Anonymous ID: bfc8a9 Jan. 27, 2024, 2:59 p.m. No.20314274   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4334 >>4532 >>4640 >>4756 >>4839 >>4865

https://twitter.com/TheChiefNerd/status/1750995031165399350

 

Chief Nerd

@TheChiefNerd

🚨 COVID Vaccine Injured Prof. Athlete Has Extremely Elevated Levels of Spike Protein Two Years After Vaccination

 

"The normal range for spike antibody is 0.00-0.79 [U/ml]. Yours was 220 [U/ml]…The ceiling of the test is 220 [U/ml]…Actually it was a lot higher but they couldn't quantify how much higher because of the ceiling of the test…So that indicates to me that you're still producing this spike protein after two years."

 

@Johnincarlisle

0:03 / 4:28

3:32 PM · Jan 26, 2024

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Anonymous ID: bfc8a9 Jan. 27, 2024, 3:55 p.m. No.20314669   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4756 >>4839 >>4865

https://twitter.com/WallStreetApes/status/1751258401252979143

 

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Wall Street Apes

@WallStreetApes

EXTREMELY CONCERNING 🚨 Does This Confirm War Is Coming?

 

2024 Health Insurance Policies Updated With NEW Exclusions & Expenses Not Covered “Treatment of an injury or a sickness, which is due to war, declared or undeclared, riot, or insurrection.”

 

“Y'all need to check your insurance policies. Listen to this. This is something that made me go, As you may know, I have had my insurance license in the state of California for over a decade. And when I was reviewing policies for 2024, I noticed this new exclusion. Look here.

 

This is under exclusions and expenses not covered on a 2024 Cigna health policy. Treatment of an injury or a sickness, which is due to war, declared or undeclared, riot, or insurrection. This is not typical. This is an insurance policy from United last year for 2023, and the language typically reads like this. What happens with my coverage under extraordinary circumstances?

 

And it says in cases of disaster, epidemic, war, riot, insurrection, that they will do their best to provide the services you need. But now take a look at United's 2024 health insurance policy, another exclusion, t, war. We do not cover an illness, treatment or medical condition due to war declared or undeclared. Cigna and United aren't the only ones that have change their language excluding war from their policies. Anthem has also done this, and it just makes you wonder why in the world would that be the case?”

Last edited

8:58 AM · Jan 27, 2024

Anonymous ID: bfc8a9 Jan. 27, 2024, 3:56 p.m. No.20314676   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4720 >>4748 >>4756 >>4839 >>4865

https://twitter.com/WrestleOps/status/1751058407031808405

 

Wrestle Ops

@WrestleOps

Vince McMahon in new statement as he officially resigns from TKO:

 

“I stand by my prior statement that Ms. Grant’s lawsuit is replete with lies, obscene made-up instances that never occurred, and is a vindictive distortion of the truth. I intend to vigorously defend myself against these baseless accusations, and look forward to clearing my name.”

 

“However, out of respect for the WWE Universe, the extraordinary TKO business and its board members and shareholders, partners and constituents, and all of the employees and Superstars who helped make WWE into the global leader it is today, I have decided to resign from my executive chairmanship and the TKO board of directors, effectively immediately.”

 

— DEADLINE

7:43 PM · Jan 26, 2024

Anonymous ID: bfc8a9 Jan. 27, 2024, 3:58 p.m. No.20314694   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4701 >>4714 >>4732 >>4756 >>4839 >>4852 >>4865

DNA Based Identification and Tracking System- patent number US20060285685A1

 

Date: 2005

--—

 

Abstract

A method and apparatus for tracking and identification of humans and animals via an embedded network consisting of existing communications infrastructure by routing unique DNA profile data packets emitted by a DNA RF MEMS Device. The apparatus consists of a RF enabled transmitter which emits a unique data packet containing DNA information from the subject. The system uses available wireless networks, internet protocols, and databases to be able to locate the subject and allows the subject to project presence or identity instantly, accurately, and securely across any distance. The method and apparatus enable a unique identifier that allows for the “real time” physical, spatial, electronic, and biometric verification of location and identity.

-–

 

  1. An apparatus for establishing a global and universal location tracking and identity verification system based on a unique biometric identifier, DNA, comprising of:

 

a device that broadcasts DNA profile packets which uniquely identify a subject human or animal: and

 

b. an embedding sensor network that utilizes existing and planned communication networks to route DNA profile packets via Internet Protocols allowing determination of location.

 

c. a universal tracking and identification device.

 

  1. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the device that broadcasts the DNA profile packets comprises a transceiver that broadcasts data packets comprising a Device ID, a DNA profile, and a stamp.

 

  1. The apparatus in claim 1, wherein the embedding sensor network uses one of IEEE 802.15, IEEE 1415, IEEE 802.11, radio frequency communications, magnetic induction communication, high frequency communications Internet protocol based data packet routine system, Internet protocol edge routers, intelligent stations linking communication networks, and applications and databases used for verification, location determination, and information retrieval.

 

  1. A method allowing universal tracking and identification via DNA profile packets via a sensor platform and a sensor network to ensure identify and determine identification, the method comprising the steps of:

 

a. delivery of the sensor platform to a subject via implantation, adhesion, or digestion;

b. obtaining a DNA Profile of the subject;

c. verifying the DNA profile of the subject; and

d. broadcasting the DNA profile of the subject, a Device ID, and a time stamp.

 

https://patents.google.com/patent/US20060285685A1/en

Anonymous ID: bfc8a9 Jan. 27, 2024, 4:21 p.m. No.20314852   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4861 >>4865

https://www.sciencealert.com/scientists-have-made-the-tiniest-antenna-ever-using-dna

 

Scientists Built The World's Tiniest Antenna, And It's Made Out of DNA

 

Scientists have built the tiniest antenna ever made – just five nanometers in length. Unlike its much larger counterparts we're all familiar with, this minuscule thing isn't made to transmit radio waves, but to glean the secrets of ever-changing proteins.

 

The nanoantenna is made from DNA, the molecules carrying genetic instructions that are around 20,000 times smaller than a human hair. It's also fluorescent, which means it uses light signals to record and report back information.

 

And those light signals can be used to study the movement and change of proteins in real time.

 

Part of the innovation with this particular antenna is the way in which the receiver part of it is also used to sense the molecular surface of the protein it's studying. That results in a distinct signal when the protein is fulfilling its biological function.

 

"Like a two-way radio that can both receive and transmit radio waves, the fluorescent nanoantenna receives light in one color, or wavelength, and depending on the protein movement it senses, then transmits light back in another color, which we can detect," says chemist Alexis Vallée-Bélisle, from the Université de Montréal (UdeM) in Canada.

 

Specifically, the job of the antenna is to measure the structural changes in proteins over time. Proteins are large, complex molecules that carry out all kinds of essential tasks in the body, from supporting the immune system to regulating the function of organs.

 

However, as proteins rush about doing their jobs, they undergo constant changes in structure, transitioning from state to state in a highly complex process scientists call protein dynamics. And we don't really have good tools to track these protein dynamics in action.

 

"Experimental study of protein transient states remains a major challenge because high-structural-resolution techniques, including nuclear magnetic resonance and X-ray crystallography, often cannot be directly applied to study short-lived protein states," the team explains in their paper.

 

The latest DNA synthesizing technology – some 40 years in development – is able to produce bespoke nanostructures of different lengths and flexibilities, optimized to fulfil their required functions.

 

One advantage that this super-small DNA antenna has over other analysis techniques is that it's able to capture very short-lived protein states. That, the researchers say, means there are plenty of potential applications here, in both biochemistry and nanotechnology more generally.

 

"For example, we were able to detect, in real time and for the first time, the function of the enzyme alkaline phosphatase with a variety of biological molecules and drugs," says chemist Scott Harroun, from UdeM. "This enzyme has been implicated in many diseases, including various cancers and intestinal inflammation."

 

While exploring "the universality" of their design, the team successfully tested their antenna with three different model proteins – streptavidin, alkaline phosphatase and Protein G – but there's potentially much more to come, and one of the advantages of the new antenna is its versatility.

 

"Nanoantennas can be used to monitor distinct biomolecular mechanisms in real time, including small and large conformational changes – in principle, any event that can affect the dye's fluorescence emission," the team writes in their paper.

 

DNA is becoming more and more popular as a building block that we can synthesize and manipulate to create nanostructures like the antenna in this study. DNA chemistry is relatively simple to program, and easy to use once programmed.

 

The researchers are now looking to create a commercial startup so that the nanoantenna technology can be practically packaged and used by others, whether that's pharmaceutical organizations or other research teams.

 

"Perhaps what we are most excited by is the realization that many labs around the world, equipped with a conventional spectrofluorometer, could readily employ these nanoantennas to study their favorite protein, such as to identify new drugs or to develop new nanotechnologies," says Vallée-Bélisle.

 

The research has been published in Nature Methods.

 

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