Message from @wacka

Discord ID: 507606600354234368


2018-11-01 17:20:20 UTC  

well yeah... cancer cells are immortal

2018-11-01 17:20:24 UTC  

no

2018-11-01 17:20:26 UTC  

they are not

2018-11-01 17:20:46 UTC  

dr Vee did a video about cancer cells a while ago

2018-11-01 17:20:49 UTC  

they just reproduce without limit

2018-11-01 17:21:02 UTC  

That would be the problem with cancer

2018-11-01 17:21:13 UTC  

Uranium 231 is not a valid isotope

2018-11-01 17:21:15 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/463054787336732683/507605053838721058/Screenshot_20181101-102100_Drive.jpg

2018-11-01 17:21:18 UTC  

Wew...

2018-11-01 17:21:23 UTC  

U235, i don't remember

2018-11-01 17:21:41 UTC  
2018-11-01 17:22:04 UTC  

n ou

2018-11-01 17:22:12 UTC  

235 is fissile and makes more sense

2018-11-01 17:22:34 UTC  

Did you know naked mole rats don't get cancer, they can't develop cancer.

2018-11-01 17:22:35 UTC  

:\

2018-11-01 17:22:37 UTC  

lemme give this a speed read

2018-11-01 17:22:50 UTC  

ima be honest, i dunno how much radition a watt

2018-11-01 17:23:07 UTC  

1.5 - 6 watts per kilogram?

2018-11-01 17:23:19 UTC  

i dunno of thats incredibly excessive or based on current exposure levels

2018-11-01 17:24:38 UTC  

lol.. the first 4 pages are just a two column list of PHd's that contributed

2018-11-01 17:27:24 UTC  

tldr;
Results
Exposure to RFR caused decreased body weights of pregnant rats during gestation and lower birth weights in their offspring. However, a few weeks after birth body weights returned to normal and were similar to non-exposed rats. In general, RFR-exposed male rats lived longer than non-exposed rats. The higher survival of exposed males was attributed to a lower severity of a natural, age-related kidney disease typically observed in male rats at the end of these types of studies, which may have been related to the RFR exposure. In both studies (GSM and CDMA),
exposure to RFR in male rats resulted in higher numbers of animals with tumors of the heart and brain. In the GSM study, increased numbers of animals with tumors of the adrenal gland were also observed in exposed males. In both studies, there were tumors that occurred in several organs that we were unable to clearly determine whether these resulted from exposure or were just incidental findings. For the GSM studies, these lesions included tumors of the prostate gland, pituitary gland, and pancreas in males and of the heart in females. For the CDMA studies, these equivocal lesions included tumors of the pituitary gland and liver in males and of the heart, brain, and adrenal gland
of females.

2018-11-01 17:27:26 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/463054787336732683/507606608256172043/Screenshot_20181101-102713_Firefox.jpg

2018-11-01 17:27:36 UTC  

Phone generates 0.12 to 1.6

2018-11-01 17:29:01 UTC  

and they tested using 1.6 - 6.. seems like a none issue

2018-11-01 17:29:19 UTC  

any effects it would have we'd probably see after our lifespan ends

2018-11-01 17:29:21 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/463054787336732683/507607091695976452/Screenshot_20181101-101925_Drive.jpg

2018-11-01 17:29:28 UTC  

Rats lived longer

2018-11-01 17:29:40 UTC  

Mice were 2.5 to 10

2018-11-01 17:29:44 UTC  

And those got cancer

2018-11-01 17:29:48 UTC  

I had a pet Rat, I loved her

2018-11-01 17:30:02 UTC  

that lack of chronic kidney problem is interesting

2018-11-01 17:30:13 UTC  

possible to use rf energy as a form of treatment?

2018-11-01 17:30:15 UTC  
2018-11-01 17:30:15 UTC  

did you expose it to GSM?

2018-11-01 17:30:15 UTC  

if it is the cause

2018-11-01 17:30:35 UTC  

but if you irradiate a rat

2018-11-01 17:30:39 UTC  

does it become IrRatiated?

2018-11-01 17:30:55 UTC  

Sounds like fallout now

2018-11-01 17:31:13 UTC  

Rip

2018-11-01 17:31:17 UTC  

@Dr.Wol I've the dinosaur costume lol