First published at 07:49 UTC on April 27th, 2024.
In beautiful Andalucia, the not-so-beautiful Robert Malone tries to explain to an interviewer what a virus is.
"This particle is really ... self-replicating ... genes ... ... that aren't really alive. Uh, they exist as a parasite, in the…
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In beautiful Andalucia, the not-so-beautiful Robert Malone tries to explain to an interviewer what a virus is.
"This particle is really ... self-replicating ... genes ... ... that aren't really alive. Uh, they exist as a parasite, in the way they become alive when they get into our cells.
It is a parasitic relationship, we ... I like to say we are the food for the virus.
I think it's really good to think of this as a, um, a virus is a parasitic gene that, um, isn't truly alive but is at the boundary of living and non-living."
"A virus is even closer to a pure gene parasite. That's, that's really what they are."
Unable to quit when he's behind, Malone then objects to the objection that there is no Sars-Cov-2 virus by droning on about cell culture and isolation, not once mentioning that the cell culture 'isolation' experiments don't isolate anything but in fact ADD a bunch of elements (some containing RNA and probably DNA) to the patient sample.
Stop it Rob. Just stop.
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