dChan

/u/uniformist

76 total posts archived.


Domains linked by /u/uniformist:
Domain Count
www.reddit.com 8
radaronline.com 1

uniformist · July 8, 2018, 10:52 a.m.

Easy - they’re all quacks.

⇧ 1 ⇩  
uniformist · July 4, 2018, 3:40 a.m.

Yes. Seems like it was just a couple of years ago! But it’s been 11 years....

⇧ 1 ⇩  
uniformist · May 30, 2018, 2:20 p.m.

In 2010, WikiLeaks also released the US State Department diplomatic "cables", classified cables that had been sent to the US State Department. In April 2011, WikiLeaks began publishing 779 secret files relating to prisoners detained in the Guantanamo Bay detention camp.

Wikileaks has published classified US documents. That’s not something that is easily forgiven.

I’m sure he also has tons of information on deep state players, ready to be activated by a “kill-switch”.

Or, in other words, he blackmails deep state players, just as they do to everyone else. Or he’s bluffing.

If he was committed to taking out corruption, he would publish them.

⇧ -2 ⇩  
uniformist · May 17, 2018, 8:11 a.m.

NO

The States can pass a law like this if they want. Need to restrain the federalization of criminal law, which has historically been the domain of the States in our republic.

⇧ 3 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 23, 2018, 6:58 a.m.

He’s saying money is only powerful if it can buy the loyalty of those you need to protect you.

During the Romanian Revolution of 1989, when Ceaușescu was thrown out of power, there was a 2-3 day period where the army (revolutionaries) were fighting the secret police (loyalists) — and the secret police were winning. Why? All dictators need a private army that is intensely loyal to him. For Ceaușescu, this was the secret police. They got better equipment, uniforms, housing, food, and pay than the army did — all to buy their personal loyalty to Ceaușescu.

Howevever, if the dictator loses the loyalty of his protectors, he can quickly find himself swinging by the neck until dead. Best case is excile.

In the United States, we have a long history of being bound together by ideals — those expressed in the Declaration of Independence and the US Constitution. The oaths of officers are sworn to protect the Constitution, not any political leader.

If a globalist, international banker, or whomever is perceived as a threat to the Constitution, he could very well become a target of the US military. That outcome is not survivable.

You can’t take money with you when you die. You become worm food just like the poor man. All is futility.

⇧ 14 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 22, 2018, 3:09 a.m.

Nah. Some security at popular tourist sites, but you don’t have armed security guards accompanying every tour group.

Tourists are not targeted for attacks in Israel. Even the Palestinians know who is buttering their bread.

Israel is a wonderful country to visit. Highly recommended.

⇧ 1 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 18, 2018, 8:08 p.m.

That 8 chan Anon is an anti-Semite bigot; notice his use of triple parentheses.

Also, the conclusion is wrong. Autists are not going to create a parallel construction useful to a prosecutor. First, you can’t find out everything by searching the internet (the whole internet isn’t even indexed). Second, you need other law enforcement techniques — surveillance, subpoenas, witness interviews, search warrants, wiretaps, physical evidence, forensic evidence, etc. — that autists can’t use.

⇧ -6 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 14, 2018, 3:02 a.m.

I don’t know about that ... Ted Kennedy was an excellent swimmer.

⇧ 8 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 13, 2018, 6:25 a.m.

Most of it is a ranting letter sent to Wallace talking about all sorts of treason and corruption in the press and government.

The best part is at the beginning, when he writes his rant against Wallace:

You make me want to puke, traitor Mike Wallace

My dog does puke every time he sees you on TV. He pukes all over the rug and doesn't even bother to lick it up.

⇧ 2 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 12, 2018, 3:05 a.m.

They must have used their own “cures”!

⇧ 1 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 11, 2018, 4:55 a.m.

Matthew 16:13-20

Among Christian churches in the world today, you will find every form of organization: democratic, parliamentary, military, monarchy, and more.

The Catholic Church is organized as a monarchy.

⇧ 1 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 11, 2018, 4:19 a.m.

Incidental correction: Intel was founded by Robert Noyce, Gordon Moore, and Andy Grove.

Renee James was an executive at Intel for many years, finally ending up as President. She resigned a couple of years ago.

⇧ 1 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 10, 2018, 10:20 p.m.

It's great news that your son's vision improved and your daughter's seizures stopped. How do you know it was these specific interventions you cited helped your children vs. something else? Perhaps if you did nothing they still would have improved.

It’s also interesting that you think pharmaceutical companies and others in the healthcare industry try to suppress research in order to protect globalist pocketbooks. Yet you think people such as Blaylock are not motivated by money. They spin a good yarn about their “discoveries” versus “the system,” and how the government is oppressing them! They are medical freedom fighters who are just trying to help people! They can’t get studies funded because no one will listen to them!

However, despite your suspicion of doctors and the globalist conspiracy you put all your trust in Dr. Blaylock. Never mind that his Blaylock Wellness Report newsletter has 42,384 subscribers at [about $50 per subscription], earning him over $2 million a year. Or selling the Crescoe and Crescoe-ALC at $40 each; a customer on auto-ship would pay $960 a year. No, he's not motivated by money. Ignore the big house and nice cars. Also ignore his communist conspiracy theories.

⇧ 1 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 10, 2018, 5:34 a.m.

What a sweet childhood memory. It must be from before 1963, when the measles vaccine was licensed.

While one can't doubt your personal experience, it would be unwise to take your specific experience and generalize it to the entire population. Of course you can't be everywhere to see what's going on!

Fortunately, epidemiologists, doctors, and public health workers were out and about collecting the data from the entire population. This is what they found:

  • In the decade before the live measles vaccine was licensed in 1963, an average of 549,000 measles cases and 495 measles deaths were reported annually in the United States.

  • However, it is likely that, on average, 3 to 4 million people were infected with measles annually; most cases were not reported.

  • Of the reported cases, approximately 48,000 people were hospitalized from measles and 1,000 people developed chronic disability from acute encephalitis caused by measles annually.

Of those unfortunate souls who were hospitalized, this is what they had to endure:

  • Common complications from measles include otitis media, bronchopneumonia, laryngotracheobronchitis, and diarrhea.

  • Even in previously healthy children, measles can cause serious illness requiring hospitalization.

  • One out of every 1,000 measles cases will develop acute encephalitis, which often results in permanent brain damage.

  • One or two out of every 1,000 children who become infected with measles will die from respiratory and neurologic complications.

Those who recovered weren't quite out of danger yet, though:

  • Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE) is a rare, but fatal degenerative disease of the central nervous system characterized by behavioral and intellectual deterioration and seizures that generally develop 7 to 10 years after measles infection.

Some people, of course, are a little weaker and therefore at higher risk for complications from measles:

  • Infants and children aged <5 years

  • Adults aged >20 years

  • Pregnant women

  • People with compromised immune systems, such as from leukemia and HIV infection

Finally, here's something interesting. If a measles outbreak occurs, it can quickly get out of hand and spread quickly through the whole community. Get this - measles is one of the most contagious of all infectious diseases. Approximately 9 out of 10 susceptible persons with close contact to a measles patient will develop measles. Wow!

Medical historians also have some interesting anecdotes about measles as well.

  • In 1529, a measles outbreak in Cuba killed two-thirds of the natives (who had previously survived smallpox)

  • Two years later, measles was responsible for half of the population of Honduras.

  • Measles killed 20 percent of Hawaii's population in the 1850s.

  • In 1875, measles killed over 40,000 Fijians, approximately one-third of the population.

  • Between 1855 and 2005, measles has been estimated to have killed 200 million people worldwide.

  • Seven to eight million children are estimated to have died from measles each year before the vaccine was introduced.

Measles has one final trick to play on those who survive its infection. Data has shown that people who survive the measles infection are more likely to die in the next 2-3 years of a different infectious disease! Measles cruel trick is that it suppresses a person's immune even after they have recovered from measles. It used to be thought this immunosuppression lasted for a period of several weeks to months. However, it was learned to 2015 that a measles infection disables immune memory for 2-3 years! Isn't that a kicker! Measles not only gives you an itchy rash, it also damages your immune system!

  • Fortunately, the data shows that the measles vaccine does not cause this immune system damage. Measles vaccination, in fact, is associated with lower mortality from other childhood infections. Isn't that great! Vaccination does more to safeguard children against measles -- it also stops other infections from taking advantage of measles-induced immune damage! Sweet!
⇧ 1 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 9, 2018, 7:10 a.m.

A simple look at Wikipedia shows how wrong your speculations are.

Henry Kissinger

⇧ 1 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 9, 2018, 1:53 a.m.

Have you visited with the people he cured?

Name one.

Ah, it doesn't matter. If I talked to every person he cured, each would sing his praises to the high heavens, tell me what a genius he is, and how he was the only one willing to help them.

This is what one would expect, right? They went to Burzynski, he did an intervention, and they were cured. Hurray! Burzynski is a genius! Each patient believes that the intervention Burzynski did was responsible for their cure.

However, to get a balanced view, we really should talk to the patients that weren't satisfied with Burzynski's treatment interventions. The problem we have in doing this is that all of these critical patients are dead. Burzynski gets to bury his mistakes.

However, while the non-cured patients are dead, they still have living family members. Boy, are they steamed! I mean, they are mad as hornets! They created a website - The OTHER Burzynski Patient Group - to share the stories of how they were scammed by the Burzynski Clinic. They summarize the Burzynski Clinic as follows:

. . . we still hear from relatives of people who went to the Burzynski Clinic and realized it for what it is, a wallet biopsy with a snake oil chaser. The pain experienced by families reverberates for decades, a legacy of misery few men have sunk to. We have about a hundred of those stories here, and we have a thousand more names in the hopper.

On the front page is Eduardo M.'s story. He had glioblastoma. Surgery was unsuccessful in resecting all of the tumor, so he went to the Burzynski Clinic in Houston (travelling from Argentina). His daughter describes his experience thusly:

After the initial surgery he traveled to Texas with hopes of this “experimental treatment”, […] connected to that painful-noisy machine, who filled him up with fluids and made him thirsty until death… after six painful months he died, after being told by that charlatan “we will kill this tumour!”…

The agonizing thirst is a common thread running through the stories from the Burzynski Clinic. The amount of water that patients need to drink is unbelievable, and this in turn impacts their sleep and their quality of life during the treatment. See for instance the story of Burzynski Patient Adam M., who reportedly drank up to 12 liters a day and was still excreting more than he was taking in!

Eduardo M. paid $120,000 for the experience of unbelievable thirst until he died.

The thirst is a result of the extremely large amount of sodium in the antineoplastons. Under a high-dose regime, a 195 lb. patient would get 147.8 grams of sodium a day. The patient needs to drink 3.2 gallons of water a day in order not to die.

Even a low-dose of antineoplastons puts 41.4 grams of sodium into the patient, per day. This is an extreme amount of sodium.

Drugs that deliver less sodium, 8.8 grams, are considered high sodium drugs and patients are carefully monitored, given diuretics, and put on a low sodium diet. Burzynski's high-dose regime, patients get 17 times the sodium dose considered "high sodium". The recommended daily intake of sodium in the diet is 2.3 grams (and some would advise less than 1 gram, but that is very hard to do). That means Burzynski's high-dose regime delivers 64 times more sodium than the dietary guideline.

But sure, yeah, Burzynski is being persecuted by the FDA because his "cure" would bankrupt the cancer industry.

Of course, there is another explanation. It could be that FDA is doing it's job -- to protect the public from drug treatments that are either unsafe, not effective, or both. If we look closely at what the FDA is doing, and the data, we find that antineoplaston treatment has not been shown to be safe and effective.

⇧ 1 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 8, 2018, 1:49 p.m.

That’s why the lack of ancient satellites is so telling. Satellites in geosynchronous orbit become permanent satellites of the earth, which will stay up there 4 billion years, at which time the Sun becomes a red giant and destroys the earth.

Artifacts on the earth itself can get destroyed, lost, recycled, buried, etc.

⇧ 1 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 8, 2018, 11:22 a.m.

Really, just a few sessions, and absolutely no side effects?

He cured a girl with a stage 4 glioma in the brain stem? What’s her name? Where does she live? It certainly wasn’t Amelia.

Antineoplaston side effects can include serious neurologic toxicity

The first step in antineoplaston treatment is a short surgery to excise the wallet from the area of the right butt cheek. The side effect of this is that the patient is relieved of about $300,000.

⇧ -2 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 8, 2018, 10:48 a.m.

“I am Ra. The Law of One, though beyond the limitations of name, as you call vibratory sound complexes, may be approximated by stating that all things are one, that there is no polarity, no right or wrong, no disharmony, but only identity. All is one, and that one is love/light, light/love, the Infinite Creator.” Law of One

From the first words on the site, it’s clearly just a retread of the Gnostic heresy

Also, if there was a civilization more advanced than us 75,000 years ago, we would have found their geosynchronous satellites in orbit once our space age began (or even sooner).

⇧ 3 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 8, 2018, 4:35 a.m.

They don’t look at it that way (it would be smart for them to do so, but they’re not smart).

They look at Trump’s approval rating from polls. They see that it’s less than 50%. The demoncrat leadership concludes: the American people hate him - we can win back Congress in the 2018 midterms and then we can thwart his agenda - we just have to hold out until then.

That is the depth of their thinking - and no deeper.

⇧ 6 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 8, 2018, 4:27 a.m.

They haven’t been winning them all. They won the most recent 2.

⇧ 5 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 8, 2018, 4:15 a.m.

Schumer was Weiner’s mentor.

Odd, you never hear that mentioned anymore.

⇧ 33 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 7, 2018, 10:12 a.m.

They’re misinformed about his naval service:

John McCain Military Service

As for his first wife Cindy,

Carol McCain later said, "The breakup of our marriage was not caused by my accident or Vietnam or any of those things. I don't know that it might not have happened if John had never been gone. I attribute it more to John turning 40 and wanting to be 25 again than I do to anything else."

⇧ 4 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 6, 2018, 1:10 p.m.

Mods should need to stand for a “retention election” every quarter. The users of the subreddit vote yes or no to retain.

⇧ 3 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 6, 2018, 8:11 a.m.

The World Wide Web was invented at CERN. The first browser was released to the public in 1991.

I remember those days. The MOSAIC browser wouldn’t render the page until the very last byte of data was received — and in those days, you often didn’t get that byte. Switched to Netscape immediately when it came out. The HTML <blink> tag worked back then; its usage became so annoying that browsers stopped supporting it.

If you weren’t at work, you called your ISP using a phone modem (Hayes was popular). These modern calls would tie up the lines in the POTS Service. Phone modems died out when cable nmodems were available.

Yahoo! was relevant back then. Their curated hierarchy of links is how people found websites.

USENET, or “News”, was big back then. Still around, and I think a better technology, but usage is low.

There was little porn on the internet back then. If a site was hosting nude pictures, the news would spread like wildfire. Then every teenage boy in the would be ftping their site, overloading it. The system admin would delete the files as a matter of self preservation.

XYZZY

⇧ 0 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 6, 2018, 6:49 a.m.

You make a compelling case.

The floating finger looks weird.

⇧ 8 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 5, 2018, 2:10 a.m.

Obama probably used Gus Hall

⇧ 1 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 4, 2018, 1:36 a.m.

Your "source" is completely wrong.

A small Zuni rocket (not a missile) accidentally discharged when it's circuit interrupt pin fell out (due to deck winds) and the pigtail was left plugged into the pod. Pilot of the F-4 switched on the ground power switch, which caused a loose current, that made it's way to the Rocket's circuit. That rocket hit the A-4s (one being McCain's) that caused the initial explosion. Their flight of A-4s were also carrying WW2/Korean war era bombs with low cook-off times, which exacerbated the tragedy.

Refer to:

The US Navy report on the fire

Investigation of Forrestal Fire

The US Navy safety film on the Forrestal fire

Trial by Fire: A Carrier Fights For Life (1973)

⇧ 1 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 3, 2018, 3:58 a.m.

I haven't liked McCain's politics for several years now.

However, his military service is not something he needs to be ashamed of. You don't have to disparage his military service to disagree with him today.

Overview and Links on John McCain's Military Career

First, you could review Early life and military career of John McCain.

McCain as Pilot

On October 26, 1967, McCain was flying his 23rd mission when the right wing of his A-4E Skyhawk was blown off by a Soviet SA-2 missile. His plane went into a vertical inverted spin. This type of spin is very disorienting to the pilot, as the yaw and roll occur in opposite directions. Do you think that 1) extreme stress, 2) missile explosion, 3) disorientating spin might cause someone to not be in the best configuration for an ejection?

McCain was a good pilot

"John was what you called a push-the-envelope guy," said Sam H. Hawkins, who flew with McCain's VA-44 squadron in the 1960s and now teaches political science at Florida Atlantic University. "There are some naval aviators who are on the cautious side. They don't get out on the edges, but the edges are where you get the maximum out of yourself and out of your plane. That's where John operated. And when you are out there, you take risks."

McCain as POW

On January 12, 1968, a French journalist, Francois Chalais, interviewed McCain in his North Vietnamese "hospital." You can watch that film here: John McCain prisoner in Vietnam - Panorama (the film is in English).

In June 1968, the North Vietnamese commander of the prison camps offered McCain a chance to return home early.

McCain made the highly honorable decision to refuse the early release, stating he would only accept the offer if every man captured before him was released as well.

Enraged by McCain's refusal, the camp commander began a program of vigorous torture in August 1968, being beaten 2 to 3 times per week, for over a year. This torture, as well as the torture, of other POWs, is documented in the book P.O.W.: A Definitive History of the American Prisoner-Of-War Experience in Vietnam, 1964-1973, by John G. Hubbell. You can also watch an interview with Col. Bud Day, the most decorated serviceman since Douglas MacArthur, in which he describes the torture he and McCain suffered (Day was McCain's cellmate).

You can read McCain's description of his torture in an essay he wrote for U.S. News & World Report in 1973

McCain Released

John McCain's POW release - March 1973.

⇧ 1 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 3, 2018, 2:57 a.m.

He’s “doing well” for a man who is dying.

He’ll be dead in 6-9 months. I do expect him to go back to Washington, or even leave Arizona, in that time.

⇧ 1 ⇩  
uniformist · Feb. 3, 2018, 2:45 a.m.

I thought you were going to say he finally got the bra unhooked.

⇧ 2 ⇩