Elle Maldonado

15.2K posts

Elle Maldonado

Elle Maldonado

@truthingaround

Katılım Şubat 2011
503 Takip Edilen402 Takipçiler
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Elle Maldonado
Elle Maldonado@truthingaround·
BEWARE OF CRYPTO SCAMMS DR. Jim Willie is a FRAUD‼️
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Ivermectin Shop | Ivermectincure |
🚨Doctors told him: “You have Stage 4 colon cancer that had spread to your liver and lungs. You have 6 months to live.” He had 7 tumors in his lungs, 7 in his liver, and one in his colon. A year and a half later… He’s still alive and doing better than ever. His wife says she created a regimen after months of research that included: • Fenbendazole • Ivermectin • Quercetin • Curcumin (turmeric) • Vitamins C, D, E, and B-complex • Grape seed extract • Chlorella • Essiac tea • Soursop (graviola) • Propolis • Beetroot powder She documented changes along the way: • His coughing stopped • His skin color returned to normal • Hemoglobin levels improved • Tumor markers dropped Today, he’s still here. Visit: 👉 ivermectincure.us #CancerResearch #Ivermectin #Fenbendazole
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healthbot
healthbot@thehealthb0t·
In 1994 Japan ended all mandatory vaccines for babies under two years old. Japan now has one of the lowest infant mortality rates in the world. America has the highest infant mortality of all industrialized nations.
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Rothmus 🏴
Rothmus 🏴@Rothmus·
Secularism is when you displace the dominant religion and install either a rival faith or a secular cult in its place.
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healthbot
healthbot@thehealthb0t·
Former YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki admits to pulling over 1 million COVID videos to silence anti vaxxers People died because of this evil woman
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Andrew Bridgen
Andrew Bridgen@ABridgen·
They didn’t tell you the truth about salt consumption. Salt is the "enemy" until you’re in the hospital... then it’s $800 a bag. Why is the one thing they tell you to avoid the first thing they give you in an emergency? Source: WikiLeaks Organisation
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Derek Johnson
Derek Johnson@rattletrap1776·
Hope that Q is big enough for you Faux “Patriots” to see… since you call us all kinds of things. 📌 Preplanned. Strategic. Military Operation Military Occupation Military Government Government in Exile Puppet Government Continuity of Government | 45 ————— 47 | 🫡♠️🇺🇸
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Crypto Tice
Crypto Tice@CryptoTice_·
BREAKING: The Bank of Japan is about to dump $2,860,000,000 in U.S. Treasuries. The largest Japanese Treasury liquidation in 30 years. The last time Japan did this. The stock market crashed 15%. Japan is the second largest holder of U.S. debt on earth. When they sell. Yields spike. When yields spike. Everything breaks. China reducing Treasuries to 2008 lows. Japan dumping at a 30 year record. The two largest foreign holders of U.S. debt. Selling at the same time. The Fed will have to buy everything they're selling. More printing. More inflation. More pressure. The system is breaking in slow motion. And nobody is talking about it.
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Harmanjot Kaur
Harmanjot Kaur@itsharmanjot·
A British scientist took a single photograph in 1952 that revealed the structure of DNA, then watched two men quietly take it from her lab and win a Nobel Prize without her name on the paper. I read the actual timeline last night and could not stop thinking about it. Her name was Rosalind Franklin. The photograph is called Photo 51. The textbook story names James Watson and Francis Crick as the discoverers of the double helix. Two young men at Cambridge, working together, having a flash of brilliance, solving the structure of life on a chalkboard. That is the story every biology student learns. That story leaves out the woman who took the actual photograph that made the discovery possible, and the colleagues who passed it to Watson without ever asking her permission. Here is the story almost nobody tells you. Rosalind Franklin was born in London in 1920. By her late 20s she had become one of the world's leading experts in X-ray crystallography, the technique of bombarding crystals with X-rays and reading the diffraction patterns to map the molecules inside. In 1951, she was recruited to King's College London to apply the technique to DNA. The molecule had just been confirmed as the carrier of genetic information. Mapping its structure was the most important problem in biology. She was the most skilled person in the world at the technique that could solve it. In May 1952, after months of careful work, Franklin and her PhD student Raymond Gosling captured the 51st X-ray diffraction pattern of the B-form of DNA. The exposure took 100 hours. The image was so clear that the helical structure of the molecule was almost visible to the naked eye. The diamond patterns on either side of the dark central cross indicated two strands. The spacing between the markings encoded the dimensions of the helix. The image is now considered one of the most important photographs in the history of science. She did not publish it right away. She was initially focused on solving the A-form of DNA, which she considered more analytically tractable, and she filed Photo 51 aside while she completed her calculations. Then in January 1953, two things happened that she did not know about. She was preparing to leave King's College for Birkbeck College. Her PhD student Raymond Gosling had been reassigned to work under Maurice Wilkins, her colleague at King's. On January 26, 1953, Gosling showed Photo 51 to Wilkins. Four days later, on January 30, Wilkins showed it to James Watson at Cambridge. Neither of them told Franklin. Watson later wrote in his memoir that the moment he saw the photograph, his mouth fell open and his pulse began to race. He understood immediately what it showed. He went back to Cambridge and told Francis Crick. Within weeks, they had built their famous double helix model. In April 1953, they published their paper in Nature with no mention of where the critical data had come from. Franklin's own paper appeared in the same issue, presented as merely supporting their model rather than being the foundation it actually was. The detail almost no biology textbook prints is what happened next. Franklin moved to Birkbeck and never knew her image had been shown to Watson. She continued her work on viruses and made foundational contributions to that field as well. She died of ovarian cancer in 1958 at age 37, never having received any meaningful credit for her role in the most important biological discovery of the 20th century. Four years later, in 1962, the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to Watson, Crick, and Wilkins. The Nobel Foundation does not award the prize posthumously. Franklin had been dead for four years. Her name was not on the citation. It was not in their acceptance speeches. Watson published his memoir in 1968, "The Double Helix," and described Franklin in some of the most condescending and personal terms ever printed about a serious scientist by a serious scientist. He nicknamed her "Rosy," a name she despised. He mocked her appearance, her temperament, and her clothing. He suggested she had been incapable of interpreting her own data and had needed men to do it for her. He had used her photograph without her permission to build his model. He spent his Nobel lecture not mentioning her by name. The most uncomfortable line in this entire story is the one Watson eventually admitted, decades later, in a moment of unguarded honesty. He said the structure could not have been solved when it was without Franklin's data. He just never said it loudly enough or early enough for it to matter. Decades after her death, Sir Aaron Klug, her last collaborator and a Nobel laureate himself, inherited her laboratory notebooks. He spent years analyzing them. The notebooks showed that her own analysis of Photo 51 had already arrived at most of the conclusions Watson and Crick would publish. She had calculated the dimensions. She had identified two strands. She had described the helical structure. She was weeks, possibly months, from publishing the same result herself. She was not assisting them. She was racing them. And the race was decided when a colleague handed her photograph to a competitor without her knowledge. Walk into any biology classroom today. Ask the students who discovered the structure of DNA. Almost none of them will say her name. The most important photograph in the history of biology was taken by a woman who never lived to see herself recognized for it. The men who used it without permission spent the rest of their lives in laboratories named after them. She is buried in a small London cemetery. The molecule whose structure she revealed is inside every cell of every person who has ever told her story incorrectly. She was right. They were faster. And modern biology is still slowly learning how to put her name back where it always should have been.
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Jeremy Ryan Slate
Jeremy Ryan Slate@JeremyRyanSlate·
🧵 By the 5th century, Romans didn't trust the army, the courts, or the emperor. So they stopped participating. Stopped paying taxes. Stopped calling themselves Roman. When people stop believing in the system, it's already dead. Signal 7: Collapse of Trust.
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Valerie Anne Smith
Valerie Anne Smith@ValerieAnne1970·
If you live in a place that the WEF has chosen to be a ‘15 minute City’...there’s a very good chance that you will suffer from mysterious flooding, fires & anarchy before they implement the ‘15 minute City’...
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Philomena O
Philomena O@PhilomenaGrady·
🔥WATERGATE WAS PEDOGATE 🔥 Never forget why we started. It always was, and still is about the children. Crimes Against Our Children Military is the only way No Deals !!! We all have a responsibility to protect our global children. NCSWIC 💞🌹🕊🌍💫
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Imtiaz Mahmood
Imtiaz Mahmood@ImtiazMadmood·
The Indian Ocean slave trade conducted by Arab merchants lasted twelve hundred years, moved an estimated seventeen million people from East Africa to Arabia, Persia, and India, castrated the majority of male slaves in transit, and has received less than one percent of the scholarly attention devoted to the Atlantic slave trade. The Indian Ocean slave trade — conducted primarily by Arab, Persian, and Swahili Coast merchants from approximately the 7th century AD through the early 20th century — operated across a longer time span and involved comparable numbers of enslaved people to the Atlantic trade, yet occupies a fraction of the space in global historical consciousness, public discourse, and museum representation. The reasons for this asymmetry are themselves historically significant — the Atlantic trade's direct connection to the economic foundations of Western Europe and North America, the survival of large descendant communities in the Americas, and the moral and political urgency of 20th-century American civil rights discourse all oriented historical attention toward the transatlantic system in ways that left the Indian Ocean trade relatively unstudied in Western scholarship until the late 20th century. The East African coastal peoples — primarily from the regions of present-day Mozambique, Tanzania, Kenya, Somalia, and Madagascar — were the primary source population for the Indian Ocean trade, captured through a combination of Arab-led slave raids, the operations of Swahili Coast intermediary merchants, and the inland expansion of slave-raiding networks that penetrated deep into the African continent. The castration of male enslaved people during the trade — documented in Arab, Persian, and European sources across multiple centuries — was practiced at rates that historians including John Lovejoy and Abdul Sheriff have estimated affected the majority of enslaved African men transported to Arab markets, creating a demographic pattern in which the descendant populations in receiving societies are far smaller relative to the number of people transported than in the Americas. The mortality rate during castration, performed without anesthesia or antiseptic technique, was estimated by contemporary observers at between 75 and 90 percent, meaning that the number of people who died in the castration process alone represented an enormous additional casualty figure beyond those who died during capture, transit, and enslavement. The trade was formally suppressed in Oman in 1970 — within living memory of people still alive today.
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