Anonymous ID: c6974e April 23, 2020, 5:36 p.m. No.8902790   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2797 >>2889 >>2898 >>3093 >>3108 >>3192 >>3193

Atlanta - VICEnews wets panties over hysterical "racist" Wuhan Flu plaques

 

These Racist 'Wuhan Plague' Plaques Are Popping Up Around Atlanta

“The adhesive was still wet, meaning this happened late morning or early afternoon,” said a shop owner.

 

Racist plaques depicting Winnie the Pooh holding a bat with chopsticks have begun to pop up around Atlanta, and police have no leads as to who is responsible.

 

The round, bronze and teal plaques bearing the words “Wuhan Plague,” referencing the Chinese city where the coronavirus originated, first appeared April 13 on an electrical box in Inman Park, according to Atlanta police. Another appeared three days later at a coffee shop in the neighborhood of Reynoldstown. The most recent incident occurred on April 18 at Atlanta’s Candler Park Market.

 

Winnie the Pooh’s association with Chinese culture originated in 2013 when parody comparisons between the cuddly bear and Prime Minister Xi Jinping went viral on social media – and China then banned Pooh images.

 

The plaques appeared to be glued to the sites where they were posted.

 

Hodgepodge Coffeehouse owner Kristle Rodriguez said her employees alerted her to the plaque at her site. Rodriguez said she immediately called the cops and the building’s landlord, who quickly removed the plaque.

 

“The adhesive was still wet, meaning this happened late morning or early afternoon,” she wrote in a Facebook post Friday. “This isn't amusing, funny, politically incorrect, edgy, or punk rock. This is super fucking gross and racist. There's enough xenophobia and ignorance being spouted from this administration, we certainly don't need street art reinforcing this shit.”

Anonymous ID: c6974e April 23, 2020, 5:46 p.m. No.8902889   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3105

>>8902790

Misfire on the Wuhan Winnie story.

 

Atlanta - VICEnews wets panties over hysterical "racist" Wuhan Flu plaques

These Racist 'Wuhan Plague' Plaques Are Popping Up Around Atlanta

 

“The adhesive was still wet, meaning this happened late morning or early afternoon,” said a shop owner.

 

Racist plaques depicting Winnie the Pooh holding a bat with chopsticks have begun to pop up around Atlanta, and police have no leads as to who is responsible.

 

 

Sauce: https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/y3my55/these-racist-wuhan-plague-plaques-are-popping-up-around-atlanta?utm_source=vicenewstwitter

Anonymous ID: c6974e April 23, 2020, 5:54 p.m. No.8902951   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8902815

I think that's the hardest concept to come to terms with…it's already happened. Nothing is as it seems, and yet "big picture" everything is okay. It's all in God's hands anyway.

 

The deepfakes are good, but when you look at the edges (ears, hair, neckline)…they don't always stay true. Good enough to convince those not looking though, for sure.

Anonymous ID: c6974e April 23, 2020, 6:02 p.m. No.8903028   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3038

>>8902944

Astute observation, anon. I was mobile, so listened on the radio…so much is lost without the body language.

 

I see him do that from time to time, for "optics" to keep the Office of the Presidency on the right side of an issue.

Anonymous ID: c6974e April 23, 2020, 6:08 p.m. No.8903086   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3108 >>3173 >>3181 >>3192

>>8903050

Combined with light

Methylene blue combined with light has been used to treat resistant plaque psoriasis.[10]

 

Methylene blue, also known as methylthioninium chloride, is a medication and dye.[1] As a medication, it is mainly used to treat methemoglobinemia.[1][3] Specifically, it is used to treat methemoglobin levels that are greater than 30% or in which there are symptoms despite oxygen therapy.[3] It has previously been used for cyanide poisoning and urinary tract infections, but this use is no longer recommended.[1] It is typically given by injection into a vein.[1]

 

Common side effects include headache, vomiting, confusion, shortness of breath, and high blood pressure.[1] Other side effects include serotonin syndrome, red blood cell breakdown, and allergic reactions.[1] Use often turns the urine, sweat, and stool blue to green in color.[3] While use during pregnancy may harm the baby, not using it in methemoglobinemia is likely more dangerous.[1][3] Methylene blue is a thiazine dye.[1] It works by converting the ferric iron in hemoglobin to ferrous iron.[3]

 

Methylene blue was first prepared in 1876, by Heinrich Caro.[5] It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines, the safest and most effective medicines needed in a health system.[6] In the United States, a 50 mg vial costs about US$191.40.[7] In the United Kingdom, a 50 mg vial costs the NHS about £39.38.[3]

 

Methylene blue has been described as "the first fully synthetic drug used in medicine." Methylene blue was first prepared in 1876 by German chemist Heinrich Caro.[45]

 

Malaria

 

Methylene blue was identified by Paul Ehrlich about 1891 as a possible treatment for malaria.[51] It disappeared as an anti-malarial during the Pacific War in the tropics, since American and Allied soldiers disliked its two prominent, but reversible side effects: turning the urine blue or green, and the sclera (the whites of the eyes) blue. Interest in its use as an anti-malarial has recently been revived,[48] especially due to its low price. Several clinical trials are in progress, trying to find a suitable drug combination. According to studies on children in Africa, it appears to have efficacy against malaria, but the attempts to combine methylene blue with chloroquine were disappointing.[52]

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methylene_blue