https://www.bitchute.com/video/X9oMvf6dbhCi/
DR. ANDREAS NOACK is Specialist for Carbon, he is Europes leading chemist with expertise in Carbon technologies.
He analyzed the vaccines.
He released the video yesterday. They killed him. His girlfriend talks about it., He got whacked. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uUWcL3SHuBc [Embed] And in the real whacked way. Killed by force.
He said it will kill everyone. Sooner or later. its non biological degradable. Its razor-sharp and will cut your capillaries and you will slowly bleed internally to death, while also producing clots.
If they hit a vein directly during the vax, you die instantly. That's all the videos on people collapsing on vaxx site.
DR. Andreas Noack supposedly killed one day after saying graphene 'razor blades' in vaccine.
👀 EYES ON! 👀
And they’re sterilized with EO. Ethylene oxide. Look at the sleeve the swab comes in.
https://www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/ethyleneoxide/default.html
Overview
CAS No. 75-21-8
Ethylene oxide (C₂H₄O) is a flammable gas with a somewhat sweet odor. Exposure to ethylene oxide may cause headache, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, breathing difficulty, drowsiness, weakness, exhaustion, eye and skin burns, frostbite, and reproductive effects. Workers may be harmed from exposure to ethylene oxide. The level of exposure depends upon the dose, duration, and work being done.
Ethylene oxide is used in many industries. It’s used to make ethylene glycol, a product used in antifreeze and polyester. Some examples of workers at risk of being exposed to ethylene oxide include the following:
Factory workers in plants that use it to produce solvents, antifreeze, textiles, detergents, adhesives, and polyurethane foam Factory workers who work in plants that manufacture ethylene oxide Agricultural workers who use it to control insects in grain bins Hospital workers who use it to sterilize medical equipment and supplies
https://www.cancer.gov/about-cancer/causes-prevention/risk/substances/ethylene-oxide
Ethylene Oxide
A model of the ethylene oxide molecule. What is ethylene oxide?
At room temperature, ethylene oxide is a flammable colorless gas with a sweet odor. It is used primarily to produce other chemicals, including antifreeze. In smaller amounts, ethylene oxide is used as a pesticide and a sterilizing agent. The ability of ethylene oxide to damage DNA makes it an effective sterilizing agent but also accounts for its cancer-causing activity.
How are people exposed to ethylene oxide?
The primary routes of human exposure to ethylene oxide are inhalation and ingestion, which may occur through occupational, consumer, or environmental exposure. Because ethylene oxide is highly explosive and reactive, the equipment used for its processing generally consists of tightly closed and highly automated systems, which decreases the risk of occupational exposure.
Despite these precautions, workers and people who live near industrial facilities that produce or use ethylene oxide may be exposed to ethylene oxide through uncontrolled industrial emissions. The general population may also be exposed through tobacco smoke and the use of products that have been sterilized with ethylene oxide, such as medical products, cosmetics, and beekeeping equipment.
Which cancers are associated with exposure to ethylene oxide?
Lymphoma and leukemia are the cancers most frequently reported to be associated with occupational exposure to ethylene oxide. Stomach and breast cancers may also be associated with ethylene oxide exposure.
How can exposures be reduced?
The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration has information about limiting occupational exposure to ethylene oxide.
Selected References:
Health Effects Notebook for Hazardous Air Pollutants: Ethylene Oxide. Washington, DC: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 2018. Also available online. Last accessed December 28, 2018. International Agency for Research on Cancer. Ethylene Oxide, IARC Monographs on the Evaluation of Carcinogenic Risks to Humans, Volume 100F. Lyon, France: World Health Organization, 2012. Also available onlineExit Disclaimer. Last accessed December 28, 2018. National Toxicology Program. Ethylene Oxide, Report on Carcinogens, Fourteenth Edition. Triangle Park, NC: National Institute of Environmental Health and Safety, 2016. Also available online. Last accessed December 28, 2018.
Fortunately, cancers related to exposure to various chemicals take years to develop through chronic exposure; a one-time exposure involves almost zero risk (if it did, everyone would have cancer :) ). I'm more worried about those fibers that imbed in your nasal cavity. I haven't read what they are made of and what they might be doing.
True. Though people are being forced or coerced to test weekly or more frequently. The fire department requires this. Fortunately I do it myself and barely more the swab into my nostril and do so gently.
The first time I did it as instructed in the package and felt like something was in my nostrils for hours and then didn’t feel well for a day or two. Not sure if it was psychosomatic or if it was real but that was the last time there was ‘vigorous swiping for 15 sec per nostril’.
The swab I got at Riteaide immediately hurt after just inserting into my nose, and not deep! The person at the drive up window said to twist it for 15 seconds in each nostril, but I know I wasn't able to do that for more than 5 or 10 seconds. Fortunately, it gathered enough to test, and was positive (I don't know of anything else that makes you lose sense of smell :) ). My wife got tested at a different place (after I warned her about Riteaide), and said her test didn't hurt, but when her results came back, it was listed as "inconclusive".