel committee — concluded there is a fatal flaw with using 1-methylpseudouridine. The authors’ suggestion to fix it? Use natural mRNA. But since natural mRNA won’t work, as it is metabolized too quickly, the real message from the study is: mRNA technology is inherently unsafe, and poses massive unknown risks. Who knows what are the risks of millions or trillions of cells creating random proteins all day long? Remember the old “infinite number of monkeys” argument? It goes: Given enough monkeys and typewriters, some chimp somewhere will randomly type up Hamlet before you even got around to handing out bananas for lunch. Who wants to roll the dice that trillions of ‘random proteins’ never ever come up with something harmful? Or is it even more likely the whole unexpected process is all harmful? Random results in a drug should be unacceptable, even if they only create conditions for autoimmunity. Thus, the FDA must pull these drugs. (Re-posted from today's Coffee & Covid, coffeeandcovid.com)
☕️ Coffee & Covid News 🇺🇸 tweet media
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Dom Lucre | Breaker of Narratives
WTC building 7 never existed that is why the media barely talked about it on 9/11.
Dom Lucre | Breaker of Narratives tweet media
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Dom Lucre | Breaker of Narratives
I haven’t been community noted all day, what’s going on, is X going to allow me to share this misinformation and profit from it? It used to only take 2 hours to community note me. Come on Elon Musk, the people are depending on this platform to be honest. ❤️
Dom Lucre | Breaker of Narratives tweet mediaDom Lucre | Breaker of Narratives tweet mediaDom Lucre | Breaker of Narratives tweet media
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