SCI-TECH

Prof Carl Heneghan: ‘Can We Trust the Gov’t COVID Death Numbers?’

UnHerd reports….
Professor Carl Heneghan is Director of the Centre for Evidence Based Medicine at Oxford University, and has been paying close attention to the Covid-19 statistics. (…) [A]n extraordinary detail: the Public Health England daily death totals announced to the media include anyone who has ever tested positive for Covid-19 — even if they recovered completely. Key quotes:

Prof. Sunetra Gupta: ‘We May Already Have Herd Immunity’

A recent study from Oxford University indicates that some parts of the UK may have already reached what is known as ‘herd immunity’ from COVID, revealing “innate resistance or cross-protection from exposure to seasonal coronaviruses.” Surprisingly, instead of celebrating these findings, politicians and mainstream media are actively ignoring them, and instead are claiming the threat of COVID is on the rise, and demanding the public accept mandatory masks, vaccines and rolling lockdowns. 

Oxford Epidemiologists: UK Gov’t ‘COVID Suppression’ Strategy is Not Viable

It’s not surprising that the public are quickly losing faith in the way Governments are approaching this supposed coronavirus ‘pandemic.’ Just as the virus is disappearing and deaths are falling to zero, technocrats are now doubling-down on draconian measures – enforcing the use of mandatory masks in public, bizarre ‘social distancing’ laws, and aggressively pushing the latest experimental Coronavirus vaccines.

It’s All About Vibrations: A Resonance Theory of Consciousness

One of the main aspects of resonance theory is the idea that what we as humans experience as consciousness is based on the vibrational frequency of all matter. It’s what hold the universe together, or what tears it apart.
But this is only the starting point. What happens when these various vibrational phenomenon start to ‘sync up’?
It is here where we discover what might be the key to understanding another dimension of resonance, known as consciousness.

Are you Doomscrolling?

We’ve all done it. Pulling out the smartphone appendage at night before you hit the sack. Scrolling away to see what’s happening in the news and in the threads. But what are the long-term physiological and psychological effects of this type of automated behaviour? Is it possible to ween yourself off of these deleterious cyber habits?
First you need to understand the mechanism which drives one to incessantly scroll down the bottomless well that is Facebook and Twitter. Only then can you begin to learn how to break the habit.