DWQA Questions › Tag: extraterrestrial psychopathsFilter:AllOpenResolvedClosedUnansweredSort byViewsAnswersVotesA recent study showed that nine pharmaceuticals commonly used in residential aged care significantly enhanced bacterial resistance to antibiotics, adding to the growing worldwide problem of declining antibiotic effectiveness, and the attendant morbidity and mortality. These included Advil, Tylenol, diclofenac (an anti-inflammatory to treat arthritis), furosemide (for high blood pressure), metformin (for high sugar levels linked to diabetes), atorvastatin (to help lower cholesterol and fats in the blood), tramadol (a stronger pain medication post-surgery), temazepam (used to treat sleeping problems), and pseudoephedrine (a decongestant). Are these or other drugs also causing lowered immune defenses against chronic viruses, which you have confirmed are the cause of 85% of chronic diseases? Hanbiao Chen, Sylvia A. Sapula, John Turnidge, Henrietta Venter. The effect of commonly used non-antibiotic medications on antimicrobial resistance development in Escherichia coli. npj Antimicrobials and Resistance, 2025; 3 (1) DOI: 10.1038/s44259-025-00144-w.ClosedNicola asked 6 months ago • Extraterrestrial Corruption of Human Institutions172 views0 answers0 votesWas the research, including the clinical data, for the paper we asked you about, “Acute inflammatory response via neutrophil activation protects against development of chronic pain,” valid and not corrupted by the interlopers to malign seemingly useful common painkillers? Given your warnings that clinical research cannot always be trusted, we just want to be sure. What is most important for us to know?ClosedNicola asked 6 months ago • Extraterrestrial Corruption of Human Institutions132 views0 answers0 votesGiven your previous feedback that the triggering of the tidal power outages will likely be during this month of September, to coincide with a historical weak period of vulnerability for the stock market, the date of 9/11 is looming as a meaningful iconic anniversary. With the agenda of the interlopers as wanting to create a mystery, to ramp up fear and suspicion, using that date to launch their attack seems advantageous for their purposes. What can you tell us about the current status of their plans for the outages and their aftermath?ClosedNicola asked 6 months ago • Extraterrestrial Agenda139 views0 answers0 votesThe phenomena seem quite striking which are reported in the paper, “Acute inflammatory response via neutrophil activation protects against development of chronic pain,” by Marc Parisien et al. Sci Transl Med. 2022 May 11; 14(644). These authors showed in animal models that painkillers like corticosteroids and NSAIDs, but not analgesics like morphine or lidocaine which lack anti-inflammatory effects, end up prolonging pain, because without neutrophil activation being allowed to happen as part of an immune response, acute pain may become chronic. A clinical study confirmed that among patients whose lower back pain had become chronic, it was exclusively those who had been treated with NSAIDS who went on to develop neuropathy. Was this a valid study with broad implications about the unexpected downside of anti-inflammatory medication for moderating pain? What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 6 months ago • Extraterrestrial Corruption of Human Institutions148 views0 answers0 votesI shudder when I consider I spent years striving to develop inhibitors of neutrophil activation as therapeutics for autoimmune disease. Was that not only misguided, but a sinister consequence of interloper manipulation to encourage the field of immunopharmacology, knowing it could make things worse? What can Creator tell us about the medical implications for using anti-inflammatories?ClosedNicola asked 6 months ago • Extraterrestrial Corruption of Human Institutions133 views0 answers0 votesAcetaminophen (paracetamol) also marketed as Tylenol, is one of the most widely-used drugs by pregnant women and children and studies have mounted showing a link between prenatal or early childhood exposure and neurodevelopmental disorders, like autism, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), language delays, behavioral problems, and lower IQ. Are those studies accurate and valid, or has there been interloper interference to create another cover story to mask their deliberate toxic manipulations of the brains of infants?ClosedNicola asked 6 months ago • Extraterrestrial Corruption of Human Institutions143 views0 answers0 votesYesterday’s earthquake (8-31-25) in Afghanistan has now been reported to have caused 800 fatalities, and those numbers may grow as wreckage continues to be searched. Was this a natural event or a purposeful attack by the Extraterrestrial Alliance?ClosedNicola asked 6 months ago • Extraterrestrial Agenda126 views0 answers0 votesA viewer asks: “Prophetic channelings well before the November 2024 US presidential election had forecast massive power blackouts in the United States, followed by record crashes in both the stock market and fiat currency, a huge gold reset, and then Alien Disclosure as a Trojan horse gambit to gain human acceptance of the darkness running things, followed by ET withdrawal. There was also some thought of a drop in gold prices during the crash period I suppose, and many decided to sell their stakes in gold and hold cash in the meantime. I stuck with what Creator had been saying about gold for many years before that and it has paid well. Would you mind checking with Creator as to whether a drop in gold prices prior to these dramatic events is still likely and how steep that drop might be? Or would it be wiser to simply stay invested in gold and ride out any temporary slide? I know the Disclosure timeline is still expected anytime, but it seems that could be a very long time, and perhaps that would be in our best interests anyway.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 6 months ago • Extraterrestrial Agenda198 views0 answers0 votesAre things on track for the tidal power outages to start soon?ClosedNicola asked 6 months ago • Extraterrestrial Agenda195 views0 answers0 votesIt has been reported that the US government has accumulated a hoard of Bitcoin worth 15-20 billion dollars through confiscation of illegal funds. This hoarding was launched by Pres. Trump who halted what would have been ongoing sales to convert Bitcoin to cash. Is this a sinister move, in order to create a way to trigger collapse of that asset by dumping a large amount of Bitcoin on the market to start a collapse at some point in the future?ClosedNicola asked 8 months ago • Extraterrestrial Corruption of Human Institutions241 views0 answers0 votesIn the book, The AI Con: How to Fight Big Tech’s Hype and Create the Future We Want, co-authors Emily Bender and Alex Hanna argue that the term AI (acronym for Artificial Intelligence) is marketing hype. Google defines the word hype as “promote or publicize (a product or idea) intensively, often exaggerating its importance or benefits.” The implication is that without the exaggerated claim of benefit, and if people knew what they were REALLY getting with widespread adoption of these technologies bundled under the AI moniker, they quite likely would reject the product or idea altogether. The other pertinent question is, benefit to WHOM? Does the average consumer really benefit more than the cost imposed and the harm potentially incurred? The authors argue NO, the use of the term AI is really a bait and switch for increased AUTOMATION across the board. Automation that will decrease the demand for labor and remove human judgment from decision-making and categorizing. It will end up benefiting the ownership and finance classes at the expense of everyone else. What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 8 months ago • Problems in Society207 views0 answers0 votesThe term AI and Artificial Intelligence suddenly became relevant in the 2010s with the fortuitous adoption of chip technology designed to solve an entirely different problem, namely presenting complex and fast-changing graphics on computer screens, used mostly to make video games more realistic and lifelike. A little more than a decade ago, a small company named Nvidia made a graphics processor for making computer video a LOT faster. Today, it’s a trillion-dollar company because that processor was successfully adapted for AI processing with little modification. Once this discovery was made, untold TRILLIONS of dollars have been poured into making billions of these chips. Massive data centers are being built to utilize them, requiring vast amounts of resources and electricity. AI was less a software innovation than it was a hardware innovation. At the end of the day, these chips are overwhelmingly “number crunchers,” not much different in base functionality than an electronic calculator, only vastly miniaturized for speed and scaled up for volume. Is it fair to say that AI is really just a vast “calculator” when one tries to grasp how it REALLY works? What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 8 months ago • Problems in Society303 views0 answers0 votesWhen people think of AI, most think about chatbots like ChatGPT and Grok. These technologies are based on a software architecture called neural networks. Another name for the way these chatbots are put together is called LLMs or large language models. A large language model is really just a very sophisticated pattern matcher, and the shortcut used to match patterns is statistical probability. At its very foundation it makes large amounts (hundreds, thousands, millions or more) of microscopic decisions based on what statistically is more or less probable in terms of what comes before or after a word. Is it more probable the word “and” follows the word “this,” or more probable it follows the word “that?” So any response from a question to ChatGPT or Grok is the result of deep statistical analysis and pattern matching with no actual intelligence involved. What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 8 months ago • Problems in Society240 views0 answers0 votesAn argument can be made that no single human being really understands how AI works. What they discovered when they added more processing power and more layers of pattern matching (what they call deep learning) for building large language models is that the chatbots became REMARKABLY humanlike in terms of their output. This was a downright shocking discovery, and this development alone suddenly diverted trillions of dollars of investment towards the development of AI. But according to the authors of the recent book, AI Snake Oil: What Artificial Intelligence Can Do, What It Can’t, and How to Tell the Difference, Arvind Narayanan and Sayash Kapoor of Princeton University, relatively little of that money has been spent on research that would attempt to understand WHY we are getting this result. It seems no one really knows, and worse, no one REALLY CARES. Instead, the agenda is to throw more and faster hardware at it, “FEED THE BEAST” to give it more power, more capacity, more memory, with no one truly understanding why it even works as it does. Is this more human folly unfolding before our very eyes? What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 8 months ago • Problems in Society256 views0 answers0 votesAnother technology that has mysterious origins is cryptocurrencies. To this day, no one really knows where Bitcoin originated, who created it, or who introduced it to the world. There is speculation all over the place, and it’s assumed someone knows, but that information is not public knowledge. Is Bitcoin a “gift” (more like a naked Trojan horse) from the interlopers? And is AI, and how it really works, similar in its origins? What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 8 months ago • Problems in Society315 views0 answers0 votes