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?
There was a normie on YouTube who sent three spoof tests to be tested. IIRC, one was his keyboard, one was a cat, and and was a sidewalk. Two of the tests came back positive. He was totally shocked when he got the results because as I say, he was a normie.
I've just had a look for it, but it looks like the mass murdering satanic fascists at YouTube have likely deleted the video. He was from the UK, and he just did it for a laugh, so his reaction suggests he never expected the results to come back positive. It was an eye opener to him.
Any idea if the video is still up?