The president of Tanzania secretly sent a bunch of 'invalid' specimens to the lab and some tested positive. A papaya, a goat, etc.
This underscores the unreliability of PCR covid tests for clinical medicine. And yet the entire scamdemic edifice is constructed on top of PCR results.
I discussed this with a friend and he said, "To be clear, the story about the papaya has not been substantiated."
I was wondering ... Has anyone else sent 'invalid' samples to be tested? Any links to share?
I thought about doing it myself with Amazon's at-home test kits, just swab a bunch of random stuff and see what results come back. But the kits cost $40 each. Do you know of any researchers who have done this?
"mAyBe It HaD cOvId On It"
Maybe the tests were never designed to detect viruses, let alone determine influenza from coronavirus, it probably can't tell a grapefruit from a virus. And i think they would be smart enough to consider contamination so used the inside of the fruit with sterile equipment since it was a test. Doubt it would exist inside the fruit. Either the test had the virus or something to infect us to begin with, or it was a false positive as always, or yes. (To both.)