Thursday, October 22, 2020

The virus that isn't there, genetic sequencing, and the magic trick

by Jon Rappoport | October 21, 2020

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Recently, I've written a series of articles revealing that the existence of the SARS-CoV-2 virus is unproven.

I've quoted key CDC and study documents that confess "the virus is unavailable." Which is like an ice company saying they have no access to water. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5]

I've published quotes from Dr. Tom Cowan's major article [6] exposing how CDC journal authors "assemble" the idea of a virus from cobbled sequences they ASSUME are parts of SARS-CoV-2. (Below, I reprint my article on Dr. Cowan's shocking findings.)

Now, I want to make overall comments on the con, the game, the hustle. 

The public, and most medical professionals, are awed by the whole concept of genetic sequencing. They accept the process as a holy of holies. If researchers in their lab claim they've "sequenced the virus," the virus must exist. How else could its genetic structure have been discovered?

Of course, the virus doesn’t have to exist at all. We are talking about an illusion. Stage magic.

And if we could force him to explain his trick, the magician would say:

"Notice, I begin with a fragment of RNA I assume is part of a larger new virus. My assumption isn't proven. I simply make the claim."

"Then I lay out the genetic structure of that little piece of RNA, and I discover I need a great more genetic information to fill out the sequence of the whole virus."

"That's not really a discovery. I already knew I'd need much more. The question is: where am I going to get that added information?" 

"The answer is: from data bases. These bases contain miles of sequences that have already been established—rightly or wrongly. Sequences of other viruses."

"Which sequences do I choose? I make guesses. I make assumptions. Actually, I choose according to a story line that has already been laid down. In this case, a story about a member of the coronavirus family. That’s right. I always knew what I was going to look for. In fact, that initial piece of RNA I began with? I could have selected all sorts of other pieces of RNA, but I chose that one because it seemed to be from the coronavirus family."

"Does this whole business sound like a Lego or tinker-toy operation? Well, it is. I never have a physical specimen of the virus. I never isolate the purported virus from all the material that surrounds it. I just assume or pretend the virus is in there."

"Anyway, I now select all sorts of genetic sequences from the huge database. And I hook the sequences together, AS IF they were already connected and real and waiting for me to find them. They weren’t, but I pretend they were."

"That pretense is the key. It's like selling a sucker a map leading to a lost silver mine. There was never a map. The con artist cobbled it together from pieces of other old maps of a territory in the mountains of Colorado. The map looks real. It looks whole. But it was never whole."

"THE GENETIC SEQUENCE OF THE VIRUS is that map. It's made to look like a one long code that was there all along. But it wasn’t. It isn't."

"Every good magic trick works this way. The magician makes the audience believe he is performing one smooth operation. But he isn’t. He's taking all sorts of detours. He’s reaching into his sleeve and pulling out a card. He's palming that card so no one sees it. He's slipping the card into the deck in his other hand. And all the while, he's talking confidently and making other gestures to distract the audience."

"The whole purpose of the trick is to inspire awe. In the lab, the same principle applies. The researchers SEEM to find one long genetic sequence of the whole virus. Astonishing."

"But that's not what happened. Not by a long shot." 

"And notice one other very important thing. In the lab, we are actually piecing and cobbling together the pattern—the code—of a virus. We don't have to deal with actual genes. What we do is all on the level of IDEATIONAL construction. We’re hooking up DATA. So that's another level of the trick. We're not stringing together pieces of material. We’re stringing together pieces of data from genetic databases. This would be like standing on stage in front of an audience and doing a very clever card trick without having a deck of cards in the first place. Now THAT’S a trick for the ages." With all this I mind, read my previous article on Dr. Tom Cowan’s shocking discoveries:

Dr. Tom Cowan explores the COVID virus invented out of sheer nonsense

—Cowan analyzes yet another key document posted by the CDC, in their journal, Emerging Infectious Diseases: "Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 from Patient with Coronavirus Disease, United States"— 


by Jon Rappoport  | October 19, 2020

The hits keep coming. The CDC used an arbitrary computer "tinker-toy" process to invent a description of the virus. The virus that no one has proven exists. This is the basic conclusion of Dr. Tom Cowan.

The CDC article [7] was discovered by Sally Fallon Morrell. Her co-author, Dr. Cowan, fleshes out the fraud. Cowan's article is titled, "Only Poisoned Monkey Cells 'Grew' the 'Virus'." [6]

Dr. Cowan: "[The CDC journal article] was published in June 2020 [original publication, March 2020]. The purpose of the article was for a group of about 20 virologists to describe the state of the science of the isolation, purification and biological characteristics of the new SARS-CoV-2 virus, and to share this information with other scientists for their own research. A thorough and careful reading of this important paper reveals some shocking findings."

"First, in the section titled 'Whole Genome Sequencing,' we find that rather than having isolated the virus and sequencing the genome from end to end, they found 37 base pairs from unpurified samples using PCR probes. This means they actually looked at 37 out of the approximately 30,000 of the base pairs that are claimed to be the genome of the intact virus. They then took these 37 segments and put them into a computer program, which filled in the rest of the base pairs."

In other words, the sequencing of the SARS-CoV-2 virus was done by assumption and arbitrary inference. If this is science, a penguin is a spaceship.

Please go to Jon Rappoport's blog to continue reading.
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