TruthArchive.ai - Tweets Saved By @abcnews

Saved - November 6, 2025 at 5:50 PM

@abcnews - ABC News

For over a month now, people with a disability have been unable to use NDIS funding for seeking sex worker services. Lived-experience advocates say it's a step backward. https://ab.co/41aG5oe

ABC.net.au: Page not Found Australia's leading source of information and entertainment abc.net.au
Saved - November 4, 2023 at 4:49 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
Elon Musk's ownership of X has led some to believe the platform is now worthless and unsafe for activists. @abcnews is accused of concealing the truth about Pfizer's actions, resulting in deaths. @RefugeOfSinner5 criticizes @abcnews for no longer reporting news.

@abcnews - ABC News

A year after Elon Musk bought Twitter, X is now a 'worthless' platform some say is no longer safe for activists https://ab.co/3u3pFzq

ABC.net.au: Page not Found Australia's leading source of information and entertainment abc.net.au

@RefugeOfSinner5 - RefugeOfSinners (ROS)

@abcnews @abcnews you stopped reporting the news a long time ago. Pfizer lied, people died, and you concealed the truth. https://t.co/LBoY04ACFG

@RefugeOfSinner5 - RefugeOfSinners (ROS)

We are shotgunning lots of DNA into billions of people. Some of this DNA may hit germlines. (think eggs and sperm). 50 - 100 billion LNP's in these shots. If 1% gets to ovaries, then you are talking about 40 - 400 million of these things hitting 300 000 oocytes. This is a…

Video Transcript AI Summary
In this video, the speakers discuss the widespread use of DNA manipulation in people. They mention that although it's not specifically targeting germ lines, there is a possibility that the DNA could affect germ cells, such as eggs and sperm. They estimate that billions of people are being exposed to this DNA, and if even a small percentage reaches the ovaries, it could potentially impact the germline. The speakers express concern about the lack of ethical consideration and the experimental nature of this practice. They also mention the potential risks, such as cancer if the DNA affects stem cells. Overall, they urge for a reevaluation of the current approach and question why this is being allowed.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: What's going on today, although we're not doing CRISPR on germ lines, we are basically shotgunning lots of DNA into people's, into billions of people, some of this DNA may hit term lines, it may hit stem cells, it may hit sperm, it may hit egg. If you do the numbers on the number of LMPs that we're putting in these things, they're in the 50,000,000,000 range to maybe 100,000,000,000 range. So if 1% of those get to the ovaries, there's only 300,000 oocytes. So there's, you're talking about, 40,000,000 to 400,000,000 maybe of these things hitting 300,000 O sites. So there, there's a chance that this stuff gets into the germline, and we can't rule that out. And, that is done now on billions of people. And it's almost mandated in many places. Speaker 1: It was mandated. It was mandated. Speaker 0: Probably very much so. Right? So, This is a radical decay in the biomedical ethics community that this has occurred. And it's a massive departure from where we were back in days when we were thinking about CRISPR babies. So, I think everyone should raise that bar back up and say, this is where you were, what has changed? And, why are we tolerating this type of experimental use on tools that are poorly characterized, mandated with liability protection? It's just, it's mind boggling that's happening. Speaker 1: Yeah. That's, that's well said, Kevin. Just, just, I mean, it's obvious to me, but I'll just make clear, make it clear to everybody. When Kevin says it's in the germ line, he's talking about genomic changes in the ovaries. That means your children Will have those genomic changes and then their children will. Forever. Right? Speaker 0: Yes. Yes. Sperm and egg are germ lines. And if it hits your stem cells, like in your bone marrow, then you can run into cancer problems. So those are immune, those are immune privileged cells, so they don't get cleaned up by the immune system and these things end up persisting for probably the rest of your life if it's in your stem cells.
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