https://www.howbadismybatch.com/cdcexpiry3.pdf
Why do other batches have no expiry date? Why do the batches with expiry date happen to be the deadly ones? Why does CDC want to keep this list a secret?
The reason is that the batches which contain the mRNA vaccines are the ones that would expire. The batches with the saline are the ones that don't need an expiry date.
Does it mean all the batches other than the deadly ones were actually Saline?
Most of the humanity is actually safe?
I am not sure where to begin. You have made so many assumptions, including the assumption my argument was made in ignorance (or lack of credentials...). This is a form of ad hominem, but you do not seem to want to listen to what that means, since you immediately employed it to begin your response.
I will start with the topic of this conversation that you are "calling me out on."
The impetus for the respondent's statements on SM-102 was based on information regarding that specific amino lipid in solution from the manufacturer, as they have been the last 50 times I have responded to this topic (please see follow up posts). I gave an informed argument in response.
Yes, biology is complicated. However, one can, if one understands biochemistry, and has worked with molecules such as this for a couple decades, look at the molecules and make some reasonable assumptions on interactions. That is what I did, based on my own experiences. Could it possibly be toxic in combination? Absolutely. I even stated that it could be toxic. However, there are no moieties (what I called "signals" to not be obtuse) that present obvious deleterious interactions with anything I know about cell biology (which is not insubstantial). However, as I said, biology is very complicated, and one never knows without testing.
What evidence have you seen? I have looked for papers on SM-102 toxicity and all of the ones that I have found suggest it is non-toxic. If you know of any papers that support your assertions (AKA actual evidence and not supposition) I am all ears.
How exactly did I present myself as such? I presented an argument. Some of that argument comes from personal experience. Should I discard all of my experiences in my argument? Perhaps, but to do so would then require explaining to someone who is not a chemist, many years of biochemistry and cell biology, just to get the context of why the molecule does not pose a threat in any apparent way. You could call that speaking from authority, and in a way it is, but it's not the same as a direct appeal to authority ("trust me, I'm a doctor" e.g.), since I am not calling on my credentials, but my direct personal experience, with (minimal) explanation of those experiences to help elucidate my reasoning.
I will admit that does not make the strongest of arguments without all the requisite explanations of biochemistry, but it's hardly the "holding myself out as an authority of some sort" as you suggest. It would be like calling out a carpenter for "holding himself up as an authority." when he is trying to explain to someone who has never seen a hammer how to drive a nail into wood.
I have done work in this specific field (cell specific targeting lipid and/or mesoporous silica nanoparticles) so I have some idea of those toxicity signals. They are most prominent in nanoparticles that do not have targeting molecules (specific ligands or antibodies) on their surface (like "the jab"). In instances where such cell specific targeting is used, the deleterious effects go way down (statistically zero if the payload is non-toxic, as far as I have seen). This suggests it is not the lipid constituents per se, but the systemic uptake. When I first saw "the jab" and it's design I practically screamed (it was a huge wake up call). It was stupid as fuck to create such a system that didn't target the local environment to increase muscle cell uptake (e.g.). It was guaranteed to go everywhere, which is exactly what the evidence suggests happens.
I can tell people that I have seen no evidence to support it (despite having done my due diligence), and in my decades of experience, lipids of this nature do not pose a threat. I can tell people that, because both of those statements are true. That doesn't mean it isn't toxic. It means there is no apparent reason to suspect it is. Do you have a reason to suspect it is other than that "biology is complicated" and "you never know until you do the science"? Because that is all I'm hearing from you. I totally agree with those suppositions, but they are purely "supposition" (of the negative nancy variety).
I didn't miss that, it just wasn't relevant to anything I said. All it does it support your suppositions (albeit very weakly). It doesn't make them not suppositions.
You will get no argument from me on this, however, this is still irrelevant to anything I said (other than as support for supposition, as stated).
Your argument is based purely on supposition without a single shred of evidence to support actual toxicity with SM-102. I'm not saying your arguments are bad, or that we shouldn't be looking at those things. I am calling it what it is; at this point it is pure supposition. There is no evidence to support SM-102 toxicity, despite several billion recipients (albeit with a dishonest scientific establishment). Having spent quite a bit of time looking through the VAERS data, I see no signals (reports of specific symptoms) that support any sort of toxicity from the breakdown products (or even any potential substitutions of the amino head group e.g.) of SM-102.
Not that I'm suggesting I can look at the molecule and know all of the possibilities (though I can think of quite a few), but all of the signals in the data point to other known specific interactions. From the VAERS data, the S-protein interactions that have been studied in various tissues show the strongest signals. These are interactions with substantial evidential support in the literature. PEG allergies are also there as a very small secondary signal (albeit higher than the "official reports"). That doesn't mean that the S-protein is the real culprit, but it is (given all the evidence so far) by far the most likely. It is also the only one with supporting evidence. Importantly, that evidence is also quite substantial because they come from two years of a meaningful percentage of the scientists on the planet studying the S-protein that the (highly modified) mRNA in "the jab" is designed to create.
"I know about cell biology (which is not insubstantial)."
"How exactly did I present myself as such [an authority of some sort]? I presented an argument. That is not speaking from authority, but presenting an argument."
You are a wiki schooled academic-style equivocator who wants to have it both ways. "I know my cell bio, just don't mistake me for speaking authoritatively when I also say, ' I can tell people that I have seen no evidence to support it (despite having done my due diligence), and in my decades of experience, lipids of this nature do not pose a threat.'"
Oh really? And, if true, by what route(s) of administration is this true - or didn't Wikipedia happen to say? And if true, in the presence of what other formulated substances is this true – or don’t you know or want to know, because you let yourself be jabbed with a host of other [undisclosed] substances to keep your job (whose cellular penetration is facilitated and whose activity(s) are possibly co-enhanced in the presence of SM-102) that are percolating through your brain right now. Still an irrelevant consideration?
Your narratives continue to evidence the fact that you have absolutely no accomplishment or understanding of basic pharmaceutical development, hence you are flailing about waving your hands and screaming "irrelevant!" at every point you do not have the intellectual capacity to comprehend. Having identified no relevant experience you persoannly have in either biological or pharmaceutical formulary development you’re clearly out of your league in this discussion in spite of all the verbiage you have thrown at it. Example:
Re: 10% SM-102/90% EtOH: “I can't find that anywhere on her list of things, but even if true (and it could be, because I think ethanol would likely be a viable solvent), pure ethanol, is toxic as fuck..”. Research Grade SM-102 (Cayman Chemicals) https://www.caymanchem.com/news/sm-102-statement Simple enough to look up and verify in 10 seconds – if you know where to look and how to do basic research.
“Do you have a reason to suspect it is other than that "biology is complicated" and "you never know until you do the science"? Because that is all I'm hearing from you.”
That is all I need to say. It is incumbent upon you to justify your safety claims (not just what you’ve read in Wiki and have parroted on the board): it is not incumbent upon me to do the science for you. All substances administered (particularly those administered by injection) must demonstrate their satisfactory safety profile through formulation integrity studies, stability/degradation profiling (according to PubMed there are possibly as many as 75 different related substances for SM-102 alone – which ones does your Moderna jab have in it, in what proportions and how are they limited synthetically?), physiologic/metabolic fates studies, and tissue depositon studies to allow for legitimate consideration for use in pharmaceutical or biologic applications. This was not adequately done for any CV19 jabs.
I do not apologize for the fact that I happen to have 40-years of career achievements and patents in pharmaceutical and biologic therapeutics development, which also happen to include having served at one time as a Review Chemist at the FDA, and having completed with distinction 4 academic undergraduate and graduate degree programs, 3 of which are in the natural sciences of biology, chemistry and biochemistry.
You wrote a clearly butt-hurt soliloquy about when one speaks of experience gained through their academics and their profession, but when you turn around and write, "I know about cell biology (which is not insubstantial),” it quickly becomes painfully obvious to readers that whatever you think you know about cell biology is somewhat less than billed and that you are substantially out of your depth on these topics - particularly with respect to your feigned “expertise” as it pertains to your unmerited certainty regarding presumed safety of SM-102 as co-formulated with undisclosed substances in injectibles.
Based upon the way you reason and write, it would come as no surprise to me to learn that the sum of your "decades of experience" is actually as a part-time Moderna summer intern, driving a pallet mover in the warehouse on 3rd shift.