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Lumeria - Wegwijs in de vrije wereld 😁

Wegwijs in een vrije positieve wereld

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Dubbele nederlaag voor Hugo de Jonge in ivermectine-zaken - INDEPEN

Tijdens de coronacrisis slingerde gezondheidsminister Hugo de Jonge artsen op de bon als zij ivermectine en hydroxychloroquine gaven aan patiënten met

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Flat Earth & Hollywood 🕳️🐇 @See_Beyond_The_Veil
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Let me tell you a little personal story to illustrate what 23 and AncestryDNA might actually be up to. A few years back, I knew a person who took both of these tests. They wanted info on a particular gene. Their plan was to download their raw DNA base pair data from their websites and blast it through the NIH’s database looking for a disease. Because Ancestry and 23 only test a minute portion of the genome (less than <0.1%), they did not get the info they were looking for. They found something else entirely. Bear in mind that most of the human genome (98-99%) is NOT in genes; meaning, most of our base pairs are in noncoding regions of our DNA. The vast majority of the DNA 23 and Ancestry DNA collects is non-coding DNA that does not impact health or phenotypes or anything like that. Those parts of the genome are particularly useful, however, for identifying individuals. Personally, they believed that’s really the point of these services. So, what did they discover by taking these tests? They found out, after 4 decades of life, that the sister they grew up with was really their half-sister. Their parents had never mentioned that they'd different fathers. This was shocking. Their parents had used an anonymous sperm donor to conceive them, and they had figured this out on Ancestry DNA. Here is the part that might scare you. No one in their biological father’s family had taken a DNA test. Despite this, they were able to identify each of them using their DNA test and through their distant relatives who had had their DNA tested. What they did there—identifying unknown relatives who haven’t been DNA tested— they could probably do for most Americans if they had access to their DNA. That’s how extensive the databases are. The point is that your DNA is not just your DNA. It is also your relatives’ DNA. Combine their DNA with public records, and most of us are easily identifiable.
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The entire board of 23andMe Resigned yesterday … Why is this important? Wojcicki is mentioned in the Qdrops as Being Associated with creating a Mass Surveillance State in a Collaborated effort between Silicon Valley and the CIA & NSA .. Sergey Brin (born in Madcow), the founder of Google, was married to… Anne Wojcicki, the founder of 23andme, whose sister is Susan Wojcicki, the CEO of YouTube [DARPA] (she died recently, though😉... Funny how they’re all connected, eh? The Qdrops also elude that [DARPA] aka Google played a role in the spy campaign against Trump… same with Twitter 1.0… which was believed to be used in an assassination attempt, where they tried to shoot AF1 out of the sky. The End Goal: The research arms of the CIA and NSA hoped that the best computer-science minds in academia could identify what they called “birds of a feather:” Just as geese fly together in large V shapes or flocks of sparrows make sudden movements together in harmony, they predicted that like-minded groups of humans would move together online. The intelligence community named their first unclassified briefing for scientists the “birds of a feather” briefing, and the “Birds of a Feather Session on the Intelligence Community Initiative in Massive Digital Data Systems” took place at the Fairmont Hotel in San Jose in the spring of 1995. At this point, Iris scanners are now on our phones, screening our eyes to “confirm our identity”… Q eluded to how long before that becomes a drop of blood? In addition to all of this, there’s also the threat of biological warfare against specific genealogy (specific races)… as RFK JR talked about.
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