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Jem777 ago

@ArtificialDuality you have contributed so much to uncovering this evil. You were explaining things 6 months ago most could not understand. Your insight and courage has been remarkable. I am sorry you are being attacked. Praying for you.

Edit: Everyone needs to support this guy. He has done very deep exposure.

ArtificalDuality ago

Thank. I know we had a little argument before but I'm over that. Thanks again. We'll see how far I'll get. I'm still dumping footage with narration from my phone onto my CPU.

If the bleeding gets worse I'll have to call emergency again and the hospital. As for the type of killswitch, it's a mold / yeast like microbe that can get very aggressive when turned "on" and "off" with EM pulse trains. That much I have researched. I have been "buddy-hugged" by one of their agents in March 2016, leaving me with an anomaly on my nose, can be seen here:

https://imgur.com/gallery/ZaaVo

Apparently the stuff can be used as a kill switch too, note though that the yeast sits in the repiratory tract. The anomaly on my nose was a different, supporting agent to scare me. A dog's saliva killed it off.

Commoner ago

Is that a staphylococcus aureus infection on your nose? Is it like a boil? http://www.medicinenet.com/staph_infection/article.htm

mooteensy ago

@Commoner I currently have a staphylococcus aureus infection inside my nose. It bleeds then scabs, and never fully heals. Sometimes it gets better, sometimes it gets worse. My ENT just confirmed the staph, and he believes I might also have MRSA. Could you maybe explain to me why you guessed that? I'm wondering if it could be of any help to me.

Commoner ago

I took a microbiology class in college. One of our test labs was to isolate and grow out a mixture of different bacteria for identification. Anyway, one of the bacteria was staph aureus and it is pretty contagious because the lab instructor who kept a good distance from us students doing the lab work, ended up with a big boil on his nose a few days later that looked pretty much like the pic that artificialduality posted. A big boil right on the tip of the nose is something you just don't forget once you see it. The lab instructor, besides being irate, knew what it was right away. I always assumed it was something you were more likely to get in a hospital, so that is why I thought about it. I don't know much more than that.