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originally posted by: saladfingers123456
originally posted by: RelSciHistItSufi
a reply to: saladfingers123456
Feels like people are getting some sleep before space launch at 8:42 tomorrow?
On that, new Q post...
Q !!Hs1Jq13jV6 ID: 5226e9 No.9192282 📁
May 15 2020 18:39:50 (EST) NEW
www.youtube.com...📁
Where. We. Go. One. We. Go. All.
Q
Q !!Hs1Jq13jV6 ID: 2a73b8 No.9189023 📁
May 15 2020 14:58:41 (EST) NEW
twitter.com...📁
Q
PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP is going to Camp David this weekend. Here’s who is going with him: House Minority Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY, White House chief of staff MARK MEADOWS and GOP Reps. DAN CRENSHAW (Texas), MATT GAETZ (Fla.), DEVIN NUNES (Calif.), JIM JORDAN (Ohio), ELISE STEFANIK (N.Y.) and LEE ZELDIN (N.Y.).
originally posted by: Quadrivium
Things that make you go........
Oh sh/t.
originally posted by: saladfingers123456
a reply to: cimmerius
OK, so here is something really weird... stay with me...
I mentioned the cyanogenic aspect of C/2019 Atlas Y4 i.e. Cyanide.
In response to Cimmerius, I just looked up what happens to cyanide in water. The basic answer is :-
What happens when cyanide reacts with water?
Reaction with liquid water can produce dangerous amounts of HCN in confined spaces. They are both soluble in water. Reaction with acids quickly produces large quantities of toxic, flammable hydrogen cyanide gas. Sodium and potassium cyanide are both highly toxic via inhalation, ingestion and skin absorption.
But then I happened upon another question and answer...
How do you neutralize cyanide in water?
As far as I know, you can neutralize cyanide with a Sodium Hypochlorite solution (Bleach) under basic conditions (pH = 9-11) which will oxidize cyanides (CN-) ions into cyanates (CNO-) ions.
Sodium Hypochlorite... bleach... So I look that up to see if anything came up in the news, and see what my first link was...
Coronavirus: Use of sodium hypochlorite on people may have harmful effects
The use of sodium hypochlorite, which is sprayed on people when they walk through a disinfectant tunnel, may have a harmful effect on them even if there is a slight variation in its concentration
So let us get this straight, to disinfect people of Covid 19, they are using the exact chemical that is used to neutralise Cyanide. It has already been stated by various people that the supposed symptoms and effects of Covid19 seem remarkably similar to the effects of cyanide. Bleach would seem pretty heavy handed in disinfecting people.
In other news...
SODIUM HYPOCHLORITE GENERATOR MARKET EXPECTED TO WITNESS HIGH GROWTH OVER THE FORECAST PERIOD 2020 – 2027
Then you have the following type article:-
The coronavirus is no match for plain, old soap — here’s the science behind it
Soap and alcohol based cleaning are best. Yet "cleansing tunnels" are spraying bleach on people.
If you do some basic research on cyanide, you'll quickly come to the conclusion that it'd be very hard to tell if you have got a case of the covids, or have touched something with cyanide on it (don't touch your face folks!!)
So, cyanide will mix with rain and water.
And just to add in a spot of the "it's going to be biblical!"...
"Wormwood" is the name of a star in Revelation 8:10-11:
“The third angel sounded his trumpet, and a great star, blazing like a torch, fell from the sky on a third of the rivers and on the springs of water—the name of the star is Wormwood. A third of the waters turned bitter, and many people died from the waters that had become bitter.”
Bitter, or poisoned by cyanide? Makes you wonder doesn't it.
EU data leak: 'Huge security breach at European Parliament - hundreds of MEPs compromised'
A cybersecurity firm says it has found a huge data leak affecting thousands of EU officials. A spokesperson for the European Parliament denies the claims.
Yash Kadakia, founder of Security Brigade and Shadow Map, said his group had found a major data breach. The security expert, a self-proclaimed "Code Monkey", was able to easily access data and passwords from members. After Brussels denied the claims, Mr. Kadakia doubled down and revealed more details of the alleged breach.
Yesterday he tweeted: "This includes data & passwords of 200+ members of the European Parliament, European Council and European Commission. Also impacts 1000+ members of staff at the European Parliament.
"The data also includes 15,000+ users including journalists, members of a number of political parties and institutions.
"It also includes members of several European Union Institutions like the Europol, European Data Protection Supervisor, EUIPO, Frontex, etc."
"I can confirm that there are at least 2000 [compromised] emails that use the europa.eu... domain.
"The website itself was also hosted on a subdomain of europa.eu....
"The data includes 10 members of the European Council (using @consilium.europa.eu), 90 members of the European Commission (using @ec.europa.eu domain), 103 members of the European Parliament (using @ep.europea.eu domain) and 1010 members of the European Parliament (using @europarl.europa.eu domain)."
The European Parliament has been contacted for a follow-up to these second claims.
This is a developing story, more to follow...
originally posted by: LanceCorvette
originally posted by: crankyoldman
originally posted by: Aallanon
a reply to: crankyoldman
????
Hint. Why are there no direct follow up questions?
Because she sucks as an interviewer? Because her focus was on not screwing up the next question on her list? Because she's not listening to answers?
Seen it a hundred times in trials and depositions. Lawyers miss key responses because they're too focused on asking the next question on their list.
Their institute manages a huge database of genetic information: thousands and thousands of genes from humans and corn and pufferfish. That data — and all the hard drives and the electricity used to power them — is getting pretty expensive.
It all started with two men in a pub. Ewan Birney and Nick Goldman, both scientists from the European Bioinformatics Institute, were drinking beer and discussing a problem.
If you took everything human beings have ever written — an estimated 50 billion megabytes of text — and stored it in DNA, that DNA would still weigh less than a granola bar.
originally posted by: PokeyJoe
a reply to: saladfingers123456
Yep - worked for them and wore their patch on my uniform the better part of a decade.