I am sorry to hear about your situation.moses1084ever said:
I live in Singapore. Orange is going to be a ball ache. Every employer is now required to perform temperature checks twice daily.. which is hard because all pharmacies around town have been sold out of thermometers for over a week.
Wife and I are seriously discussing about whether to take the kids and bail somewhere, but the tradeoffs aren't clear.. risk getting stuck/stranded, being around sick people while travelling, etc.
Its a botUncoverAg00 said:
Interesting... prior to a couple of days ago, that Twitter account was seemingly inactive for like 6 years.
It is possible the account changed its account name and display name before posting again.UncoverAg00 said:
Interesting... prior to a couple of days ago, that Twitter account was seemingly inactive for like 6 years.
JJxvi said:
In other words, you believe anything negative but not positive that they say or that you can infer?
Civil.Savage said:
Come on back to Texas. We are here and there are many who can lend a hand.
-RAB
Bobcat06 said:
It's real
https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/cruise-ship-travelers-returning-to-nj-will-be-screened-for-coronavirus-sources/2281562/
Quote:
There's no indication anyone has the coronavirus but the CDC and health officials took 23 others, all Chinese nationals, off the ship after it docked in Bayonne on Friday morning. They will be taken to Newark airport for a flight back to China.
The mayor said he was told none of the 27 are from Wuhan, the epicenter of the virus, or have traveled there since the outbreak was first identified.
.moses1084ever said:
I live in Singapore. Orange is going to be a ball ache. Every employer is now required to perform temperature checks twice daily.. which is hard because all pharmacies around town have been sold out of thermometers for over a week.
Wife and I are seriously discussing about whether to take the kids and bail somewhere, but the tradeoffs aren't clear.. risk getting stuck/stranded, being around sick people while travelling, etc.
Commies gonna commieCivil.Savage said:
They dont have toilet paper or body bags but they do yave enough telescoping steel bars to baricate everyone they need to? Hmmm
Is FedEx still delivering to China?Quote:
Moses,
How about a texags care package? Email me your address and some items that you would like. Maybe some N95 masks, gloves, GermX. What is getting hard to come by?
I'm in BCS so if someone wants to throw something in the package shoot me an email.
Fellow Moses RAB here. There are plenty on this board. Let us know if we can do anything to help.moses1084ever said:
I live in Singapore. Orange is going to be a ball ache. Every employer is now required to perform temperature checks twice daily.. which is hard because all pharmacies around town have been sold out of thermometers for over a week.
Wife and I are seriously discussing about whether to take the kids and bail somewhere, but the tradeoffs aren't clear.. risk getting stuck/stranded, being around sick people while travelling, etc.
Quote:
Irrefutable: The coronavirus was engineered by scientists in a lab using well documented genetic engineering vectors that leave behind a "fingerprint"
By Mike Adams
(Natural News) Every virology lab in the world that has run a genomic analysis of the coronavirus now knows that the coronavirus was engineered by human scientists. The proof is in the virus itself: The tools for genetic insertion are still present as remnants in the genetic code. Since these unique gene sequences don't occur by random chance, they're proof that this virus was engineered by scientists in a lab.
But the WHO and CDC are covering up this inconvenient fact in order to protect communist China and its biological weapons program, since no government wants the public to know the full truth about how frequently government-run labs experience outbreaks. Decades ago, for example, the U.S. Army ran an Ebola bioweapons lab in the United States, where a monkey infected one of the scientists there. The strain turned out to be infectious only in monkeys, not humans, so the world dodged a bullet, but the U.S. Army "nuked" the entire facility with chemical bombs, killing all the monkeys and wiping out any last remnant of the virus on U.S. soil.You can read the full details of that incident in the book The Hot Zone by Richard Preston. We've also covered it at NaturalNews.com, where this book description is reprinted:
How to genetically engineer viruses: the pShuttle vector
One of the tools used to accomplish this genetic engineering is called pShuttle. It's a genetic tool set that can carry a payload of genes to be inserted into the target virus.
Researchers engaged in genetic engineering can purchase the pShuttle sequence from online retailers such as AddGenes.org, which sells the sequence for $75, shipped in "bacteria as agar stab."
The method for using pShuttle is described in a PubMed document entitled, "A simplified system for generating recombinant adenoviruses."
The summary of the paper describes, "a strategy that simplifies the generation and production of such viruses." Here's how the process works to achieve genetic engineering of viruses:
A recombinant adenoviral plasmid is generated with a minimum of enzymatic manipulations, using homologous recombination in bacteria rather than in eukaryotic cells. After transfections of such plasmids into a mammalian packaging cell line, viral production is conveniently followed with the aid of green fluorescent protein, encoded by a gene incorporated into the viral backbone. Homogeneous viruses can be obtained from this procedure without plaque purification.
Another gene sequence also shows a 92% match with the Spike protein from the SARS coronavirus:
The process for achieving this was patented by Chinese researchers as shown in this patent link.
The pShuttle vector was used to insert SARS genes into the coronavirus, a process that makes it deadly to humans. "The very researchers conducting studies on SARS vaccines have cautioned repeatedly against human trials," warns Lyons-Weiler:
The disease progression in of 2019-nCoV is consistent with those seen in animals and humans vaccinated against SARS and then challenged with re-infection. Thus, the hypothesis that 2019-nCoV is an experimental vaccine type must be seriously considered.
He also warns about, "studies that have reported serious immunopathology in animals rats, ferrets, and monkeys in which animals vaccinated against coronoviruses tended to have extremely high rates of respiratory failure upon subsequent exposure in the study when challenged with the wild-type coronavirus."
He concludes:
If the Chinese government has been conducting human trials against SARS. MERS, or other coronviruses using recombined viruses, they may have made their citizens far more susceptible to acute respiratory distress syndrome upon infection with 2019-nCoV coronavirus.
Thats an interesting interpretation of The Hot ZoneQuote:
Decades ago, for example, the U.S. Army ran an Ebola bioweapons lab in the United States, where a monkey infected one of the scientists there. The strain turned out to be infectious only in monkeys, not humans, so the world dodged a bullet, but the U.S. Army "nuked" the entire facility with chemical bombs, killing all the monkeys and wiping out any last remnant of the virus on U.S. soil.You can read the full details of that incident in the book The Hot Zone by Richard Preston. We've also covered it at NaturalNews.com, where this book description is reprinted: