Cytokine Storm

13.1K posts

Cytokine Storm

Cytokine Storm

@soriguana

"The time will come when men such as I will look upon the murder of animals as they now look upon the murder of men". -Da Vinci.

Katılım Ağustos 2016
1.6K Takip Edilen657 Takipçiler
Cytokine Storm
Cytokine Storm@soriguana·
@nicknet100 @SenRonJohnson @MariaBartiromo Causation will never be proved from data that is ignored. Proving cause was never the standard for pulling drugs. The precautionary principle was used- 50 or so suspected deaths would get a product off the market. Now everyone suckered into having to "prove causation" 🙄
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Nick Greenacre
Nick Greenacre@nicknet100·
@SenRonJohnson @MariaBartiromo They do not prove vaccines caused the events, especially with massive reporting volume during the rollout (stimulated reporting, confounding by the pandemic itself, etc.). VAERS has well-known limitations; it is an "early warning" system, not definitive epidemiology.
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Senator Ron Johnson
Senator Ron Johnson@SenRonJohnson·
Thank you @MariaBartiromo for covering what the legacy media refuses to: the largest government scandal in my lifetime. FDA officials were fully aware of COVID injection injuries — including sudden cardiac death, pulmonary infarction, stroke, and Bell’s palsy — but kept them hidden. The public had a Right to Know but was denied informed consent.
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Cytokine Storm
Cytokine Storm@soriguana·
The US embargo was a direct response to Cuba's nationalization of US businesses, not to "communism" per se. Other provocations: Cuba allied itself with the USSR, Bay of Pigs, exporting revolution, Mariel boatlift... It's a historical grudge, all about US vengeance and punishment, don't look for rational explanations.
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Michael T. Lester
Michael T. Lester@MichaelTLester·
I had almost 300 responses to my Cuba post. The most common reply was: "Because communism." Okay. Let's accept that as true. Communism is a failed economic system. Cuba's government is repressive. Castro was a dictator. Now answer the question: Why does punishing ordinary Cubans with a 67-year embargo serve American interests? If the goal is freedom for the Cuban people, starvation is a strange way to free them. If the goal is regime change, it hasn't worked in 67 years. If the goal is to help Cubans, lifting the embargo costs us nothing and gives them everything. The communism answer explains why we don't like Cuba. It doesn't explain the embargo. Try again.
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Cytokine Storm retweetledi
Cytokine Storm
Cytokine Storm@soriguana·
@WSJ Stupid inflammatory rhetoric. The public is so over it.
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The Wall Street Journal
Elon Musk holds so much power at SpaceX that it is nearly impossible to fire him or make other significant corporate changes without his support. That won’t change post-IPO. on.wsj.com/4f3uIFO
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Toby Rogers
Toby Rogers@uTobian·
@SecKennedy What are you doing, bro!? This ain't it. Come join us again on the outside. The moral cost of remaining in the coalition is too high.
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Secretary Kennedy
Secretary Kennedy@SecKennedy·
Today, I signed a targeted PREP Act declaration to support the development and deployment of medical countermeasures related to Andes virus, which can cause the deadly respiratory illness Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome. This action helps remove barriers to research and response efforts while we continue monitoring the recent outbreak linked to the South Atlantic cruise ship. HHS is taking this situation seriously and will continue working to protect public health and support the safe development of potential treatments and countermeasures.
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Cytokine Storm
Cytokine Storm@soriguana·
@mtracey It can be both. Stranger coincidences have happened. No need to cancel her husband's illness as a motive. There is something obtuse about you Michael.
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Michael Tracey
Michael Tracey@mtracey·
Sorry, but if you're taking at face value that the sole reason Tulsi Gabbard resigned 15 months into her tenure as Director of National Intelligence is because of a family health matter, you should nominate yourself for the "Most Gullible Consumer of Political Information" award
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Cytokine Storm retweetledi
Alex Fasulo
Alex Fasulo@alex_fasulo·
The land under these panels will never be farmed again. Potato growing associations nationwide will not buy potatoes grown on ex-solar sites. Why? The panels leach heavy metals, as well as drop glass shards and microplastics onto the soil below them. In a mass commercial arrangement, vegetation below the panels is soaked in herbicides. The fertile farmland is gone forever.
Farmer Crafted@FarmerCrafted

Look at the mess grazing cows are making! Oh, wait.

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Cytokine Storm
Cytokine Storm@soriguana·
@DanielLozovsky @MarioNawfal The terms overlap/coincide. Israel has been accused of all 3 in Gaza- see the ICC, Human Rights Watch, UHCHR, others. Amnesty International: Israel is committing genocide, ethnic cleansing (mass displacement), and multiple war crimes (starvation).
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Daniel Lozovsky
Daniel Lozovsky@DanielLozovsky·
Tucker couldn’t even keep the accusation straight. Is it genocide? Ethnic cleansing? A war crime? “Whatever it is”? Those words have meanings. A journalist should know that. If civilian deaths alone define genocide, then what was Japan? Dresden? Afghanistan? Iraq? Syria? Libya? Ukraine? Civilian suffering is tragic. But serious analysis requires standards, not vibes.
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Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
🇮🇱🇵🇸 Tucker went head-to-head with Israel’s Channel 13 in a fiery exchange over the Gaza war and genocide accusations. Things heated fast as both sides clashed over civilian casualties, military strategy, and how Western media is covering the conflict. Who do you think landed the stronger points? Source: Channel 13 News
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal

🇮🇱🇺🇸 Tucker in Israeli Channel 13: "Well, Israel has definitely lost its morality. There's no question about that. Of course, I do think, and I would always say because it's true, that Israel has many enemies, many of whom have committed atrocities against innocent Israelis. Blowing up people in cafes in Tel Aviv is every bit as immoral as killing any other innocent in any other country at any other time."

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Cytokine Storm
Cytokine Storm@soriguana·
@MarioNawfal It was a civil exchange. The interviewer lobbed the same old propaganda talking points while Tucker was more of a critical thinker, exposing the hypocrisy and double standards behind them without taking the bait. Israeli TV is the media after all.
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Cytokine Storm retweetledi
Give A Shit About Nature
Give A Shit About Nature@giveashitnature·
A billion birds die hitting windows in the US every year. A dotted pattern that covers <7% of the glass prevents most collisions. When the Javits Center installed bird-safe glass, bird deaths dropped by 90%. It's a $20 fix that saves lives.
Give A Shit About Nature tweet media
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Cytokine Storm
Cytokine Storm@soriguana·
@TVNewsNow Are people anti-American racists who abhor the US Govt interfering in their politics? I expected better from Scott.
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TV News Now
TV News Now@TVNewsNow·
🚨 NEW: Scott Jennings blasts Thomas Massie on his way out the door: “Despicable, anti-Semitic, nasty, gutter politics… it needs to be condemned.” “What a way to go out. He said, ‘I’d have called Gallrein but I had to find him in Tel Aviv.’.. it needs to be stated, acknowledged and condemned because it was pretty despicable,” adds @ScottJenningsKY. President Trump didn’t just beat Thomas Massie, he exposed him.
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Cytokine Storm
Cytokine Storm@soriguana·
@uTobian The federal govt is too big, centralized, captured and corrupt. It's a systemic, institutional problem now, beyond the scope of individuals to fix. Look at what happens to the people who try. No one is coming to save us.
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Toby Rogers
Toby Rogers@uTobian·
The thing about the Massie defeat is, Democrats are too vaccine injured to be a viable opposition party. So the only chance for keeping the D.C. crowd in check was principled voices from within the Republican Party. And now that's gone. So.
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Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
He wouldn't put the phone down, so the cops put him down instead
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Cytokine Storm
Cytokine Storm@soriguana·
@TMZ Someone had to pay so OJ didn't. That was this guy. RIP.
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TMZ
TMZ@TMZ·
🕊️ O.J. Simpson detective Mark Fuhrman has died at 74. Exclusive: bit.ly/4uZwFb1
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Cytokine Storm
Cytokine Storm@soriguana·
@0rf Accepted protocols re respiratory viruses were ignored and at times reversed to make way for the coming mRNAS, including long established WHO guidelines. Perhaps the most deadly about face was denial of early treatment. Science gave way to social engineering.
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Matt Orfalea
Matt Orfalea@0rf·
Coronavirus mutations were always known to be rapid and unavoidable. No vaccine was ever gonna stop transmission to protect your grandma from infection. Our lead scientists knew that and lied to us. Baric in 2003: "What makes a coronavirus so serious, Baric says, is its high rate of recombination and mutation".
Matt Orfalea tweet mediaMatt Orfalea tweet media
Jim Haslam@jhas5

Reminder: Baric's career started with SARS1 at Fort Detrick Stalking SARS: Twenty years ago, Ralph Baric quietly began studying coronaviruses. Now he’s battling a global menace. In the struggle of human against virus, it pays to be prepared. September 1, 2003 In early June 2003, after months of press conferences and university lectures stressing vigilance to the emerging global SARS epidemic, North Carolina’s state epidemiologists and UNC Hospitals staff had reason to mobilize. A contract UNC-Chapel Hill employee, having visited a sick relative in a tainted Toronto hospital, came down with severe acute respiratory syndrome while on the job. State health officials quarantined the man’s coworkers, caregivers, and family in a successful effort to control the infection. At the same moment, though, Ralph Baric, professor of epidemiology and microbiology and immunology, was doing the opposite. He was figuring out ways to make more of the deadly virus by rebuilding it from the bottom up. But he’s no rogue scientist. Baric was attempting to create an infectious clone of the urbani strain of the SARS coronavirus. By July he had successfully tested — at the Army’s top bio-level three labs in Maryland — his cloning approach, which could lead to a SARS vaccine and less of the deadly disease. “It is nice to be positioned to respond to a potentially important human problem,” Baric says. His SARS clone will allow other researchers around the world to produce other mutated SARS coronaviruses in an attempt to find one that the human body could tolerate enough to produce antibodies. (Baric is also an expert in Norwalk viruses, the pathogen that has caused widespread illness among cruise-ship passengers.) For twenty-one years Baric has studied coronaviridae, a family of viruses that causes 15 to 30 percent of our common colds and devastates swine, cattle, cats, and lab rats with severe illnesses. Coronaviruses, with their protein envelope and halo of spikes, are the most complex of the positive-stranded RNA viruses. RNA viruses replicate in the cytoplasm of the host cell independent of the cell’s nucleus. The coronavirus replication strategy is unique, Baric says, and in 1982 he thought it would become an exciting field of virology. But a year later, HIV emerged, and the world’s attention turned to the human immunodeficiency virus. Even so, Baric kept his focus. Normally jocular, Baric now has more reason to smile — he was right all along. “A lot of my research pointed to the fact that new coronaviruses had the high potential to emerge and cause significant disease,” Baric says. He published a paper in 1995 suggesting that danger. “His predictions came true in remarkably short time,” says Mark Denison, a physician at Vanderbilt University Medical Center who has known Baric for fifteen years and is currently collaborating with him on two coronavirus studies. What makes a coronavirus so serious, Baric says, is its high rate of recombination and mutation, a constant genome shifting that gives viruses abilities to efficiently replicate and to evade animal immune defenses. With increasing population densities and ecological change, we’re becoming exposed to more exotic animals and the viruses they harbor. The civet cat and other species found in the live-animal markets of China have been implicated in the transmission of the SARS coronavirus to humans. Baric is an expert in the study of cross-species transmission. As he studied the way coronaviruses move from one species to another, he found that the viruses become more prolific. “They become generalists,” adapting to multiple species at the same time, he says. Mouse hepatitis virus, for example, adapts to humans just as easily as it does to hamsters and primates. Then, once a virus is comfortable in a particular species, he says, it probably evolves into a specialist, developing a more efficient replication and transmission strategy for that specific animal. Over the past decade, several new coronavirus pathogens emerged in pigs and cows. These viruses spread globally and within a few years of emergence caused considerable economic loss in the United States and elsewhere. Baric is the only U.S. researcher who’s been able to clone any of the coronaviruses, which had eluded laboratory manipulation for many years. He and his students, including Boyd Yount and Kristopher Curtis, developed a method to reproduce multiple viruses, break their genomes into fragments that could be genetically manipulated, and then patch pieces of each into a full-length clone from which molecularly cloned viruses could be recreated in the laboratory. It was a profound approach, Denison says, and one that has dramatic implications for how scientists study coronaviruses. Susan Baker, a virologist at Loyola University Chicago, agrees. “Ralph’s work on the systematic assembly of a full-length infectious cDNA of coronaviruses — first for the porcine coronavirus and then for the murine coronavirus — produced landmark studies,” Baker says. She praises Baric for sharing the clones with other researchers, who use his creations to put specific mutations back into the genetic information of the virus to learn if the mutations have any effect on virus replication. The global focus on SARS, and the scientific community’s interest in Baric’s work, meant he was able to persuade university officials to convert an unused bio-level three laboratory into a coronavirus lab. And this summer, the National Institutes of Health shoved money Baric’s way to support his efforts to produce the infectious SARS coronavirus clone. Within a few years, this clone could lead to an attenuated virus — a live SARS virus that has been tweaked so it’s no longer deadly. That, in turn, could be used to create an effective vaccine. Baric’s dedication to understanding the minute details of coronaviruses has made him a “go-to guy” that other virologists respect, says Curtis, a recent doctoral student mentored by Baric. “There’s nobody in the field that I respect more,” Denison says. “Ralph deserves a tremendous amount of credit for his work.” Indeed, Baric was quickly invited to participate in the important weekly SARS teleconferences convened by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in May and June. By August the world health community had beaten back SARS and learned a valuable lesson. “The SARS coronavirus illustrates that even supposedly benign viral pathogens have considerable potential to evolve and cause significant disease,” Baric says. “And really what that means is basic research in all virus families — even those that don’t seem to be important pathogens — has the potential to have big payoffs.” Baric has multiple grants from the National Institutes of Health to study Norwalk viruses and coronaviruses. endeavors.unc.edu/fall2003/baric…

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“Sudden And Unexpected”
“Sudden And Unexpected”@toobaffled·
Lady has a full meltdown on the plane because no one else is masked during the “double pandemic” (Covid + Hantavirus). She even filed a formal complaint with the FAA and CDC. The rest of the passengers just want to land in peace. Some people never left lockdown. They brought it with them.
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Cytokine Storm
Cytokine Storm@soriguana·
Robert Malone (who has repeatedly stated it is gene therapy) and others note that the exception (essentially regulatory wordplay) is to be able to route them through the faster vaccine pathway, avoiding the stricter safety, testing, and oversight rules designed for gene therapy technologies. What they apparently didn't test for in these vaccines is now of concern - persistence, genomic integration risks, oncogenicity... Necessary to go back to 1998 to see how this all evolved. Hot takes with everyone's definition of choice don't cut it.
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Orlando
Orlando@Orlando74180344·
@Yashn37 @Jimmy78591 @soriguana @simonmaechling There’s no physical difference between an mRNA vaccine and mRNA cancer treatment. It’s injecting a gene that your body transcribes into protein. Carving out an exception to the definition just because it’s temporary makes no sense.
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Simon Maechling
Simon Maechling@simonmaechling·
For the umpteenth time, mRNA vaccines are not gene therapy. They cannot alter your DNA.
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