>>14254107 QRG
Fact checkers saying only a small percentage of the masks have graphene. I'm guessing that means all of them. So is that the black fibers in the masks and swabs? These people need off this planet.
https://factcheck.afp.com/only-small-percentage-all-blue-surgical-masks-contain-graphene
Then "wearables" that track your vitals.. (vid rel.).
This shit is everywhere.
https://zitsticka.com/blogs/skin-tech/p-b-what-are-graphene-amp-hydrogel-can-they-clear-breakouts-b-p-p-p
Wearable tech meets tattoo art in a bid to revolutionize both
>Rogers, who cofounded MC10, Inc., a company that develops wearables for healthcare data collection, demonstrated possible applications, including measuring activity in the brain (EEG), heart (ECG), and muscle (EMG). Because the tattoos transmit data wirelessly and without adhesive tapes, straps, and conductive gels, the device could enable patients, athletes, or anyone interested in his own vital signs to monitor himself outside of a medical setting. Rogers’ company has already released a version of this product called BioStamp, which helps researchers track study subjects and doctors follow patient health. The battery required for the current product, however, makes the device thicker than a temporary tattoo.
>And mechanical and materials engineer Nanshu Lu of the University of Texas at Austin, a colead author on Rogers’ seminal paper, recently developed a graphene tattoo that measures vital signs. “No one would be able to see it unless you look very closely,” she says. For those who want to make a fashion statement, she has a showier gold- and titanium-based version that she’s commercializing through her startup, Rotex. In hopes of someday helping people whose medical conditions require constant monitoring, Katia Vega, a beauty-tech designer, then a postdoctoral fellow at the MIT Media Lab, began developing Dermal Abyss, a permanent smart tattoo, with collaborators in her group and at Harvard Medical School. After learning from tattoo artists how to use a tattoo machine, Vega swapped traditional inks for biosensors whose colors change to report sodium, glucose, and pH levels in the interstitial fluid of the skin. She tested the idea in skin extracted from a pig.
Isn't there something where they're monitoring everyone who got the injection, as well? I thought I saw something like that.. Some hacker found out and then it was confirmed to be true later. I have to dig.. I thought it was confirmed, though.