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How many people do you know who killed themselves during the Covid hoax during 2020?

this is literally grifter vomit. can you come up with your own ideas?
How about a virus so deadly you need a gov't test to know if you have it. What about bribing people with pot,food,money,gift cards to take the jab? Suspicious? Indeed. What about FEMA and the national guard on site with weapons at the jab sites. What about the lockdowns which I didn't do and the 5G network went up while people sheltered in place. The churches closed. first time in history. But the package stores were open. Thats all I will say since I know it won't matter anyways. Just like the posters I put up for a year about the vaX and 5G which were torn down within an hour.
 
which were torn down within an hour.
maybe because it's harmful bullshit?

name me a virus with a 100% infected fatality rate (ifr) and i'll consider your first sentence.

o wait, it's EXTRA dumb because even IF you know you're sick, most sane ppl might want to know the identity of the pathogen causing the sickness.

ffs, please watch some videos (from a reputable university and not some vlogger)...


...ON CRITICAL READING!
 
maybe because it's harmful bullshit?

name me a virus with a 100% infected fatality rate (ifr) and i'll consider your first sentence.

o wait, it's EXTRA dumb because even IF you know you're sick, most sane ppl might want to know the identity of the pathogen causing the sickness.

ffs, please watch some videos (from a reputable university and not some vlogger)...


...ON CRITICAL READING!
Did you know using pulsed frequencies can cause all sorts of sicknesses. They can also heal at the right frequency. Check it out. I'll even help with the censorship and give you the government documents:
You can use key words or go by date on this subject. Nothing new under the sun. This is part of the silent weapons for quiet wars program. The forever chemicals in the water, nano metals in the air which fall to the ground and taint our soil n chems in the food supply besides radiation exposure from wireless..
 
maybe because it's harmful bullshit?

name me a virus with a 100% infected fatality rate (ifr) and i'll consider your first sentence.

o wait, it's EXTRA dumb because even IF you know you're sick, most sane ppl might want to know the identity of the pathogen causing the sickness.

ffs, please watch some videos (from a reputable university and not some vlogger)...

.
...ON CRITICAL READING!
I watch videos but I like to verify them too with documents, testing ext. If you read the links provided you can connect the dots easy.
 
That guy may be smart but he is just an asswipe of a person
He's not smart though, but definitely an arsewipe. Another one of these scientism poster boy fuckwads who haven't actually accomplished anything of note.
 
He's not smart though, but definitely an arsewipe. Another one of these scientism poster boy fuckwads who haven't actually accomplished anything of note.
I meant in the academic sense. He is an astrophysicist.
 
He's an academic and grifter who hasn't actually done anything of significance except shuffle words about under the prestige of his rubber stamped accreditation. Looking at his actual publications, it's just typical astrophysicist guff.. mathematical modelling and speculation, that has no tangible connection to the real-world at all.

Also, a troll
On the Possibility of a Major Impact on Uranus in the Past Century
Neil D. Tyson et al, 1993, Astronomy & Astrophysics (Research Notes), v.275, p.630
 
I was wrong, I fell for it. He is not a great anything. He is not what he the media portrays him as.
I haven't done much research except Wikipedia.😞 I can admit when I am wrong. He is a mainstream media darling and I fell for it.
 
Are you really gonna believe breitbart of all sources? His CV is right there on this page, go read it

The breitbart article throws mud at him for leaving U of Texas... But where did he go? Columbia. Yea what an intellectual dwarf, going to those shitty ivy leagues
 
He's an academic and grifter who hasn't actually done anything of significance except shuffle words about under the prestige of his rubber stamped accreditation. Looking at his actual publications, it's just typical astrophysicist guff.. mathematical modelling and speculation, that has no tangible connection to the real-world at all.

Also, a troll
Neil deGrasse Tyson, along with many astrophysicists, plays a vital role in science education and outreach. His work in making complex scientific concepts accessible and exciting to the public helps to foster a greater understanding of the universe. This type of outreach is essential for inspiring the next generation of scientists, engineers, and informed citizens, and in ensuring public support for scientific endeavors, which indirectly supports technological advancements and innovations.

While astrophysics may seem removed from "real-world" applications, the field actually contributes significantly to various technologies used daily. For instance, technologies developed through astrophysics research have found their way into medical imaging devices, GPS systems, and even the internet. The mathematical models and theories developed by astrophysicists often lead to new technologies or improvements in existing ones. For example, understanding the physics of black holes and cosmic radiation improves our understanding of particle physics, which is fundamental to the development of new materials and technologies.

Astrophysics helps us address fundamental questions about our existence and the universe, contributing to the body of knowledge necessary for future scientific breakthroughs. This quest for knowledge can also lead to unexpected discoveries that have practical applications.

Challenging the status quo and expanding our knowledge frontiers is what drives progress. Neil deGrasse Tyson’s work, whether through direct research or by inspiring others, contributes to this progress. His ability to communicate and popularize science not only educates but also helps sustain a society that values and understands the importance of science.

While it may seem that astrophysicists like Tyson are just "shuffling words," they are actually vital contributors to both our understanding of the universe and practical technological advancements.
 
For example, understanding the physics of black holes and cosmic radiation improves our understanding of particle physics, which is fundamental to the development of new materials and technologies.
Yeah, and it's all bloody circular. This is why both astrophysics and particle physics haven't actually achieved anything of practical value and have stagnated, and why astrophysics keeps getting continually 'surprised' by observations that undermine their concept structure.

These fields are entrenched in dogma and institutional bias that is holding us back, feeding off each other and their mathematical speculative bullshit.
Challenging the status quo and expanding our knowledge frontiers is what drives progress.
This isn't how it works. If you suggest that black holes, neutron stars, the Higg's Boson, or any of the metaphysical speculations they've come up with are just mathematical drivel then you'll never see funding or recognition again.

Halton Arp had actual prestige and credibility, won awards, and was a protégé of Hubble himself. And what happened when he made observations that challenged the status quo? He lost his telescope time and was relegated from the profession for daring to suggest that his observations disproved the long held dogma of red-shift Universe expansion.

Neil deGrasse, Brian Cox, and all these other poster-boy wankstains do nothing except reinforce institutional dogma. You will never hear them ever entertain competing ideas, only disparage them. This is why Neil shat all over Nikola Tesla on Joe Rogan's podcast, despite the fact Tesla has 700+ patents and numerous world changing inventions and Neil has.. 0.

You're infatuated with 'the science' mate. It's embarrassing. The real world does not work like this.
 
Yeah, and it's all bloody circular. This is why both astrophysics and particle physics haven't actually achieved anything of practical value and have stagnated, and why astrophysics keeps getting continually 'surprised' by observations that undermine their concept structure.

These fields are entrenched in dogma and institutional bias that is holding us back, feeding off each other and their mathematical speculative bullshit.

This isn't how it works. If you suggest that black holes, neutron stars, the Higg's Boson, or any of the metaphysical speculations they've come up with are just mathematical drivel then you'll never see funding or recognition again.

Halton Arp had actual prestige and credibility, won awards, and was a protégé of Hubble himself. And what happened when he made observations that challenged the status quo? He lost his telescope time and was relegated from the profession for daring to suggest that his observations disproved the long held dogma of red-shift Universe expansion.

Neil deGrasse, Brian Cox, and all these other poster-boy wankstains do nothing except reinforce institutional dogma. You will never hear them ever entertain competing ideas, only disparage them. This is why Neil shat all over Nikola Tesla on Joe Rogan's podcast, despite the fact Tesla has 700+ patents and numerous world changing inventions and Neil has.. 0.

You're infatuated with 'the science' mate. It's embarrassing. The real world does not work like this.
The argument that astrophysics and particle physics have not achieved anything of practical value might overlook the broader impacts these fields have had. Beyond the technological spin-offs I mentioned earlier, these sciences deepen our understanding of the fundamental constituents of matter and the forces governing the universe. This knowledge is foundational, even if its applications are not immediate. Moreover, particle physics has driven developments in computer technology, data processing, and even cancer treatment through radiation therapy.

It’s true that astrophysics and particle physics are often surprised by new observations; however, this is not a sign of stagnation but rather of vitality. Science progresses through the refinement of theories when new data presents itself. The history of science is filled with examples where prevailing theories were challenged and refined in light of new evidence—this is a feature of robust scientific inquiry, not a flaw.

Your mention of Halton Arp highlights a real challenge in science: how revolutionary ideas are sometimes resisted by mainstream scientific communities. It’s important to acknowledge that science, like any human endeavor, is subject to biases and institutional inertia. However, the scientific method is designed to eventually overcome these biases by continually testing and challenging existing theories.

Regarding Neil deGrasse Tyson and others, it's valid to critique public figures for not sufficiently engaging with or discussing alternative theories. However, their role often involves as much science communication and education as it does contributing to the forefront of their field. Their influence in popularizing science has motivated countless individuals to pursue science and technology careers.

Comparing the contributions of historical inventors like Tesla with modern scientists can be misleading due to the different contexts in which they worked. Tesla’s contributions were indeed revolutionary, but his environment allowed for more direct applications of his inventions. Modern astrophysicists and particle physicists typically work in theoretical realms that might not translate as directly into practical technologies but pave the way for future applied sciences.

The philosophy that underpins science is not static. Science is iterative, self-correcting, and progressively builds towards better understanding. Dismissing large bodies of established science as "mathematical drivel" ignores the rigorous testing and validation that these theories have undergone. While it’s crucial to remain critical and aware of the limitations of scientific claims, it’s equally important to recognize the structured approach science takes to ensure reliability and validity in its conclusions.

While criticisms of the scientific establishment are necessary for its health and progress, dismissing entire fields based on perceived stagnation or institutional bias overlooks the complex, iterative, and fundamentally progressive nature of scientific endeavor.
 
afterBeyond the technological spin-offs I mentioned earlier, these sciences deepen our understanding of the fundamental constituents of matter and the forces governing the universe.
They really haven't. The establishment has spent decades denouncing the concept of the aether, off the back of a single experiment, only to come full circle and create their own imitation of the original concept under the guide of the Higg's field. A concept of mass that is so ridiculously circular in logic that even a child can comprehend it.

And all it took was billions of dollars creating a giant machine that operates at a level that only mathematical theory can interpolate, and that has no tangible connection to reality what so ever. And like so many other concepts in institutional science it can not be disproven because the theory necessitates machinery that only the establishment has access to. How convenient.
Their influence in popularizing science has motivated countless individuals to pursue science and technology careers.
This holds weight, until they inevitably show their hand. And deGrasse did that when he disparaged Nikola Tesla's wireless electricity system (Wardenclyffe), trying to pass it off as a static electricity generator, showing quite clearly that deGrasse was talking out of his ass. None of these 'entertainers' are open minded at all, they are just gatekeepers for the established order. They are the last type of person you want representing science.

We don't need cheerleaders. Science held its own until it became institutionalized. It was literally magical from the 18th and into the early 19th century.
Modern astrophysicists and particle physicists typically work in theoretical realms that might not translate as directly into practical technologies but pave the way for future applied sciences
See, now you're aligning yourself there with what I have been saying. This is the problem, these sciences are so far off the deep end now in terms of an actual tangible relation to reality that they are essentially religious beliefs handed down from the priesthood (institutions).

Nikola Tesla called it, a century ago, when he lamented that scientists were substituting experiments for mathematics. Divorcing ourselves from reality. The concept structure we have created is circular, can you not see that? At either end of the scale (universe/astrophysics, atomic/particle physics) both domains now rely solely on mathematics to keep the thing plugged together.

Luckily with astrophysics we can at least see things in space, unlike the haze of the atomic level. And time after time, we see things in space that continue to shatter the standard model we have created, and again and again they have to resort to untested metaphysical nonsense (dark matter/energy) in order to plug up the gaping holes in the theory.

Look man, I get it, you love science. I love science too. But what we have today is not true science. It is institutional science, science with an agenda, science by money and politics. Where we have ended up, whether it is accidental or malign, who can say. But it is crystal clear that the picture that we've painted is completely false, and certain parties wish to keep the picture they've created and are afraid to concede it is wrong.
 
They really haven't. The establishment has spent decades denouncing the concept of the aether, off the back of a single experiment, only to come full circle and create their own imitation of the original concept under the guide of the Higg's field. A concept of mass that is so ridiculously circular in logic that even a child can comprehend it.

And all it took was billions of dollars creating a giant machine that operates at a level that only mathematical theory can interpolate, and that has no tangible connection to reality what so ever. And like so many other concepts in institutional science it can not be disproven because the theory necessitates machinery that only the establishment has access to. How convenient.

This holds weight, until they inevitably show their hand. And deGrasse did that when he disparaged Nikola Tesla's wireless electricity system (Wardenclyffe), trying to pass it off as a static electricity generator, showing quite clearly that deGrasse was talking out of his ass. None of these 'entertainers' are open minded at all, they are just gatekeepers for the established order. They are the last type of person you want representing science.

We don't need cheerleaders. Science held its own until it became institutionalized. It was literally magical from the 18th and into the early 19th century.

See, now you're aligning yourself there with what I have been saying. This is the problem, these sciences are so far off the deep end now in terms of an actual tangible relation to reality that they are essentially religious beliefs handed down from the priesthood (institutions).

Nikola Tesla called it, a century ago, when he lamented that scientists were substituting experiments for mathematics. Divorcing ourselves from reality. The concept structure we have created is circular, can you not see that? At either end of the scale (universe/astrophysics, atomic/particle physics) both domains now rely solely on mathematics to keep the thing plugged together.

Luckily with astrophysics we can at least see things in space, unlike the haze of the atomic level. And time after time, we see things in space that continue to shatter the standard model we have created, and again and again they have to resort to untested metaphysical nonsense (dark matter/energy) in order to plug up the gaping holes in the theory.

Look man, I get it, you love science. I love science too. But what we have today is not true science. It is institutional science, science with an agenda, science by money and politics. Where we have ended up, whether it is accidental or malign, who can say. But it is crystal clear that the picture that we've painted is completely false, and certain parties wish to keep the picture they've created and are afraid to concede it is wrong.
The transition from the concept of the aether to the acceptance of the Higgs field reflects the natural evolution of scientific understanding, not a regressive return to discarded ideas. The aether was a theoretical substance once thought necessary for the propagation of electromagnetic waves, a concept that was dispelled by the Michelson-Morley experiment in 1887. The Higgs field, on the other hand, is a fundamental field posited by the Standard Model of particle physics, essential for explaining the origin of mass in elementary particles. The development of such theories is based on cumulative evidence and experimentation, not mere philosophical or financial whims. The discovery of the Higgs boson at the Large Hadron Collider in 2012 provided empirical support to this theoretical framework, demonstrating the tangible progression of theoretical physics into confirmable reality.

The concern that theories like those tested in the Large Hadron Collider are beyond lay verification and heavily reliant on expensive, exclusive equipment is understandable. However, these experiments require conditions that are not naturally occurring on Earth, necessitating such complex machinery. Far from being a closed ecosystem, the results and data from these experiments are peer-reviewed and published, allowing the global scientific community to analyze, critique, and build upon them. This is a foundational principle of modern science—transparency and reproducibility, albeit within the constraints of available technology.

Criticism of public figures like Neil deGrasse Tyson for their comments on other scientific pioneers like Nikola Tesla highlights a broader debate about the role of popularizers of science. While it's vital that these figures communicate accurately, they also simplify complex concepts for general understanding. Missteps can occur, and constructive criticism helps ensure accountability. However, dismissing their overall contribution based on disagreements over specific interpretations risks undermining their valuable role in inspiring and educating the public.

The claim that science was more "magical" before becoming institutionalized romanticizes the past and overlooks the many ways in which science has advanced human knowledge and capability. The structured approach to modern science has yielded unprecedented advancements in medicine, technology, and our understanding of the universe. While institutional biases and funding can influence research priorities, the scientific method remains designed to challenge and refine understanding through evidence-based inquiry.

The criticism that modern science, especially fields like astrophysics and particle physics, has become akin to a religion with 'priesthoods' and dogmas is a serious philosophical and sociological assertion. It's true that all human endeavors, including science, can be influenced by human biases and socio-political contexts. However, science is uniquely self-correcting, with mechanisms such as peer review, replication studies, and continuous theoretical and experimental challenge. This process, while imperfect, strives to minimize individual biases and institutional influence.

The introduction of concepts like dark matter and dark energy is not a sign of desperation or fiction but an indication of science's responsiveness to observational anomalies. These concepts are placeholders for phenomena that current theories cannot yet explain, much like the term 'atom' was used before the electron was discovered. They represent the frontiers of our knowledge, not the failures of our science.

While it's crucial to maintain a critical perspective on the development and application of scientific knowledge, dismissing broad swathes of modern scientific endeavor as fundamentally flawed overlooks the empirical, methodological foundations of these fields. True scientific inquiry welcomes scrutiny and skepticism, but it also relies on an accurate understanding of its methods, aims, and achievements.
 
The introduction of concepts like dark matter and dark energy is not a sign of desperation or fiction but an indication of science's responsiveness to observational anomalies. These concepts are placeholders for phenomena that current theories cannot yet explain, much like the term 'atom' was used before the electron was discovered. They represent the frontiers of our knowledge, not the failures of our science.
I'm only going to respond to this part because I don't believe you're actually writing any of this yourself at this point.

Dark matter/energy are the clearest example of desperation within astrophysics. These are completely metaphysical, mathematical constructs. You literally can not observe them directly, you can not test for them directly. Astrophysicists pulled them out of the magic hat when they realized that they could not explain the rotational mechanics of galaxies without them, under the current gravitational model we have.

That is to say, rather than admit that the gravitational model is wrong, they simply manufactured the mathematical band-aids required to keep the model functional. Absolutely no proof or experimentation done what so ever, just mathematics pulled out of thin air to rationalize why the current model can not explain ACTUAL OBSERVED data.

Honestly, if you can't even recognize that then there is no hope for you.
 
I'm only going to respond to this part because I don't believe you're actually writing any of this yourself at this point.

Dark matter/energy are the clearest example of desperation within astrophysics. These are completely metaphysical, mathematical constructs. You literally can not observe them directly, you can not test for them directly. Astrophysicists pulled them out of the magic hat when they realized that they could not explain the rotational mechanics of galaxies without them, under the current gravitational model we have.

That is to say, rather than admit that the gravitational model is wrong, they simply manufactured the mathematical band-aids required to keep the model functional. Absolutely no proof or experimentation done what so ever, just mathematics pulled out of thin air to rationalize why the current model can not explain ACTUAL OBSERVED data.

Honestly, if you can't even recognize that then there is no hope for you.
They don't know if the model is wrong yet, I'm wondering how you know when you've never engaged with the math or conducted a physics experiment
 
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