💥 Another Way Big Pharma Is Getting Graphene Oxide Into People...Ink Printed On Meds 💥
(twitter.com)
🤢 These people are sick! 🤮
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The body actually has an enzyme which is able to process small amounts of GO. It's called Myeloperoxidase.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/08/180823113613.htm
How do we know she didn't put metal shavings into the glass? In a word, we don't.
It would be a good experiment for you to try, then you would be able to trust the results
You are 100% correct. On the other hand, it would be pretty easy for anyone to do the experiment themselves in order to confirm/refute this lady's statement.
A collection of articles on graphene oxide...
https://www.drrobertyoung.com/post/humanity-at-risk-transfection-of-graphene-parasites-activated-by-3-4-5g-pulsating-emf
Pure evil
It's definitely evil, especially when it is not labeled as an ingredient. My question I have is, does the stomach and gastro-intestinal system actually digest this sh**? Or is passed through the system? I haven't read any material concerning this.
Nevertheless, this is an important 'informed consent' issue. There just might be a good lawsuit waiting to be launched.
Assuming she isn't tricking us, it doesn't actually prove its graphine oxide, just that whatever the substance is is ferromagnetic. I would assume that's bad regardless, but I don't know enough to say definitively.
You will get the same reaction out of corn flakes or "iron fortified/fortified" foods and cereals. Its iron. I dont know why it wpuld be in the pill but a secondary test to remove the lettering then dissolve the pill woumd show that the iron is in the pressed powder. To add, Graphene oxide is so tiny of a particle that it wouldnt be that size and would most likely not be visible using the method she used.
Pills are made from petroleum byproduct anyway so no matter what you're ingesting poison
Couple of questions come to mind:
Are we certain this is graphene oxide and not some other compound? Graphene oxide is carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. There are no metallic elements in that compound and yet this is clearly showing magnetic properties. Ink can have iron mixed in the complex mixture that makes up ink. We need to be specific about what we're dealing with.
These are large pieces, visible to the naked eye. Typically, when I read about toxicities of GO, it involves nanoparticles. So, then I need to know have they prepared the ink in such a way to generate nanoparticles (this takes considerable effort, as I understand it)? And does the body absorb them through the lining of the GI tract? We eat a lot of things that don't get absorbed and just pass through the system into the feces. It's not a trivial question.
I don't know what precisely I'm looking at here, so I'm not going to start jumping up and down until I have a better idea of what this is and whether it is in fact harmful.
Why would someone randomly run a test like this on their medicine out of the blue?