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Wtf 🤡

‘Human composting, also known as natural organic reduction (NOR), would be an option for residents who don't want to be buried or cremated upon their death - starting in 2027.’

It’s an excellent idea.
 
I remember Tom Clark using laser interferometry in his Cadillac in the late 90s to determine the best speaker positions for imaging.
Seems like a queer idea. How would you get the lasers to act like sound waves on the materials and panels of the interior? How would you account for sound absorption? I don't think that is the best approach for determining the best speaker positions for imaging.
 
1. I haven’t seen anyone prove this isn’t real.

2. I highly doubt that CNN comparison.

We are all biased; you wouldn’t be human if you weren’t.

1) Assuming it wasn't real (which I never claimed) how would one prove that something that doesn't exist doesn't exist? Not only that the very fact that I can't prove the conspiracy exists proves they're hiding it from me.

2) Every single time I've fact checked Mr Durden, he's come up empty. CNN at least gets it right occasionally. I haven't even read the article and know it's full of holes, such as links to other dubious sites that can't/don't actually back the claims they make. My favorite is the other day you posted something about (IIRC) myocarditis being 98x more likely after a vax, but then the article actually states there is no statistical baseline to measure against, which means the 98x number is a complete fabrication. My wife scans for myocarditis - has yet to have a patient who got from the vax, but tons of people who have it from Covid. Makes Durden's version of the world a little hard to swallow.
 
Seems like a queer idea. How would you get the lasers to act like sound waves on the materials and panels of the interior? How would you account for sound absorption? I don't think that is the best approach for determining the best speaker positions for imaging.
Queer enough that he won the IASCA championship. I guess the judges like the results.

He had a Grand National that was the “winningest” car in IASCA’s pro division.
Must have known nothing about car audio.
 
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1) Assuming it wasn't real (which I never claimed) how would one prove that something that doesn't exist doesn't exist? Not only that the very fact that I can't prove the conspiracy exists proves they're hiding it from me.

2) Every single time I've fact checked Mr Durden, he's come up empty. CNN at least gets it right occasionally. I haven't even read the article and know it's full of holes, such as links to other dubious sites that can't/don't actually back the claims they make. My favorite is the other day you posted something about (IIRC) myocarditis being 98x more likely after a vax, but then the article actually states there is no statistical baseline to measure against, which means the 98x number is a complete fabrication. My wife scans for myocarditis - has yet to have a patient who got from the vax, but tons of people who have it from Covid. Makes Durden's version of the world a little hard to swallow.

It wasn’t “his” version; there were multiple reports of that from the same source. It’s just called reporting. I never saw heart disease from covid reported until the vaccines came out, and I was all over all info I could find on anything about covid and the vaccines and still am. It’s unprofitable to blame anything on the covid vaccines, and I find it suspicious that myocarditis is listed as a factual, known side effect of vaccine, and now so many random things are being blamed for heart problems. Literally heart problems are being normalized now, even for young kids, which covid basically does nothing to them. My jinkies radar is smelling some bullshit, especially since the vaccine is known to cause blood clots, myocarditis, all sorts of havoc in the body on those who suffer symptoms. Kids have gotten myocarditis from the covid mRNA vaccines. The way the media propagates messages at certain times is suspicious as to the truth of what causes what. It just seems like running constant cover for a huge cash cow.
 
1) Assuming it wasn't real (which I never claimed) how would one prove that something that doesn't exist doesn't exist? Not only that the very fact that I can't prove the conspiracy exists proves they're hiding it from me.

2) Every single time I've fact checked Mr Durden, he's come up empty. CNN at least gets it right occasionally. I haven't even read the article and know it's full of holes, such as links to other dubious sites that can't/don't actually back the claims they make. My favorite is the other day you posted something about (IIRC) myocarditis being 98x more likely after a vax, but then the article actually states there is no statistical baseline to measure against, which means the 98x number is a complete fabrication. My wife scans for myocarditis - has yet to have a patient who got from the vax, but tons of people who have it from Covid. Makes Durden's version of the world a little hard to swallow.

It still makes no sense to vaccinate someone with a vaccine that doesn’t protect you from a virus, and then double down on the risk of heart problems by vaccinating someone with a vaccine that can cause heart problems to not stop infection from the virus that causes heart problems, where we live in a nation where the highest category of death nationwide is heart problems. Doesn’t seem legit.

I have heart problems, amongst many others, that’s why I didn’t want to take an experimental shot, like so many were illegally forced to do. EUA is not legal to mandate; should be treated as a crime.
 
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