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On the existence of viruses


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2024 Apr 29, 10:45am   112 views  3 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (59)   💰tip   ignore  

https://anthonycolpo.substack.com/p/german-biologist-stefan-lanka-bet


In November 2011, German biologist Stefan Lanka publicly issued a bold challenge. He offered the hefty sum of 100,000 Euros to anyone who could prove the existence of the measles virus.

Lanka was inspired to issue the challenge after witnessing an intense and sustained propaganda campaign that year by both the World Health Organization and the German government, urging people to get vaccinated against measles. ...

"The reward will be paid, if a scientific publication is presented, in which the virus is not only asserted, but also proven and in which, among other things, the diameter of measles virus is determined." ...




Authorities constantly admonish the importance of measles vaccination, and whenever a measles ‘outbreak’ occurs it is invariably blamed upon unvaccinated folk.

The existence of a measles virus, therefore, is presented as a given. Which means Lanka should have been flooded with offers to take up his challenge.

After all, who could resist the opportunity to legally score a quick and easy €100,000?

Turns out proving the existence of a measles virus isn’t so easy. ...




... It seems all the stories reporting Lanka’s subsequent victory got “down-ranked.”

The first result on Google, meanwhile, was a Reuters piece trying to diminish the importance of Lanka’s eventual triumph...


If viruses don't exist, then what does cause measles and how is it infectious?

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1   Ingrid   2024 Apr 29, 11:27am  

several article appeared lately on this and adjacent subjects. Here is one from today :Christine Massey's "germ" FOI Newsletter
another one was on Conspiracy Sarah I think, only a few days ago
IMO most illnesses occur, when people are already not healthy, like missing vital minerals, vitamins, sunlight etc. I think there exists something that makes them transmissible, because when young, my ex came home sick, from sitting next to a sick colleague all day, and a few hours later, I was sick too. It apparently was flu, and it must have very transmittible ! If only some scientists had checked us, we would know for sure what caused it. I do not believe that vaccination prevent illness, I know several people who got the illness shortly after the jabs (I know one with shingles less than a month after the 2 very painful jabs). I know lots of people who had measles as a kid, and so did I, and it is said you have lifelong protection after it, but I also know of 2 people who had it a second time. Measles spread like wildfire for sure. At school, whole classes had it close together when I was a kid. And then you would not hear of it for years.
2   Patrick   2024 May 2, 6:57pm  

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-01284-1


When Paul Zimmer-Harwood volunteered to be intentionally infected with SARS-CoV-2, he wasn’t sure what to expect. He was ready for a repeat of his first brush with COVID-19, through a naturally acquired infection that gave him influenza-like symptoms. But he hoped his immunity would help him feel well enough to use the indoor bicycle trainer that he had brought into quarantine.

It turned out that Zimmer-Harwood, a PhD student at University of Oxford, UK, had nothing to worry about. Neither he nor any of the 35 other people who participated in the ‘challenge’ trial actually got COVID-19.

The study’s results, published on 1 May in Lancet Microbe1, raise questions about the usefulness of COVID-19 challenge trials for testing vaccines, drugs and other therapeutics. “If you can’t get people infected, then you can’t test those things,” says Tom Peacock, a virologist at Imperial College London. Viral strains used in challenge trials take many months to produce, making it impossible to match emerging circulating variants that can overcome high levels of existing immunity in populations.


Hmmm.
3   RWSGFY   2024 May 2, 7:03pm  

Not sure if serious: they say in the article that the guy have already had coof before, so what's so mysterios about him not getting it again? He has immunity to it, duh.

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