The conspiracy level for something like this to be true is off the charts. My wife did medical research on viruses back in the day. Is she part of it? Did some shadowy cabal fund fake research and go so far as to fabricate all the tests and build fake lab equipment for people to use? And not just for my wife, but many thousands of other people all over the world? All with little to no leaks? Seems a bit much.
I don't think you're looking at it from the right angle. The lab equipment doesn't have to be faked. Ask her how many viruses she looked at and how she could tell them apart and if she would recognize a virus if she saw it again and if she could prove that consistently...or...if she was just repeating what she was being taught so she could pass her tests.
She wasn't passing tests, she was doing commercial research. And yes, they could tell a whole lot about the viruses and distinguish between them in excruciating detail... When she gets going my eyes glaze.
Listen to Kary Mullis' lectures. Not saying they don't exist nor that there aren't any with a substantive enough side effect but the fact that the very idea of HlV being the root cause of AlDs was contested by one of the most distinguished scientists in medical history should be cause to question.
The explanation given by this other guy I watched was that, quite simply, they can't see what they say they can see. They've been taught/groomed differently than scientists in other fields so they simply don't know what's wrong with their methods because they have no other methods to compare it to. He talked about how when oncologists look at (or maybe that was this lady) look at parasitic cysts, they ask why they're being shown a cancer cell. They've never seen a parasitic cyst before and they didn't realize they were indistinguishable from cancer cells.
These different specialties are siloed from each other to an enormous degree. They might all be experts in their respective fields but they have no idea that people in other fields have different understandings of the very same things they look at and different verbiage for it too. They all get smarter and smarter as they suppose, in their chosen fields, without the context of what the other fields have to offer and invariably arrive at bad conclusions. Why else would cancer still be such a mystery to oncologists? Why else would anti-parasitic medication be so effective on cancer and oncologists never knew?
Conspiracies? At the top, maybe. Further down the line, it's just knowledge/expertise/observational silos.
I don't trust much these days, but...
The conspiracy level for something like this to be true is off the charts. My wife did medical research on viruses back in the day. Is she part of it? Did some shadowy cabal fund fake research and go so far as to fabricate all the tests and build fake lab equipment for people to use? And not just for my wife, but many thousands of other people all over the world? All with little to no leaks? Seems a bit much.
I don't think you're looking at it from the right angle. The lab equipment doesn't have to be faked. Ask her how many viruses she looked at and how she could tell them apart and if she would recognize a virus if she saw it again and if she could prove that consistently...or...if she was just repeating what she was being taught so she could pass her tests.
She wasn't passing tests, she was doing commercial research. And yes, they could tell a whole lot about the viruses and distinguish between them in excruciating detail... When she gets going my eyes glaze.
Listen to Kary Mullis' lectures. Not saying they don't exist nor that there aren't any with a substantive enough side effect but the fact that the very idea of HlV being the root cause of AlDs was contested by one of the most distinguished scientists in medical history should be cause to question.
The explanation given by this other guy I watched was that, quite simply, they can't see what they say they can see. They've been taught/groomed differently than scientists in other fields so they simply don't know what's wrong with their methods because they have no other methods to compare it to. He talked about how when oncologists look at (or maybe that was this lady) look at parasitic cysts, they ask why they're being shown a cancer cell. They've never seen a parasitic cyst before and they didn't realize they were indistinguishable from cancer cells.
These different specialties are siloed from each other to an enormous degree. They might all be experts in their respective fields but they have no idea that people in other fields have different understandings of the very same things they look at and different verbiage for it too. They all get smarter and smarter as they suppose, in their chosen fields, without the context of what the other fields have to offer and invariably arrive at bad conclusions. Why else would cancer still be such a mystery to oncologists? Why else would anti-parasitic medication be so effective on cancer and oncologists never knew?
Conspiracies? At the top, maybe. Further down the line, it's just knowledge/expertise/observational silos.