PCR TESTS ARE EXTREMELY UNRELIABLE
HERE'S SOME BASIC FACTS YOU SHOULD KNOW:
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PCR TESTS HAVE BEEN SHOWN TO PRODUCE UP TO 97% FALSE POSITIVES
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PCR TESTS - ACCORDING TO THEIR OWN MANUALS - WERE NEVER INTENDED TO BE USED TO DIAGNOSE COVID, BUT HEALTH OFFICIALS TREAT THEM LIKE THEY DO.
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TESTING OF ASYMPTOMATIC PEOPLE IS ABUSED TO ARTIFICIALLY INFLATE CASE NUMBERS
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PCR TESTS CANNOT TELL YOU IF IT FOUND LIVE/DEAD VIRUS, WHAT TYPE OF VIRUS IS THERE, OR THE VIRAL LOAD
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ANY PCR TEST OVER 35 CYCLES IS VERY RARELY GOING TO FIND LIVE VIRUS
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MOST PCR TESTS ARE DONE AT 35 CYCLES AND UPWARDS OF 42 (IN CANADA)
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SEVERAL INTERNATIONAL COURTS HAVE RULED PCR TESTS AS AN INVALID WAY OF DIAGNOSING COVID
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A PERSON WHO HAD COVID HAS A HIGH CHANCE OF TESTING POSITIVE USING PCR DESPITE REINFECTIONS BEING EXTREMELY RARE
Please note that links above are not meant to be exhaustive, but simply give readers a first look at the available evidence. You can find more information on these topics in the sections below.
PCR FAQ'S
QUESTION
Does a PCR test always detect if a person is sick and infectious?
ANSWER
No. It has been known for quite some time that PCR tests yield incredibly high fasle positive rates, especially when Cycle Thresholds are set too high. The Justice Centre discusses the issues in their podcast linked below:
QUESTION
Are PCR tests always set at a reasonable level and not at cycle thresholds designed to promote higher rates of false positives?
ANSWER
No. The majority of Canadian labs have been testing as low as 35 CT and as high as 42 CT, which yield incredibly high false positive results. More worrisome is that Canadian officials have stopped reporting the CT values currently used in testing, leading many to speculate that CT values remain extremely high.
QUESTION
Is Asymptomatic testing helpful?
ANSWER
No. With the incredibly high likelihood of false positive tests (97% in many cases), and the incredibly rare chance of asymptomatic spread, testing those who are not sick only creates artificially inflated case counts and unreasonable punishments. Several courts have already deemed PCR tests to be wholly inadequate for this reason.
QUESTION
Are PCR tests designed to diagnose illness?
ANSWER
No. PCR tests are a research tool, used to add more information to a diagnosis of an illness. The manuals for the PCR testing kits themselves say that they're not designed to diagnose illness. Still, governments rely almost exclusively on PCR tests to declare someone as sick, leading to an epidemic of false diagnoses.
Please note that links above are not meant to be exhaustive, but simply give readers a first look at the available evidence. You can find more information on these topics in the sections below.