Monday, March 29, 2021

my rant on our state

my rant


 yeah and it will get you the worst if you plan your escape near Bozeman Mt after you've given everyone the morgies thing you think you have controlled. Oh yeah, it was 2010 when we prevolved with that ESP kind of stuff you always seem to be behind of, because we were ready for those morgies to meet the measles. Haha, not sure who or when or which of us put it all together, but Lonnecs disease is coming, which is certainly a sort of perfect pitch that you just don't quite git, and the measles has broken out in WA already. Just a ludicrous preposterous theory bullshitted a few minutes ago, but your fucking seed bank in smoke is gonna blow ;-) or just one more crazy troll. have fun with your infection now at our direction and discretion, hahahaaaaaa! I don't know, google it! Learn what alpha turns and beta sheets are. or just go spend more money you don't understand. But the bottom line is, stop fucking with people because youre just training a bunch of victims of greater number than you to be unfuckable and giving them a vendetta. I don't know lyme disease is weird, something about endocrine disruptors, and luciferase, boy did yall fucking name it! 1 of 1The particles at about 1000 times actual size (courtesy Godfrey Louis). The shaded area represents the state of Kerala in India. (Courtesy Nichalp) Genes behind transsexualism possibly found MORE NEWS Man-sized scorpion described Childhood neglect found to change brain chemistry Chimps won't do a neighbor a favor Sign up for our email newsletter: send subscribe cancel A paper to appear in a scientific journal claims a strange red rain might have dumped microbes from space onto Earth four years ago. But the report is meeting with a shower of skepticism from scientists who say extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof‹and this one hasn't got it. The scientists agree on two points, though. The things look like cells, at least superficially. And no one is sure what they are. "These particles have much similarity with biological cells though they are devoid of DNA," wrote Godfrey Louis and A. Santhosh Kumar of Mahatma Gandhi University in Kottayam, India, in the controversial paper. "Are these cell-like particles a kind of alternate life from space?" The mystery began when the scarlet showers containing the red specks hit parts of India in 2001. Researchers said the particles might be dust or a fungus, but it remained unclear. The new paper includes a chemical analysis of the particles, a description of their appearance under microscopes and a survey of where they fell. It assesses various explanations for them and concludes that the specks, which vaguely resemble red blood cells, might have come from a

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