Havana Syndrome
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wrote on 20 Dec 2021, 04:25 last edited by
Yep.
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wrote on 20 Dec 2021, 14:49 last edited by
Will take a lot more evidence for me to buy that Russia is the cause of this:
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wrote on 20 Dec 2021, 14:56 last edited by
Not saying that this is what it is, but the tech is there:
Link to video -
Not saying that this is what it is, but the tech is there:
Link to videowrote on 20 Dec 2021, 15:39 last edited by Copper@george-k said in Havana Syndrome:
Not saying that this is what it is, but the tech is there:
I think that kind of RF technology is also used by plastic surgeons to do facelift (radiofrequency skin tightening) kind of work.
I had similar treatment (Photodynamic therapy "blue light") for pre-cancerous actinic keratoses. This feels like your face is going to melt off, it feels really hot. The first time I was treated with it, it was painful.
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wrote on 18 Mar 2024, 16:21 last edited by
Researchers with the National Institutes of Health published a pair of studies on Monday that found few clinical differences between patients with a mysterious ailment known as “Havana syndrome” and healthy comparison groups.
In one study, NIH researchers took a closer look at the brains of people who were believed to have Havana syndrome and found no consistent evidence of brain injury and no significant differences between that group and a healthy comparison group.
In the second study, scientists ran a battery of tests on 86 US government staff and family members who reported Havana syndrome, comparing them with 30 people who had similar jobs but had no such symptoms, and found that by most clinical and biomarker measures, the two groups were the same.
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Researchers with the National Institutes of Health published a pair of studies on Monday that found few clinical differences between patients with a mysterious ailment known as “Havana syndrome” and healthy comparison groups.
In one study, NIH researchers took a closer look at the brains of people who were believed to have Havana syndrome and found no consistent evidence of brain injury and no significant differences between that group and a healthy comparison group.
In the second study, scientists ran a battery of tests on 86 US government staff and family members who reported Havana syndrome, comparing them with 30 people who had similar jobs but had no such symptoms, and found that by most clinical and biomarker measures, the two groups were the same.
wrote on 18 Mar 2024, 17:47 last edited by@taiwan_girl said in Havana Syndrome:
Researchers with the National Institutes of Health published a pair of studies on Monday that found few clinical differences between patients with a mysterious ailment known as “Havana syndrome” and healthy comparison groups.
In one study, NIH researchers took a closer look at the brains of people who were believed to have Havana syndrome and found no consistent evidence of brain injury and no significant differences between that group and a healthy comparison group.
In the second study, scientists ran a battery of tests on 86 US government staff and family members who reported Havana syndrome, comparing them with 30 people who had similar jobs but had no such symptoms, and found that by most clinical and biomarker measures, the two groups were the same.
I guess it's possible that this is like those cops who pass out due to fentanyl exposure?
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wrote on 18 Mar 2024, 20:57 last edited by
My only criticism is that the first study looked at MRI anatomical changes in the subjects.
Just because you can't see something doesn't mean it's not there.
Same for the "biomarker" tests.
D2 still suffers from the residual of her COVID. Breathlessness, parosmia, etc. Chest X-ray, pulmonary functions, blood work all normal.
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My only criticism is that the first study looked at MRI anatomical changes in the subjects.
Just because you can't see something doesn't mean it's not there.
Same for the "biomarker" tests.
D2 still suffers from the residual of her COVID. Breathlessness, parosmia, etc. Chest X-ray, pulmonary functions, blood work all normal.
wrote on 19 Mar 2024, 01:55 last edited by@George-K said in Havana Syndrome:
D2 still suffers from the residual of her COVID. Breathlessness, parosmia, etc. Chest X-ray, pulmonary functions, blood work all normal.
How is her taste and smell? I remember you mentioning that it was quite bad for a long time.
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wrote on 1 Apr 2024, 11:10 last edited by
60 Minutes did a followup of the story.
Link to video -
wrote on 1 Apr 2024, 12:37 last edited by
Surprised?
Nope.
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wrote on 3 Apr 2024, 13:21 last edited by
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wrote on 5 Dec 2024, 23:07 last edited by
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wrote on 6 Dec 2024, 01:00 last edited by
Bomb Havana. But get all the cool old cars out first.
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wrote on 6 Dec 2024, 01:05 last edited by
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wrote on 6 Dec 2024, 02:08 last edited by
Meh. The Dominicans are just as good. Cubans are like Coors used to be east of the Rockies.
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wrote on 30 Dec 2024, 23:35 last edited by
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wrote on 4 Jan 2025, 10:50 last edited by
As any detective would ask, what is the motive for covering up? It is not like Cuba is our strategic partner or anything like that.
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wrote on 11 Jan 2025, 00:53 last edited by
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wrote on 14 Jan 2025, 15:55 last edited by
@George-K said in Havana Syndrome:
This man is in charge of the nuclear force.
That made me think. I would assume that there is some sort of "2 factor authentication" before anything could be done with our nuclear bombs, right?
I dont think that the president could just say, "fire all the bombs at Russia" and it would be done?
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@George-K said in Havana Syndrome:
This man is in charge of the nuclear force.
That made me think. I would assume that there is some sort of "2 factor authentication" before anything could be done with our nuclear bombs, right?
I dont think that the president could just say, "fire all the bombs at Russia" and it would be done?
wrote on 14 Jan 2025, 17:30 last edited by@taiwan_girl said in Havana Syndrome:
@George-K said in Havana Syndrome:
This man is in charge of the nuclear force.
That made me think. I would assume that there is some sort of "2 factor authentication" before anything could be done with our nuclear bombs, right?
I dont think that the president could just say, "fire all the bombs at Russia" and it would be done?
The short answer is yes, the President is the SOLE person who can authorize the use of nukes. That being said, what really happens (he doesn't have a button, he doesn't have launch codes) is he asks/orders his senior officials to execute the order. Ultimately a number of senior officials and military individuals are involved in carrying it out. If the order was as you said above (i.e., asks for it out of the blue), I'd imagine there would be senior officials who would refuse the order.
Some good articles, at least read the first bits...