To: Bull RidaH who wrote (40818 ) 10/28/2022 12:54:04 PM From: teevee 3 RecommendationsRecommended By bjzimmy Hugh Bett roguedolphin
Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 50767 If you have ever placed a drop of saturated salt water on a slide and watched as evaporation forces the salt to crystallize, you see something similar although salt crystals are much better defined than complex protein crystals, which have rough or hairy margins. I seriously doubt that the injections contain little nanobots controlled by radio frequency energy that create microchips in the human body, which is what these people are implying. We're watching the slow crystallization of a complex protein or nucleic acid, probably mRNA. The stupid injection campaign will not be stopped until people stop taking the injections. As soon as I learned about pseudouridine well over a year ago, I decided not to take an injection (I thought I was going to take Novavax until I realized it also has pseudouridine in it}. I don't think we need to worry about EM nanobots; we simply have to worry very seriously about what we already know is in it! These injections are ALREADY the stupidest thing modern medical science has EVER done, without dreaming up nanobots. In fact, stories like this can tend to make us look silly for misinterpreting complex protein or nucleotide crystal formation. We have seen protein crystals like these form in human blood, and we've also seen strings of red blood cells and platelets in long gluey strings obviously caused by the injections. This is already VERY BAD, as it is probably what is causing the amyloid clots, and we need no nanobots to support our argument that these injections are dangerous and useless.