Asking if agents provocateur carried flags among the truckers caused a stir... Should I apologize?
Oh yeah, Agents provocateurs - they're everywhere.
The fake opposition has a stranglehold on the genuine opposition big time.
Asking if agents provocateur carried flags among the truckers caused a stir... Should I apologize?
OOPS, Off Guardian a mighty conspiracy website, how did you find it, and are you pretending to be a conspiracy theorist, or are you a conspiracy theorist?
Double OOPS... Off Guardian is an intense pseudoscience website, and you like it because it promotes unproven conspiracy theories and false information regarding the Coronavirus. You won, you found the dumbest web site for the virus.
BTW, actually deaths from Corona Virus are higher than reported, and you don't care why, or are able to figure out why - because you prefer misinformation about the pandemic.
Cluelessly spreading BS
Good news, you are in the correct sub-forum, where you can post the most idiotic conspiracy theories, and be on topic.
I've noticed that the people who don't think it exists, either haven't had it, or haven't met anyone who has, which means they are likely a bigger shut in than I am, which is saying something.
Oh my goodness. You can lead a horse to water but you can't make it drink.
Just go to the article and you will see all the citations you need.
https://off-guardian.org/2020/06/27/covid19-pcr-tests-are-scientifically-meaningless/
I'm not sure what you're referring to. I summarised the article with a link to the article.
https://off-guardian.org/2020/06/27/covid19-pcr-tests-are-scientifically-meaningless/
SourceMedia Bias Fact Check said:Overall, we rate OffGuardian a Strong Conspiracy and Strong Pseudoscience website that frequently promotes unproven conspiracy theories and false information regarding the Coronavirus.
Bias Rating: CONSPIRACY-PSEUDOSCIENCE
Factual Reporting: MIXED
MBFC Credibility Rating: LOW CREDIBILITY
Here the authors take a bunch of quotes about testing for the virus, extrapolate them into a mantra, call the mantra a "religion," then dismiss the lot of them for being religious. Nice rhetoric, but it doesn't address they key point they're trying to make, that COVID-19 PCR tests are scientifically useless.Off-Guardian: “COVID-19 PCR tests are scientifically useless” said:This indicates that the belief in the validity of the PCR tests is so strong that it equals a religion that tolerates virtually no contradiction.
But it is well known that religions are about faith and not about scientific facts. And as Walter Lippmann, the two-time Pulitzer Prize winner and perhaps the most influential journalist of the 20th century said: “Where all think alike, no one thinks very much.”
Off-Guardian said:So to start, it is very remarkable that Kary Mullis himself, the inventor of the Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) technology, did not think alike. His invention got him the Nobel prize in chemistry in 1993.
Unfortunately, Mullis passed away last year at the age of 74, but there is no doubt that the biochemist regarded the PCR as inappropriate to detect a viral infection.
SourceMedia Bias Fact Check said:Overall, we UncoverDC extreme right biased and Questionable based on the promotion of debunked conspiracy theories and pseudoscience, the use of poor sources who routinely fail fact checks, and a lack of transparency with ownership.
Questionable Reasoning: Conspiracies, Pseudoscience, Propaganda, Poor Sourcing, Lack of Transparency, False Claims
Bias Rating: EXTREME RIGHT
Factual Reporting: LOW
MBFC Credibility Rating: LOW CREDIBILITY
Off-Guardian said:How declaring virus pandemics based on PCR tests can end in disaster was described by Gina Kolata in her 2007 New York Times article Faith in Quick Test Leads to Epidemic That Wasn’t.
Off-Guardian said:Moreover, it is worth mentioning that the PCR tests used to identify so-called COVID-19 patients presumably infected by what is called SARS-CoV-2 do not have a valid gold standard to compare them with.
This is a fundamental point. Tests need to be evaluated to determine their preciseness — strictly speaking their “sensitivity” and “specificity” — by comparison with a “gold standard,” meaning the most accurate method available.
Off-Guardian said:Jessica C. Watson from Bristol University confirms this. In her paper “Interpreting a COVID-19 test result”, published recently in The British Medical Journal, she writes that there is a “lack of such a clear-cut ‘gold-standard’ for COVID-19 testing.”
Off-Guardian said:.. it is downright absurd to take the PCR test itself as part of the gold standard to evaluate the PCR test ...
SourceMedia Bias Fact Check said:Overall, we rate The Conversation Least Biased based on covering both the right-center and left-center politically, as well as covering evidence-based topics. We also rate them Very High for factual reporting due to excellent sourcing of information and a clean fact check record.
Bias Rating: LEAST BIASED
Factual Reporting: VERY HIGH
MBFC Credibility Rating: HIGH CREDIBILITY
The use of scare quotes when describing Dr. Watson as an expert is evidence of the authors' bias and not their objectivity.Off-Guardian said:In addition, “experts” such as Watson overlook the fact that only virus isolation, i.e. an unequivocal virus proof, can be the gold standard.
Petra, I think if you start your investigation with the belief that Covid does not exist (as you said), you are not honestly "thinking for yourself."
One might, if perhaps a rigid empiricist, begin with the question of whether or not Covid exists, and, after looking at the evidence from the least partisan sources or a mix of them, come to a conclusion. But if you start from the assumption that it does not, you are either fooling yourself or trying unsuccessfully to fool others with the notion that you're "thinking for yourself." Someone else did that thinking.
And understand that this would be entirely true even if your starting point were correct, and even if all your conclusions were correct.
You can be the fastest human ever, but if you jump the gun at the starting blocks, you've cheated, even if you win the race by ten times the difference.
You are entitled to believe whatever aspect you think is absurd, Nick, I think everything about the situation is absurd. Of course, I don't believe in the virus, its alleged variants, I believe in nothing of this pandemic, however, even if I did I'd think it absurd that someone who is perfectly well is kept under house arrest for 7 days for testing positive for an illness she shows no signs of ... and was obliged to pay the money I stated.
Bubba, your anecdotes (and obvious lies) about "agents provocateur" (a word you've obviously just encountered and think looks cool when you write it) are as useless as your anecdotes about your "doctor friend" and your "cartographer friend".How revealing of you to say that, when the fake racists at the Youngkin event are merely the most recent proof.
Years ago I saw footage of a peaceful protest (IIRC it was in Quebec) where two guys joined the march with rocks in their hands as the march reached the police line. Some protesters pointed and shouted "They have rocks, stop them". The protestors tackled them and took them down. The two guys crawled toward the police line, which opened for them. As they disappeared among the police, a protestor pointed out that the two guys wore boots identical to boots the police were wearing.
"...invoking paranoid fantasies about sinister plots" .....Really.?
But I would understand your reaction, if the 'agent provocateur' thing is a new concept for you. I recall often seeing the same reaction from others unaware of it, when the possibility is mentioned. It still happens today.
As an example of general ignorance of such deception practices.........Just about a week ago, I noticed some of the MSM was explaining "false flag attack" to their audiences, after mentioning FFA on air regarding Putin and Ukraine. So dont feel bad if you are just now learning about agents provocateur.
If that makes you feel better, then good for you. But I still have nothing but condescension for the ridiculous arguments you've presented here. The map alignment claim is proof that you will never admit that you're wrong about anything, even when the evidence is undeniably obvious. As I've been saying for years, conspiracy theories are gnostic cults that appeal to certain people by letting them believe that they are special - that they are among the smartest people on earth because they see a big secret that everyone else isn't clever enough to uncover. That's why they dig in even harder when the ******** they conspicuously consume and regurgitate is shown to be just that - ********. It's not about finding the truth. When the truth turns out to contradict the cult dogma that gives them their special feeling of superiority, whether it's regarding QAnon, maps, or a massive scientific consensus, then the truth becomes the enemy and excuses must be found to declare it part of the conspiracy.I forgive you for your condescending comment.
First off, Off-Guardian is a psuedo-science site. They're not over-the-top tin foil hat crackpots, but they don't have a good rating:
Source
That said, I went ahead and read the article. Here are some comments.
Good! They've made a point and back it up with a link. Where does the link go? A web site called Uncover DC.
We're off to a bad start: one meaningless piece of rhetoric and a failed fact check from a crank site.
No, in the case of covid they're not being used to amplify DNA sequences, they're being used to test for infection by an alleged RNA virus.So now it's off to the New York Times article. It's from 2007, more than a decade before COVID, but that's not reason enough to dismiss it. It's a cautionary tale about using in-house, home brew tests to determine if a pathogen is loose in a facility. When these tests were followed up with a much better test (cell cultures,) the home brew tests were discovered to raise a lot of false positives.
Except PCR tests aren't "home brew." They're an established technology being used for the purpose for which they were invented: amplifying DNA sequences.
I'd take that with a grain of salt.Repeating the Off-Guardian article, it says there is no better ("gold standard") test for Sars-Cov-2 than the PCR test itself, which is a circular reference and not a good thing. It back up its statement with an article in the British Journal of Medicine:
Yes, she did say that in the article and indicated it was a problem. She then went on for five paragraphs with numerous references on how to improve the state of testing and interpretation.
The claim of genomic sequencing is disputed (see below). Let's say there now is a gold standard. Are you OK with the fact that there wasn't all this time, that a test that wasn't a gold standard was being used by itself to "diagnose" a condition. Surely, if the test was admitted not to be a gold standard a covid case should surely have been determined not by the test alone but in combination with a diagnosis by a doctor.Both the Off-Guardian and the BMJ articles are from the first half of 2020. They're over a year and a half old by now. And guess what—there is a now gold standard for Sars-Cov-2. We have its genome and we have pictures of it. We're sequencing hundreds of thousands instances of the virus using second and third generation techniques: Genomic sequencing: Here’s how researchers identify omicron and other COVID-19 variants [The Conversation.]
One final thought: Just because a year and a half ago there was some question about the effectiveness of the PCR test, it does not stand to reason the Sar-Cov-2 virus does not exist, as you so boldly claim. The virus most certainly exists: we have its genome and pictures of it. Science overwhelmingly supports the conclusion that it causes a disease called COVID-19, one that so far has killed about 5.7 million people worldwide.
Dr Mark Bailey and Dr John Bevan-Smith did not use science, they used BS and seem to be conspiracy theorists.
DID you read their BS/Paper? There is evidence or paranoia and no science.
Asking if agents provocateur carried flags among the truckers caused a stir... Should I apologize?
Since we all know by now that such tricksters are always a possibility...(recent example of similar players being the fake racist white supremacists showing up with torches at a Youngkin event, pretending to support him) ...I thought actual skeptics would naturally agree we dont actually know who carried the offensive flags.
Instead, we see "Defending racists", which is nonsense. Instead of apologizing, maybe I should be thanked for facilitating a lame abusive tirade, with its latest neurological payoff.
Equating a known (and possibly deployed) practice of inserting agents provocateur with 'annunaki reptilian' nonsense was a great pseudo *flag* to fly, in itself. Revealing. Good job!
BTW I did not see any pics or footage of the flag carriers.
IAs soon as we were shown images of people falling flat on their face in Wuhan I have to admit I thought, "Psyop"! Immediately.
This is what you do all day, just rebleat nonsense from scammers, crackpots, and propagandists. There's nothing on OffGuardian that deserves anyone's time or energy. They have nothing to contribute to science or understanding.
You've shown over and over that you don't understand science, reality, or much of anything else. Don't try to make it my problem.
Oh yeah, Agents provocateurs - they're everywhere.
Nope.Petra said:This is what I'm clear on: There is no evidence of a virus sars-cov-2
Fact Check-SARS-CoV-2 has been isolated and its complete genome has been sequenced.
No, you should provide evidence to support you claim, rather than be a serial bald asserter.Asking if agents provocateur carried flags among the truckers caused a stir... Should I apologize?
Well then we should ban voice and flight data recorders on commercial aircraft, right? we have no right to record that kind of private data, right?I asked you a simple question that you haven't answered. You pushed a link at me that was supposed to respond to an article I posted. I asked you to specify what in the article the paper addressed and you haven't done that.
It is you who have zero credibility.
This is a summary of the article I link to. See if you can debunk any of it - peer-reviewed papers - or any source at all - any at all debunking it welcome.
https://off-guardian.org/2020/06/27/covid19-pcr-tests-are-scientifically-meaningless/
none of the rest of your post has any relation to truthsnip bollocks
See comment #2679.I've asked a couple of times on this thread for someone to argue against the claim that the suspicion of a new virus has no scientific foundation. No one has replied yet.
Petra said:Less clear:
Whether viruses exist at all
Fact check: Viruses harmful to humans are proven to exist.
A Facebook post with over 350 shares as of May 25, 2020 falsely claims that deadly viruses are a “hoax” and that no virus harmful to humans has been shown to exist.
The post includes a photo overlaid with text (here ). The text on the image contains several remarks on the issue vaccination, alongside the claim: "No "virus" harmful to humans has ever been proven to exist". This claim is untrue.
Lynda Coughlin, a virologist (twitter.com/Virusnerdette) and Assistant Professor in Microbiology at Mount Sinai Hospital (here) told Reuters: “The statement that "no virus harmful to humans has ever been proven to exist" is absolutely false. There are numerous examples of viruses which are known to cause disease in humans. In the same way we can trace DNA left at the scene of the crime, scientists can identify viruses which are the cause of human disease by isolating them from infected individuals, sequencing their genetic material to identify them, directly visualising them (by electron microscopy) and indirectly visualising their effects on cells, as well as confirming their ability to cause disease by testing isolated and characterised viruses in animal models”.
So says a poster who doubts the very existence of viruses. Not just covid -- all viruses.It is you who have zero credibility.