Hoarder of old game stuff.

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Hoarder of old game stuff.

Hoarder of old game stuff.

@PsychosisFuzz

Twitter was bought with government money. It is now an official government disinformation machine; run by employees of DOGE. No free speech here anymore.

Land of Oz เข้าร่วม Mart 2019
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Hoarder of old game stuff.
Hoarder of old game stuff.@PsychosisFuzz·
This hits pretty hard. Our societies used to be about improving longevity and quality of life. Now we waste resources on convincing people to go and get (re)infected, shortening life, and reducing quality of life. We have no hope, unless we fix public health. #CovidIsNotOver
Hiroshi Yasuda (保田浩志)@Yash25571056

Everyone's health is a prerequisite in a free, vital society. The more diseases we have, the more hopes we lose.

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PACO
PACO@PacoOnPause·
Suppressed fear is still fear..
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The John Snow Project
The John Snow Project@JohnSnowProject·
We face a choice: continue to ignore deaths from COVID-19 or prevent them. In collaboration with @RealOzSAGE, we call on the Australian government to act urgently to reduce transmission of COVID-19 by using the tools we have, instead of abandoning them.
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Nina Wildflower
Nina Wildflower@Ninawildflower·
You haven’t taught in a classroom post-Covid. Nobody has.
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Carol Topalian
Carol Topalian@CarolTopalian·
@drseanmullen John Horgan, former premier of my province, was also dead wrong about covid. He likely died because, post-covid, it flared his own recurring cancer. They all bought in to the Swedish death pact to rationalize their [passive] killing via covid "public health" policy.
Carol Topalian tweet mediaCarol Topalian tweet media
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Dr. Sean Mullen
Dr. Sean Mullen@drseanmullen·
People keep asking why some of us are so frustrated with how COVID.. and now vaccines.... are talked about in the media. Here’s one example that explains a lot. For the past five years, Emily Oster has been treated as a trusted voice on public health. Not because she’s trained in medicine or epidemiology (LOOK AT HER CV vivo.brown.edu/display/eoster…) but because she’s confident, prolific, and “sounds reasonable.” She’s an economist. DOESNT THAT MATTER TO YOU? A certain strain of economic thinking treats preventable deaths as acceptable tradeoffs. If harm occurs, the market will “correct.” Regulation and precaution are framed as overreactions. That logic shows up again and again in her work. Before COVID, she argued that treating HIV in Africa wasn’t “economical.” Later, she framed drinking alcohol during pregnancy as a feminist issue...dismissing long-standing medical consensus. Then COVID hit. While teachers were dying and kids were getting sick, Oster rose to prominence by promoting early school reopenings using unverified newsletter surveys..Google Forms with no way to confirm who was responding or whether the information was accurate. Those claims shaped policy anyway. When the consequences became clear... educator deaths, overwhelmed schools, kids developing Long COVID...there was no apology. No reflection. Just more op-eds, more TV appearances, more insistence that everyone else was “overreacting.” Now, she’s moved seamlessly into legitimizing anti-vaccine talking points, attacking childhood vaccine schedules, and positioning herself as a centrist bridge between pediatricians and RFK Jr.’s worldview. You cannot repeatedly get core scientific facts wrong across infectious disease, pediatrics, vaccines, pregnancy, and public health..and still expect to be treated as a trusted authority on matters of life and death. panaccindex.info/p/profile-emil…
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Cat in the Hat 🐈‍⬛ 🎩 🇬🇧
🚨 Indoor AIRBORNE Risk Assessment in the context of SARS-CoV-2 from the World Health Organisation (@WHO) For clean air advocates, this is HUGE! The WHO are finally saying, loud & proud: COVID IS AIRBORNE. Let’s take a closer look at the details…🧵 🔗 iris.who.int/handle/10665/3…
Cat in the Hat 🐈‍⬛ 🎩 🇬🇧 tweet media
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AJ Leonardi, MBBS, MPH, PhD
AJ Leonardi, MBBS, MPH, PhD@fitterhappierAJ·
It's absolutely crazy to me that everyone is talking about Covid's T cell lymphopenia and immunological harm without acknowledging that when I brought it up 5 years 7 months ago, and never abandoned the hypothesis, I was labeled a "crank" by NYT writers, professors, and tech founders. It's like people attacked me personally because I wasnt selling some kind of treatment at the same time.
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Hiroshi Yasuda (保田浩志)
Hiroshi Yasuda (保田浩志)@Yash25571056·
"Bill Murphy (77 y/o) remains highly active in diverse communities today, which makes some of his long Covid symptoms striking, even though at first glance, they look inconspicuous.. He walks into a room and completely blanks on why he entered it in the first place.. He gets dizzy when walking from one place to another, which increases the likelihood of falls when he has to pivot quickly.. he finds himself struggling to find the right words in conversations.. symptoms [of long COVID] such as memory lapses, short-term memory forgetfulness, language impairments, and faulty executive function do generally look undistinguishable on the surface from a patient with impending Alzheimer’s disease.. [Whereas,] The difference between long Covid and dementia or Alzheimer’s is that a person with long Covid will likely have some motor issues, like Murphy’s difficulties with dizziness and pivoting at tight angles. While it’s a subtle difference, it’s a key one to know when it comes to determining what cognitive quirks are pointing to what condition.' We need more long COVID experts, rather than short-tempered officers. 'Aging, or Long Covid?' aginginamerica.news/2026/01/22/agi…
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Hiroshi Yasuda (保田浩志)
Hiroshi Yasuda (保田浩志)@Yash25571056·
In the UK, "More than 68,000 people died from dementia in 2025, one in six recorded deaths from leading causes, as the illness maintains its position as the deadliest condition in the country. According to the Office for National Statistics, the number is 2,588 more than expected.. 900,000 people in the UK have been diagnosed with dementia, and the number is set to rise to 1.4 million by 2040. The Alzheimer's Society says more than a third of people with the illness have not been diagnosed.." Living with COVID means living in oblivion. '68,000 die from disease in a year and cases are set to hit 1.4million' bristolpost.co.uk/news/uk-world-…
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Power to the People ☭🕊
Power to the People ☭🕊@ProudSocialist·
All the Democratic party wants to do is ride this anti-Trump sentiment into the midterms and into 2028 so they can control the empire again and implement the same fascist policies as Republicans only with better PR and zero resistance from liberals or the corporate media.
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AJ Leonardi, MBBS, MPH, PhD
AJ Leonardi, MBBS, MPH, PhD@fitterhappierAJ·
The Price of Denial: Early Warnings, Arrogant Dismissal, and the Lingering Cost of COVID's Immune Legacy There have been a recent number of articles framing the immune harm from Covid as a new insight. While I am pleased this has entered the mainstream, I am afraid it is too gracious to the lagging scientific consensus of how covid has been wearing away at our immune responses. Especially given how when I raised this based on T cell phenotypes, I was dismissed and attacked with extreme prejudice. Reframing Covid's immune harm as a new insight rather than a long-fought hypothesis contrary to 'immunity debt' achieves several aims: 1) It deemphasizes the role in propagating false narratives that several individuals had along with choice medical journals. For example, the BMJ extensively platformed Alasdair Munro's claims of the 'immunity debt' hypothesis. When an editor was approached with a proposal for how covid was harming immunity by individuals who had published in the BMJ before and myself, they refused to accept it. 2) It saves face for the individuals who staunchly attacked the hypothesis and dismissed it as a joke. Those people also strongly attacked me, and they would go on to claim that it is my fault such a false and ridiculous narrative of immune harm from covid even existed. These are lay people but also others. 3) it preserves a semblance of credibility for the established sources who previously denied the hypothesis and obfuscated it. 4) It shirks accountability for the duty of discernment, consideration, and equipoise that stewards of information and knowledge, like the BMJ, had to the public. They had access to the hypothesis and rationales previously and chose to trounce on it and dismiss it with extreme prejudice. To me, it highlights how many of the experts were ill-equipped to grasp early immunological changes and project them to their outcomes. This was not just an oversight, it was an editorial choice. The author of the BMJ article, Nick Tsergas, confided that the editors wanted to avoid controversy and drama. They wanted to whitewash its history. What did I do to earn such controversy? Tell the truth before other scientists could see. By the time immune harm manifests there is much damage already done. In the first half of 2020, I noted that SARS-CoV-2 had been shown in preprints to downregulate MHC Class I, overstimulate and kill CD8 T cells, and would likely accumulate harm with reinfections. I noted this even in mild cases and was dismissed by many figures, including Francois Balloux Marc Veldhoen, Zeynep Tufekci, and Antonio bertoletti. They did not dismiss kindly. Bertoletti, a senior professor at Duke NUS would reply under my posts calling me a clown and insulting me constantly. I was a medical student at the time and this behavior seemed inappropriate and offensive, especially considering how I was engaging him with genuine concern when I was discussing T cell death with him in the summer of 2020. By late 2022, I was pointing out that many people, after even mild infections, appeared to have reductions in plasmacytoid dendritic cells and other immune changes without reporting symptoms that would fit the conventional definition of Long COVID. These were not dramatic claims; they were mechanistic observations grounded in emerging data. However, the implications were stark. I had numerous media appearances discussing that immune harm was occurring. This was discussed in The Tyee by Andrew Nikiforuk. thetyee.ca/Analysis/2022/… In April 2023, FactCheck.org published a piece that characterized concerns about lasting immune effects from mild infections as exaggerated. They quoted Professor Danny Altmann, who stated there was “no phenotype” resembling immunodeficiency, only “nuanced differences” that did not translate to real-world consequences. The article framed early warnings as misinformation, implying that those raising them were overstating risks. This was not neutral correction; it was authoritative closure of debate. The message was clear: mild infection left no meaningful immune scar outside severe disease or formally diagnosed Long COVID. Discussion effectively ended there for many. factcheck.org/2023/04/sciche… Where did factcheck find the authority to promise that no such immune harm was occurring? Did they truly seek to understand what the consequences of broad t cell activation, differentiation, and death would manifest in? The dismissal was reckless and arrogant. And now proven wrong. The personal cost for telling the truth when people were actually concerned about covid was immediate and lasting. I was tagged in threads alongside senior immunologists who dismissed the ideas outright, accused (implicitly or explicitly) of fearmongering or misinterpreting preliminary data. These characterizations spread quickly on social media, embedding themselves in timelines and memories. People lied about me. Zeynep and Jeremy Kamil said that I had paid for my own PhD, when it was actually paid directly by the National Cancer Institute for my discovery of a linked mechanism of T cell death and differentiation. Years later, a search of my name still surfaces echoes of those accusations, unaccompanied by context or correction. Professional relationships cooled; invitations to collaborate quietly dried up. I lost a fellowship offer at the National Cancer Institute as Tom Misteli, the head of NCI research, wrote how, "I needed to learn what I can and can not say." The energy spent defending basic mechanistic possibilities was energy not spent on research or clinical work. It was isolating, and it was unnecessary. This manifested into something remarkably shocking and completely unprecedented in scientific literature. My two greatest and most eminent antithetical-fans teamed up and published an article mocking my twitter handle, saying that mild breakthrough infections correlated with 'fit and happy' t cells. onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/im… It was shared across social media with an interpretation to mock my claim that T cells were harmed. People that mocked me cheered, like the Harvard professor Mark Davis, along with zeynep saying that it was a good rebuttal to 'looney twitter-only claims.' On Indie Sage, Christina Pagel did not disagree with the scientific content but expressed disappointment at the devolution of my interlocutors, that she was not a fan of shaming and mocking no matter how outlandish my claims were. She was wrong on both counts. Their mockery is now a testament to their ignorance and the devolution. This is not something they can retract, only deny publicly. When it occurred I reached out to the editor and he asked me if I would like to reply about the scientific content. I wanted to, but, on advice of a friend who was mortified at the conduct of the individuals and the journal itself, asked for an investigation of bullying from professors. The journal concluded the investigation saying that only my followers would know that I was the one being referenced, so were under no fault or obligation to amend the title. They retracted the offer for my response. (I included this saga and the emails to Nick and the BMJ. They chose not to include it.) I continued to watch the literature. The signals did not vanish: persistent T-cell alterations, exhausted phenotypes, subtle shifts in innate compartments. These were not the province of fringe voices; they appeared in mainstream journals, yet the narrative remained that mild infection was immunologically inconsequential for most. The possibility that repeated or even single mild infections could erode immune resilience was treated as speculative at best, irresponsible at worst. I paid a price for insisting otherwise, not in fame or notoriety, but in the quieter currency of reputation and peace of mind. Now, in early 2026, the conversation has shifted. A recent Daily Mail article discusses widespread reports of people “getting sicker more often,” with doctors noting struggling immune defences against routine bugs. The piece quotes Danny Altmann again, this time describing the hypothesis of lasting immune harm from mild COVID as “reasonable.” The idea is presented as fresh and worthy of consideration. There is no mention of the earlier certainty that no such phenotype existed, no acknowledgement that some of us were attacked for articulating precisely this possibility years ago. The system lacks both memory and foresight. The absence of reckoning is striking. Those who confidently declared “no phenotype” now entertain the same hypothesis without reference to prior denial. No correction, no apology, no credit to those who endured the backlash. This is not personal grievance alone; it reflects a broader pattern in science where consensus resists challenge until the evidence becomes overwhelming, then absorbs the insight as if it were always obvious. History is replete with such examples (Semmelweis, Warren and Marshall), yet we seem incapable of learning the lesson. The societal toll compounds the individual one. Delayed acceptance meant delayed mitigation: fewer precautions against reinfection, less urgency in studying immune reconstitution, slower recognition that population-level immune dysregulation might follow waves of mild cases. Excess respiratory illness, rising cancer concerns, unexplained reactivations. These are not abstract. They represent preventable burden born of a refusal to countenance uncomfortable possibilities when they were first raised. Vindication, when it arrives quietly and without acknowledgement, is a hollow reward. The smears linger longer than the evidence ever did. Yet the deeper failure is not personal. It is the persistent hubris that treats early, mechanistic warnings as threats rather than contributions. Until we cultivate the humility to listen when the data are still emerging, rather than demanding certainty before engagement, we will pay this price again in the next crisis. I hope the record shows that some of us tried to warn you, not for credit, but because the immune system deserved better stewardship than it received. I am glad I can look upon this period knowing that I did my very best, was ruthless, about conveying what seemed so clear to me, in very unambiguous terms. What is happening was more important than my professional standing as a fragile, early-career immunologist, because I was placed in a niche position as a specialist in T cell aging and death.
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AJ Leonardi, MBBS, MPH, PhD
AJ Leonardi, MBBS, MPH, PhD@fitterhappierAJ·
In the future when we are headed to some other disaster like the current widespread immunological harm from covid reinfections like I predicted in 2020, the "cassandra" may look at how I was treated for half a decade and abandon cause.
AJ Leonardi, MBBS, MPH, PhD@fitterhappierAJ

@NateSilver538 @toad_spotted If this hypothesis is true and the virus is a force of nature which only 'herd immunity' can stop, expect it to ravage every city with every escape mutation, and no, your cd8 cell repertoire will not be better off because of it.

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Jammer
Jammer@acrossthemersey·
“We might be done with COVID, but COVID is not done with us. It’s always going to be here now, my goal is just to catch it less often.” This is how it’s done. ‘COVID Dystopia,’ award-winning, animated short film about the ongoing Pandemic. filmfreeway.com/COVID380
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Metro
Metro@MetroUK·
The long Covid legacy: ‘People don’t want to think about us’ trib.al/4R4fV3b
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sarah
sarah@sahouraxo·
Happening now at the UN General Assembly: Diplomats walked out during Netanyahu’s speech. He is left speaking to an empty room. The world is no longer listening to Israel’s propaganda.
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Oliver Weilein, Iowa City Councilor
Also, many people are talking about this 👇
Oliver Weilein, Iowa City Councilor tweet media
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sarah
sarah@sahouraxo·
“There is no superior race.” “There is no ‘chosen people of God’.” “It is neither the United States nor Israel.” “The ‘chosen people of God’ is all of humanity.” —President of Colombia, Gustavo Petro
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