This is fake. Ethylene oxide is a gas. You can't coat or impregnate a cotton bud with it. It disappears into the air as soon as you open the container.
It is not about a one off. It is about the normalcy of being tested everyday. Repeat it long enough and you develop a problem.
See Schools: where kids are being tested daily.
Another point of concern is the spot: being up the Nose as far back as the brain barrier.
A look around at NCBI, we are not the first to raise concerns.
Whether the argument hold that a one off meet with residue could cause brain hemorrhages, brain tumors, lukemia, is debatable, I guess. As said: testing with such swabs is not a one off.
https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2016-09/documents/ethylene-oxide.pdf
is it the same video as this? https://www.bitchute.com/video/2bKLFaDOiwEy/
This is fake. Ethylene oxide is a gas. You can't coat or impregnate a cotton bud with it. It disappears into the air as soon as you open the container.
thank you
No it is not.
First: you seem to operate under the impression that a gas cannot leave residue. It does.
https://www.steris-ast.com/techtip/overview-ethylene-oxide-residuals/
Second:
It is not about a one off. It is about the normalcy of being tested everyday. Repeat it long enough and you develop a problem.
See Schools: where kids are being tested daily.
Another point of concern is the spot: being up the Nose as far back as the brain barrier.
A look around at NCBI, we are not the first to raise concerns.
Whether the argument hold that a one off meet with residue could cause brain hemorrhages, brain tumors, lukemia, is debatable, I guess. As said: testing with such swabs is not a one off.
Read the Manual. https://www.lyondellbasell.com/globalassets/documents/chemicals-technical-literature/ethylene-oxide-manual.pdf
Goto page 70. And let it sink in.