Anonymous ID: 15b76a Aug. 6, 2023, 8:13 a.m. No.19309306   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>9313 >>9320

>>19309254

they delete shills and spammers, which is fine by me.

>le wealthiest

>actually tons are under poverty line

this means they are slaves just like everyone else.

And this means bullshit claims like the shill here to be bullshit to divide aka going against Q.

Anonymous ID: 15b76a Aug. 6, 2023, 8:26 a.m. No.19309392   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>19309357

it's not research though, it's bullshit.

 

fiction of retarded clowns:

>totally wealthy all of them

reality:

>they aren't, most make average at best, tons at poverty

 

that's why the bullcrap gets removed. it's division fagging as well as non research and easily disproven bullshit.

Anonymous ID: 15b76a Aug. 6, 2023, 8:43 a.m. No.19309532   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>9566 >>9584

>>19309485

Shut your stinking mouth.

They "isolated" polio by literally injecting it into the brains of animals.

and even that did not work, except for newborn mice, but tons of these even died immediately, which isn't surprising because they injected feces into the brains of animals. Your virus is fake, just like covid.

 

and about DDT being totally safe+effective:

 

https://www.cdc.gov/biomonitoring/pdf/ddt_factsheet.pdf

Human health effects from DDT at low environmental doses are unknown. Following exposure to high doses, human symptoms can include vomiting, tremors or shakiness, and seizures. Laboratory animal studies showed effects on the liver and reproduction. DDT is considered a possible human carcinogen.

 

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/consequences-of-ddt-exposure-could-last-generations/

Consequences of DDT Exposure Could Last Generations

Scientists found health effects in grandchildren of women exposed to the pesticide

 

Hailed as a miracle in the 1950s, the potent bug killer DDT (dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane) promised freedom from malaria, typhus and other insect-borne diseases. Manufacturers promoted it as a “benefactor of all humanity” in advertisements that declared, “DDT Is Good for Me!” Americans sprayed more than 1.35 billion tons of the insecticide—nearly 7.5 pounds per person—on crops, lawns and pets and in their homes before biologist Rachel Carson and others sounded the alarm about its impacts on humans and wildlife. The fledgling U.S. Environmental Protection Agency banned DDT in 1972.

 

Friends and family often ask Barbara Cohn, an epidemiologist at Oakland's Public Health Institute, why she studies the effects of the long-banned pesticide. Her answer: DDT continues to haunt human bodies. In earlier studies, she found that the daughters of mothers exposed to the highest DDT levels while pregnant had elevated rates of breast cancer, hypertension and obesity.

 

Cohn's newest study, on the exposed women's grandchildren, documents the first evidence that DDT's health effects can persist for at least three generations. The study linked grandmothers' higher DDT exposure rates to granddaughters' higher body mass index (BMI) and earlier first menstruation, both of which can signal future health issues.

 

“This study changes everything,” says Emory University reproductive epidemiologist Michele Marcus, who was not involved in the new research. “We don't know if [other human-made, long-lasting] chemicals like PFAS will have multigenerational impacts—but this study makes it imperative that we look.” Only these long-term studies, Marcus says, can illuminate the full consequences of DDT and other biologically disruptive chemicals to help guide regulations.

 

 

Go fuck yourself with your lies.

Anonymous ID: 15b76a Aug. 6, 2023, 9:11 a.m. No.19309725   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>9885

>>19309640

>colds are an imagination

classic shill method

 

>there is a disease or problem

>there is no other way that it's one of my imaginary viruses

Even both of these are ass-umptions and claims without proof

 

btw. the flu is not infectious.