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Jun 27
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Don's avatar

What a crazy coincidence that after many years with no flu, I developed highly unusual "Flu symptoms" around the time Delta variant peaked. I guess my internal/external toxins just happened to crest along with Covid.

No, I'm not buying the "No virus" BS. Call them exosomes, or something else if you wish, but "They" are biologically created, biologically transmitted, and often harmful to living organisms, including human beings. Until terrain theory does a better and more comprehensive job of explaining the myriad of biological phenomena and epidemiological events we have observed, let's keep studying.

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Jun 27
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Jun 28Edited

So 90% of your argument rests on the claim that a virus has not been adequately isolated. You will never hold a test tube of quarks or bosons, either, but the tracks and interactions of these things have given rise to convincing and useful explanations in particle physics. The constructs have worked well for decades, and have become more detailed with each passing year -- without any kind of isolation.

Sometimes entire theories must be junked, but there still seems to be substantial value in virology. When terrain theory (or some other replacement) explains everything that virology does in a clear and convincing manner, we can throw away the virology textbooks, but we have not reached that point yet. "Toxins and environmental conditions" is simply not a robust scientific framework.

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Jun 28
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The biological effects of what you call "Field theory" have most certainly NOT been proven -- in any way, shape, or form. There are fascinating possibilities, but little concrete evidence at this point.

The frontiers of understanding are expanding; let's see where this goes.

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That is what you call "Junk Science." Parts of the theory may have value, but magnetic fields can be measured in units of Gauss, and the earth's weak magnetic field is dwarfed (because of distance) by the field strength of many devices we encounter every day. Based on your theory, people should be constantly ill from their microwave ovens, electric cars, ceiling fans, and any number of other devices containing motors and/or transformers.

Yes, EMF effects can be damaging, and need to be explored. However, such effects are not easily and conveniently quantified or characterized.

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