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CV and mad panic behaviour
(08-29-2021, 12:59 PM)kruddler date Wrote:.....just like vaccines and autism!
A deliberate act of fraud by an anti-vax researcher / doctor.

There is a group of individuals who believe medical technology is the cause of global overpopulation and poverty, too many people dividing not enough resources, so they follow an ethos of campaigning to remove stuff that keeps people alive to return the world to a state of natural attrition. They do this under a guise of spreading a false message about harm these medical interventions allegedly do in an effort to scare people away from all treatments.

The irony here is that the guy who published the false autism claims, allegedly had a severe accident on a bike and called the ambulance! You can all die, but he must be saved it seems!
"Ruck, ruck, ruck, ruck ....... Ruck, ruck, ruck, ruck"
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(08-29-2021, 10:07 PM)LP link Wrote:A deliberate act of fraud by an anti-vax researcher / doctor.

There is a group of individuals who believe medical technology is the cause of global overpopulation and poverty, too many people dividing not enough resources, so they follow an ethos of campaigning to remove stuff that keeps people alive to return the world to a state of natural attrition. They do this under a guise of spreading a false message about harm these medical interventions allegedly do in an effort to scare people away from all treatments.

The irony here is that the guy who published the false autism claims, allegedly had a severe accident on a bike and called the ambulance! You can all die, but he must be saved it seems!

FWIW, i did some research into that. Supposedly the 'study' that this whole thing stemmed from was done on a study of 12, yep count them, 12 people. Clearly insignificant results that could not be used to verify anything. Of course it failed peer reviews and studies of 1.5mil (instead of 12) clearly prove otherwise. The guys behind the study admit defeat but the damage was done.

....and now wannabe, self educated youtube 'scientists' and their leader Jenny McCarthy say otherwise....and people who don't know better continue to peddle false claims.
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(08-29-2021, 12:59 PM)kruddler link Wrote:There was a radio guy in the US who is 'one of them'. I wish i could remember his name, but i barely took it in.
On his show he was anti vax, PLANdemic blah blah. Backed himself in against the virus, no masks the whole 9 yards.
Karma bus hit him.
Got Covid
....and died.
Phil Valentine. What shocks me is that he was taking Ivermectin and he still got Covid  :-*
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(08-29-2021, 11:40 PM)Mav link Wrote:Phil Valentine. What shocks me is that he was taking Ivermectin and he still got Covid  :-*
Thats the one i was talking about!

Not surprised there is a couple of similar types who fit the bill.  :Smile
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Sample size of n = 12 says it all really doesn't it Kruddler.  Wonder why it didn't pass peer review?
DrE is no more... you ok with that harmonica man?
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(08-29-2021, 11:47 PM)Professer E link Wrote:Sample size of n = 12 says it all really doesn't it Kruddler.  Wonder why it didn't pass peer review?
It SHOULD say it all.

However, we have seen that 'small details' like that mean nothing to the youtube generation! They always know better!
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There's an interesting background to Trump's famously idiotic question about whether disinfectant could be injected into the body to clean the system of Covid.

It seems that conmen trying to sell bleach as a cure for autism had repurposed it as a Covid cure. That wasn't too hard as they were  promoting it on the basis that "it can cure 99% of all illnesses including cancer, malaria, HIV/Aids as well as autism". Man, he should be up for the Nobel Prize. Makes you wonder what the 1% of illnesses it didn't treat were ...

So the chief conman, "Archbishop" Mark Grenon, had written to Trump before that infamous press conference and his band of 30 merry conmen had also been bombarding him with letters and had reached out to his aides:
Revealed: leader of group peddling bleach as coronavirus 'cure' wrote to Trump this week, The Guardian.

I'm not sure if he was the same guy who was mentioned in a doco about the tactics of Anti-Vaxxers. That guy was selling a nebuliser which converted the bleach into a mist so it could be inhaled. It, too, was spruiked as a cure for autism but was repurposed into a Covid cure. 

The "Archbishop" has been charged with offences in Florida and argued unsuccessfully that his con was protected as he was selling bleach through his "Church", Genesis II.

This possible basis for Trump asking such a profoundly stupid question at least provides some explanation for why he did it. But in true Trump form, it adds sleaze, conspiracy theory peddling and shameless pandering to the religious right & the far right. 
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(08-29-2021, 11:48 PM)kruddler date Wrote:It SHOULD say it all.

However, we have seen that 'small details' like that mean nothing to the youtube generation! They always know better!
On FartBook, Twiddler and InstaGrope, it only takes one!
"Ruck, ruck, ruck, ruck ....... Ruck, ruck, ruck, ruck"
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Only a lousy 1300 new cases (close enuff) in NSW.  They're paralyzed. 
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