Study Links Plant Damage to Nanoparticles/NY Times blog
Thanks to Teresa Binstock for this tip–
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An exposure to nano-scale copper oxide particles stunted the shoots and roots of radishes and two species of rye grass. |
Thanks to Teresa Binstock for this tip–
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An exposure to nano-scale copper oxide particles stunted the shoots and roots of radishes and two species of rye grass. |
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s approval last week of Moderna’s Spikevax COVID vaccine — backed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — made a mockery of science and the regulatory process. https://childrenshealthdefense.org/defender/fda-cdc-approval-moderna-spikevax-vaccine/ By Josh Mitteldorf, Ph.D Link copied Miss a day, miss a lot. Subscribe to The Defender’s Top News of the Day. It’s…
Oxford University is the NIAID of the UK–as far as deliberate prevention of effective treatment for Covid goes. Think HCQ poisonings. The two principal investigators fo the Recovery trial (Peter Horby and Martin Landray) are Oxford professors, who dosed people with sufficient HCQ that more patients died in the treatment arm than in the placebo…
https://live.childrenshealthdefense.org/shows/good-morning-chd or https://rumble.com/v1ra3u8-good-morning-chd-episode-170-the-biosecurity-state.html
From the NY Times, Sept. 21, 2005 – Just as governments around the world are stockpiling millions of doses of flu vaccine and antiviral drugs in anticipation of a potential influenza pandemic, two new research papers published today have found that such treatments are far less effective than previously thought. “The studies published today reinforce…
I am a board-certified internal medicine doctor. I graduated with a degree in biology from MIT, attended NJ Medical School and the University of Mississippi Medical School. I have practiced in Maine since 1997. I am passionate about improving the lives of my patients. I try to find the least toxic methods of treatment for each…
Today’s Washington Post headline reads “‘Swine flu’ strain returns; dramatic rise in deaths of young adults, children.” But the data do not bear this out. Swine flu isn’t really “back”– since 2009, it never left, but there are more cases this year than the last two, relative to other flu strains. After the 2009-10 swine…
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I am not surprised considering that plant life over areas where the soil contains high amounts of particular natural metals is often sparse, or limited in species.