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(05-09-2026, 05:25 AM)chr0naut Wrote: ... as were X-Ray and MRI machines.
Or, perhaps, at that early stage, they didn't know any of the interactions with certain conditions, treatments, drugs and diseases, and wrote down a list of things to be vigilant about, rather than it being a list of 'adverse reactions'?
I mean, can you see people suddenly sprouting X-Ray and MRI machines because they got immunized? LOL.
You guys are crack-ups!

Really? It was listed as an adverse reaction. I didn’t see X-Ray or MRI machines listed as an adverse reaction. However, wouldn’t you find it mildly interesting through your mask of superiority and sarcasm that those two machines/processes were listed as something to avoid? Hmmm.
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(05-10-2026, 09:06 AM)LightAngel Wrote: Yes, those sorts of things I already do.
By the way, just because they hide things doesn't mean that you can't imagine what they hide, you just need to find evidence, and that isn't so easy unless you have access.
But the evidence is the point. In a world of truly chaotic noise, how would you know what is evidence?
... and evidence of what?
People can make up all sorts of fiction, and, yes, they can think of stories that fit something in the random noise, but the correlation isn't evidence of anything real.
Unless 'they' directly tell you, or tell you by denial, in most cases, you just won't have a clue.
... and you could spend all your life and energy chasing, and believing in, things that just don't exist, and that you will, therefore, never either prove nor disprove.
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(05-10-2026, 04:59 PM)ARM1968 Wrote: Really? It was listed as an adverse reaction. I didn’t see X-Ray or MRI machines listed as an adverse reaction. However, wouldn’t you find it mildly interesting through your mask of superiority and sarcasm that those two machines/processes were listed as something to avoid? Hmmm.
I think that if you have a look at the same document that mentions Zika and Hantavirus, it also mentions "X-ray hepatobiliary abnormal" towards the end. The document was a part of the license application to the FDA in Feb 2021 and includes an appendix of 9 pages of close-typed unformatted alleged adverse reactions.
The section entitled "4. DISCUSSION" on Page 28 gives a little explanation of the appendix:
5.3.6 CUMULATIVE ANALYSIS OF POST-AUTHORIZATION ADVERSE EVENT
REPORTS OF PF-07302048 (BNT162B2) RECEIVED THROUGH 28-FEB-2021
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(05-08-2026, 04:12 PM)ARM1968 Wrote: Now, am I right or wrong in thinking this virus was flagged in the Pfizer adverse reactions list as a possible outcome from the vaccine? I’m sure I saw it there.
Have they isolated the Hantavirus? I would guess not. They could simply blame side effects from the Covid-19 vaccines on a new virus. To self perpetuate the reason to continue poisoning the public. And profiting from it with the new mRNA quackzine.
Never had much a problem with the Hantavirus until they came up with the new vaccine. Huh.  They seem to be involved in every outbreak. Ready to profit from what they caused.
Good thing Trump quit funding the WHO. Huh.
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05-13-2026, 11:57 PM
This post was last modified: 05-14-2026, 01:19 AM by Knows. 
Do you know Hanta means "Fake" or "Scam" in Hebrew?  Now some are saying this is not so. Who's lying this time?
In Israeli slang, hanta (or chanta/chanta, spelled חַנְטָה) refers to a scam, fake, nonsense, or a lie. It is a colloquial, informal term used to dismiss a story or situation as total rubbish or "full of crap". [ 1, 2, 3] Key Details About "Hanta" in Hebrew:- Meaning: It denotes something that is fraudulent, a hoax, or "BS".
- Usage: It is not formal Hebrew but rather modern, colloquial slang.
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(05-08-2026, 10:10 AM)LightAngel Wrote: Hantavirus is nothing new, it’s been around for decades. It’s primarily rodent-borne, rare in most parts of the world, and often treatable if caught early. Yet suddenly we’re hearing the drumbeat of another emerging threat.
The thing that makes this story especially interesting is that back in September 2024, Moderna announced a partnership with Korea University’s Vaccine Innovation Center to develop an mRNA-based hantavirus vaccine.
Long before this cruise ship cluster made headlines, the same mRNA platform that made the rounds during COVID, was already being prepped for the next one.
How convenient. And, profitable.
You promised the truth about hantavirus, yet didn't deliver.
Developing a vaccine for a known pathogen is a routine scientific endeavour.
Any suggestion that Moderna's research on hantavirus vaccines is evidence of a conspiracy is completely unfounded.
Moderna is also developing similar mRNA targets for influenza and other viral threats. Are you next going to tell us they're planning to orchestrate outbreaks in these areas as well?
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