Kevin McKernan
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Now, we've only sequenced two other lots before, So we don't have good surveillance of all the different lots of Pfizer. They could have different plasmids in each one. They could all be the same. We don't know. We need to do more to sort that out. But there is another hypothesis that could be at play here that leads to a much more frightening scenario, I think, in my mind, which is โ
In the middle of the pandemic, there's a paper that was published that really went unnoticed. It was a group in Seattle that showed that their lab people were testing positive for COVID, but didn't have COVID. And they only tested positive. If you remember the COVID test, they actually had three assays usually testing for the virus.
In the middle of the pandemic, there's a paper that was published that really went unnoticed. It was a group in Seattle that showed that their lab people were testing positive for COVID, but didn't have COVID. And they only tested positive. If you remember the COVID test, they actually had three assays usually testing for the virus.
In the middle of the pandemic, there's a paper that was published that really went unnoticed. It was a group in Seattle that showed that their lab people were testing positive for COVID, but didn't have COVID. And they only tested positive. If you remember the COVID test, they actually had three assays usually testing for the virus.
They would look at the spike, they'd look at nucleocaps, and they'd look at the envelope. region. And if all three lit up, they were pretty confident the virus was there. Occasionally, one of them would drop out, like the S-target would drop out once in a while. They had that happen in Europe. It was called S-target failure.
They would look at the spike, they'd look at nucleocaps, and they'd look at the envelope. region. And if all three lit up, they were pretty confident the virus was there. Occasionally, one of them would drop out, like the S-target would drop out once in a while. They had that happen in Europe. It was called S-target failure.
They would look at the spike, they'd look at nucleocaps, and they'd look at the envelope. region. And if all three lit up, they were pretty confident the virus was there. Occasionally, one of them would drop out, like the S-target would drop out once in a while. They had that happen in Europe. It was called S-target failure.
And they would say, all right, we don't really know if you've got COVID because only two out of the three assays are working. So what was happening in Seattle in this lab is only the nucleocapsid test was going off. And that was really weird. And it was in all their lab staff.
And they would say, all right, we don't really know if you've got COVID because only two out of the three assays are working. So what was happening in Seattle in this lab is only the nucleocapsid test was going off. And that was really weird. And it was in all their lab staff.
And they would say, all right, we don't really know if you've got COVID because only two out of the three assays are working. So what was happening in Seattle in this lab is only the nucleocapsid test was going off. And that was really weird. And it was in all their lab staff.
So that somehow infected all the lab people, and then it got out of the lab and infected their housemates. And so the paper hypothesized that, okay, this must be because this is a shuttle vector that can grow in a coli and can grow in a million cells. That means it's transmissible. Our vaccine in the lab infected our staff and got out into the wild.
So that somehow infected all the lab people, and then it got out of the lab and infected their housemates. And so the paper hypothesized that, okay, this must be because this is a shuttle vector that can grow in a coli and can grow in a million cells. That means it's transmissible. Our vaccine in the lab infected our staff and got out into the wild.
So that somehow infected all the lab people, and then it got out of the lab and infected their housemates. And so the paper hypothesized that, okay, this must be because this is a shuttle vector that can grow in a coli and can grow in a million cells. That means it's transmissible. Our vaccine in the lab infected our staff and got out into the wild.
Um, this was another lab leak that didn't hit the radar anywhere. And, um, they kind of wrote it off as no worries. It's nucleocapsid. It's not spike. You know, if it were spike, you know, maybe we could have gotten those people some spikeopathy, um, cause the spike protein itself is really pro-inflammatory nucleocapsid, perhaps not as much. Um, they kind of wrote the paper as, Hey, watch out.
Um, this was another lab leak that didn't hit the radar anywhere. And, um, they kind of wrote it off as no worries. It's nucleocapsid. It's not spike. You know, if it were spike, you know, maybe we could have gotten those people some spikeopathy, um, cause the spike protein itself is really pro-inflammatory nucleocapsid, perhaps not as much. Um, they kind of wrote the paper as, Hey, watch out.
Um, this was another lab leak that didn't hit the radar anywhere. And, um, they kind of wrote it off as no worries. It's nucleocapsid. It's not spike. You know, if it were spike, you know, maybe we could have gotten those people some spikeopathy, um, cause the spike protein itself is really pro-inflammatory nucleocapsid, perhaps not as much. Um, they kind of wrote the paper as, Hey, watch out.
Your PCR tests might be giving you false positives if you're working on these vaccines on the side. Um, But for someone like me who reads that paper, I'm like, no, you just had a huge bio leak in Seattle and it should have been followed up by the CDC. They should have run all over Seattle and looked for this and all their housemates and everyone else. All right.
Your PCR tests might be giving you false positives if you're working on these vaccines on the side. Um, But for someone like me who reads that paper, I'm like, no, you just had a huge bio leak in Seattle and it should have been followed up by the CDC. They should have run all over Seattle and looked for this and all their housemates and everyone else. All right.
Your PCR tests might be giving you false positives if you're working on these vaccines on the side. Um, But for someone like me who reads that paper, I'm like, no, you just had a huge bio leak in Seattle and it should have been followed up by the CDC. They should have run all over Seattle and looked for this and all their housemates and everyone else. All right.
So there are hundreds of labs around the world doing those same types of experiments where they're taking spike proteins that have been sequenced and there's some differences and they want to characterize those differences, those variants of concern. Right. You may have heard of this, like there's Omicron, Delta, Alpha. Right, right, right.