AJ Gentile on Tucker Carlson Show: "I think the US government probably has unlocked zero point or close to zero point energy, which would be pulling energy out of the vacuum. We have inventors that have done that over and over."
Charles Pogue got 200 miles per gallon in the 1930s. It was proven by engineers. News hit, oil stocks crashed, and the oil industry lobbied the government. Then came the 1951 Invention Secrecy Act: Any device over 20% efficient gets classified as a state secret.
Tom Ogle hit over 200 mpg in the 1970s by recycling exhaust. Offered millions to shelve it. He was killed shortly after.
Stanley Meyer ran a car on ordinary tap water in the 1990s. Engineers called it the invention of the century. He was offered billions, toasted with investors, suddenly felt ill, said "They poisoned me," and died. His tech vanished.
Floyd "Sparky" Sweet ran heavy loads from a tiny box the size of a deck of cards using near-zero input. Military visited. He died of a heart attack the same night. All his equipment disappeared.
These stories repeat: Breakthroughs that threaten trillion dollar industries get buried, inventors silenced. What if free energy has been here for decades? Mind blowing history most never hear.
All my unvaxxed homies are very unbothered by the latest headlines, are heavily allocated in crypto, and are becoming increasingly religious. This is no coincidence
T-cell exhaustion occurs when T-cells (key immune players, especially CD8+ cytotoxic T-cells and CD4+ helper T-cells) are overstimulated by persistent antigen exposure, like in chronic infections (e.g., HIV, hepatitis C).
They lose their ability to proliferate, produce cytokines (like IFN-γ), or kill infected cells effectively, often upregulating inhibitory receptors like PD-1, LAG-3, or TIM-3.
In the context of the Yale study claims, prolonged spike protein presence post-vaccination could theoretically act as a chronic antigen, driving this exhaustion.
What the Study Might Suggest: If CD4 T-cell counts dropped (as reported) alongside signs of exhaustion, it could mean the immune system is being overtaxed.
CD4 cells are critical for coordinating immune responses, so a sustained decline might increase vulnerability to infections or reduce vaccine efficacy over time.
Short-term antigen exposure from mRNA vaccines (days to weeks) shouldn’t cause exhaustion—studies like Oberhardt et al. (2021) show robust T-cell responses post-vaccination.
However, if spike protein lingers for months or years, as claimed, it could mimic a chronic state.
This would be a novel finding, as vaccine-induced T-cell exhaustion isn’t well-documented outside chronic disease models.
Are these T-cells truly “exhausted,” or is this a temporary suppression? We’d need longitudinal data on T-cell function (not just counts) and exhaustion markers to confirm.
The idea that mRNA from vaccines could integrate into human DNA, leading to prolonged spike protein production, is a hot-button topic.
The Yale study reportedly hints at this by showing increasing spike levels over time in some recipients, which defies the expected mRNA degradation timeline (hours to days).
For integration to occur, mRNA would need to be reverse-transcribed into DNA (via enzymes like reverse transcriptase) and then inserted into the genome (via integrases or DNA repair pathways).
Humans don’t naturally express these enzymes at high levels, but endogenous retroelements (e.g., LINE-1) could theoretically facilitate this.
A 2021 study by Zhang et al. in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences showed SARS-CoV-2 RNA integrating into cultured human cells under specific conditions, fueling speculation about mRNA vaccines.
The CDC and mainstream science assert that vaccine mRNA doesn’t enter the nucleus or alter DNA, as it lacks the machinery to do so in vivo.
The Zhang study used artificial setups (e.g., overexpressed LINE-1), not reflective of normal human physiology. Plus, mRNA vaccines don’t contain viral sequences that would trigger such processes efficiently.
If spike levels are rising over time, as claimed, it could suggest either persistent mRNA (unlikely, given its fragility) or a DNA-based source.
Without genomic sequencing from these patients’ cells showing spike-coding DNA, this remains speculative.
The study’s reported intent to validate samples independently might aim to test this hypothesis—watch for that in the preprint.
Extraordinary claims need extraordinary evidence. Integration is possible in theory but lacks in vivo confirmation in vaccine recipients to date.
I'm 37. Instead of regretting that I can't wake up age 18 again, I pretend to myself that I'm 90 and I've woken up age 37 again, and that I get to magically, wonderfully have the next 50 years again.
Thank you, President Trump. As a boy, I sat in the Oval Office where my uncle led on the issues of health and fitness. And now, six decades later, I stand with a transformational leader who fully grasps the public health crisis our great nation faces. I couldn’t be more thrilled to be confirmed as the 26th Secretary of @HHSGov. Let’s Make America Healthy Again.
🚨 What’s happening in Sicily - Italy 🇮🇹 is absolutely extraordinary
Mount Etna is erupting with its summit covered in snow
Here are some explorers skiing between snow and fire!
Unprecedented
Feeling something tonight that a friend once said…
“You read Hayek, Mises, Bastiat, and you become a libertarian because you just want to be left alone. And then one day you realize, they’re never going to leave you alone…and you become something else.”
Here we are.
Strip away the terminology, and what you’re left with is a call to arms. A call to stop outsourcing your life to external authorities, societal norms, or even the comforting illusions of spirituality.
The work is yours and yours alone. It’s not about reaching some distant peak of enlightenment; it’s about the gritty, unglamorous act of showing up for yourself, day after day doing the work of self-creation.
Let me get this straight. Fauci’s NIAID and @USAID sent over $40M in U.S. taxpayer “support” to a scientist in Wuhan who was working on “bat coronavirus emergence” research, who also became “patient zero” for COVID-19?
And the completion date for that funding was … in 2019???
This document was obtained via FOIA by @WhiteCoatWaste. Give them a follow.
@elonmusk
I have been saying for 7yrs frequency, light, and sound will replace most of western medicine in the coming years.
Rife did this in the early 1900s and his work was buried and shunned due to Rothschilds.
> heh heh, i’ll force elon to buy twitter even though he doesn’t want to
> backfires, Republicans win white house and both chambers of congress
> Musk begins dismantling federal government
> d’oh!
> I know how to get back at him. i’ll take away his pay package
> every company leaves Delaware
> d’oh!
It's becoming clearer and clearer that we're looking at a seismic shift in the US's relationship with the world, between:
1) The US dismantling its foreign interference apparatuses (like USAID 👇)
2) Marco Rubio stating that we're now in a multipolar world with "multi-great powers in different parts of the planet" (https://t.co/dyHpStHPsO) and that "the postwar global order is not just obsolete; it is now a weapon being used against us" (https://t.co/TPOksRgnwP)
3) The tariffs on supposed "allies" like Mexico, Canada or the EU
This is the US effectively saying "our attempt at running the world is over, to each his own, we're now just another great power, not the 'indispensable nation'."
It looks "dumb" (as the WSJ just wrote) if you are still mentally in the old paradigm but it's always a mistake to think that what the US (or any country) does is dumb.
Hegemony was going to end sooner or later, and now the U.S. is basically choosing to end it on its own terms. It is the post-American world order - brought to you by America itself.
Even the tariffs on allies, viewed under this angle, make sense, as it redefines the concept of "allies": they don't want - or maybe rather can't afford - vassals anymore, but rather relationships that evolve based on current interests.
You can either view it as decline - because it does unquestionably look like the end of the American empire - or as avoiding further decline: controlled withdrawal from imperial commitments in order to focus resources on core national interests rather than being forced into an even messier retreat at a later stage.
In any case it is the end of an era and, while the Trump administration looks like chaos to many observers, they're probably much more attuned to the changing realities of the world and their own country's predicament than their predecessors. Acknowledging the existence of a multipolar world and choosing to operate within it rather than trying to maintain an increasingly costly global hegemony couldn't be delayed much further. It looks messy but it is probably better than maintaining the fiction of American primacy until it eventually collapses under its own weight.
This is not to say that the U.S. won't continue to wreak havoc on the world, and in fact we might be seeing it become even more aggressive than before. Because when it previously was (badly, and very hypocritically) trying to maintain some semblance of self-proclaimed "rules-based order", it now doesn't even have to pretend it is under any constraint, not even the constraint of playing nice with allies. It's the end of the U.S. empire, but definitely not the end of the U.S. as a major disruptive force in world affairs.
All in all this transformation may mark one of the most significant shifts in international relations since the fall of the Soviet Union. And those most unprepared for it, as is already painfully obvious, are America's vassals caught completely flat-footed by the realization that the patron they've relied on for decades is now treating them as just another set of countries to negotiate with.