Tee Hee!! Gotta love The (sh**ty) Sun https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/world...ce=sharebar_native&utm_medium=sharebar_native So . . ..if he was 60ft below ground in a concrete capsule.......how exactly did he see it?
please log in to view this image Tim Young @TimRunsHisMouth · Oct 24 If I had gotten 2 shots of something that was originally sold as being 95% effective at completely stopping a virus that has a 99% survival rate...then told I needed to get a 3rd shot because the first 2 weren't good enough... I'd at the very least start to believe I was lied to.
please log in to view this image Robert E Dresser @Rob_E_Dresser · 6h I must have got this wrong. For the next 5 months, both the vaccinated and unvaccinated NHS staff will be allowed to transmit Covid to patients. As from 1st April, only the vaccinated will be permitted to do it.
For a bunch of people who presumably don't want to enable conspiracy theories to flourish, politicians sure know how to enable conspiracy theories to flourish. President of Egypt - invisible force of a third jab please log in to view this image please log in to view this image please log in to view this image
Anti-5G necklaces found to be radioactive Necklaces and accessories claiming to "protect" people from 5G mobile networks have been found to be radioactive. The Dutch authority for nuclear safety and radiation protection (ANVS) issued a warned about ten products it found gave off harmful ionising radiation. It urged people not to use the products, which could cause harm with long-term wear. There is no evidence that 5G networks are harmful to health. ADVERTISEMENT The World Health Organization says 5G mobile networks are safe, and not fundamentally different from existing 3G and 4G signals. Mobile networks use non-ionising radio waves that do not damage DNA. Despite this, there have been attacks on transmitters by people who believe they are harmful. The products identified included an "Energy Armor" sleeping mask, bracelet and necklace. A bracelet for children, branded Magnetix Wellness, was also found to be emitting radiation. please log in to view this image IMAGE SOURCE,RIVM Image caption, The bracelet for children was found to be radioactive "Don't wear it any more, put it away safely and wait for the return instructions," the ANVS said in a statement. "The sellers in the Netherlands known to the ANVS have been told that the sale is prohibited and must be stopped immediately, and that they must inform their customers about this." ADVERTISEMENT Conspiracy theories have fuelled a market of "anti-5G" devices that are typically found to have no effect. In May 2020, the UK's Trading Standards sought to halt sales of a £339 USB stick that claimed to offer "protection" from 5G. So-called "anti-radiation stickers" have also been sold on Amazon. The ANVS has published a full list of the products it identified as radioactive on its website.