Camm
Feeding the Cats.
+761|5208|Dundee, Scotland.
(NaturalNews) Even as the veggie blame game is now under way across the EU, where a super resistant strain of e.coli is sickening patients and filling hospitals in Germany, virtually no one is talking about how e.coli could have magically become resistant to eight different classes of antibiotic drugs and then suddenly appeared in the food supply.

This particular e.coli variation is a member of the O104 strain, and O104 strains are almost never (normally) resistant to antibiotics. In order for them to acquire this resistance, they must be repeatedly exposed to antibiotics in order to provide the "mutation pressure" that nudges them toward complete drug immunity.

So if you're curious about the origins of such a strain, you can essentially reverse engineer the genetic code of the e.coli and determine fairly accurately which antibiotics it was exposed to during its development. This step has now been done (see below), and when you look at the genetic decoding of this O104 strain now threatening food consumers across the EU, a fascinating picture emerges of how it must have come into existence.


Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/032622_ecoli … z1ObQ7M9UL
More reading on the website here

What do you think about this? It's easy to dismiss it as tinfoil hat conspiracy bull shit, but if you keep and open mind about it, some of it falls in to place.

Much like the thoughts behind the swine flu and vaccinations, they think that this has been engineered to make people ill, therefore making them have to pay for treatment.
for a fatty you're a serious intellectual lightweight.
11 Bravo
Banned
+965|5477|Cleveland, Ohio

Camm wrote:

they think that this has been engineered to make people ill, therefore making them have to pay for treatment.
same can be said for cancer as well.  we have cures for boners and hair loss yet nothing for cancer.
ghettoperson
Member
+1,943|6889

11 Bravo wrote:

Camm wrote:

they think that this has been engineered to make people ill, therefore making them have to pay for treatment.
same can be said for cancer as well.  we have cures for boners and hair loss yet nothing for cancer.
There's a cure for boners? I could have really used that back in 7th grade.
11 Bravo
Banned
+965|5477|Cleveland, Ohio

ghettoperson wrote:

11 Bravo wrote:

Camm wrote:

they think that this has been engineered to make people ill, therefore making them have to pay for treatment.
same can be said for cancer as well.  we have cures for boners and hair loss yet nothing for cancer.
There's a cure for boners? I could have really used that back in 7th grade.
shut up
ghettoperson
Member
+1,943|6889

lol
Cheeky_Ninja06
Member
+52|6972|Cambridge, England
Hmmm any article that is describing the bacteria as "magic" and having "super powers" should be taken with a rather large pinch of salt imo.
M.O.A.B
'Light 'em up!'
+1,220|6463|Escea

https://collider.com/uploads/imageGallery/I_Am_Legend/i_am_legend_will_smith__1_.jpg
Uzique
dasein.
+2,865|6710
one of my friends does biochemistry here at uni and was just saying the other night, actually, about this news... that they regularly do shit like this for practical experiments, changing all sorts of bacteria and viruses and messing around. he said it's incredibly common and e.coli is often one of the things they study/work on for a better understanding. doesn't seem like such a high-conspiracy when some undergraduate talks about it in such a banal manner.
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
unnamednewbie13
Moderator
+2,053|7012|PNW

Camm wrote:

Forensic evidence emerges that e.coli superbug was bioengineered
Shocking
sorry you feel that way
+333|6239|...

Uzique wrote:

one of my friends does biochemistry here at uni and was just saying the other night, actually, about this news... that they regularly do shit like this for practical experiments, changing all sorts of bacteria and viruses and messing around. he said it's incredibly common and e.coli is often one of the things they study/work on for a better understanding. doesn't seem like such a high-conspiracy when some undergraduate talks about it in such a banal manner.
Yep, pretty much. E. Coli was one of the first things I worked with when I had a few biochemistry courses.
inane little opines
rdx-fx
...
+955|6831
Biopreparat, sounds like.  Alive and well, and available to the highest bidder.

As quickly as the Russians shut down all imports of EU produce...
"Oh, shit-ski! We know that one!  Fuck's sake, keep that one out of here!"

I'll be 99% convinced if the people that get better from the e. coli, develop something fatal shortly afterwards.
DesertFox-
The very model of a modern major general
+796|6924|United States of America

Shocking wrote:

Uzique wrote:

one of my friends does biochemistry here at uni and was just saying the other night, actually, about this news... that they regularly do shit like this for practical experiments, changing all sorts of bacteria and viruses and messing around. he said it's incredibly common and e.coli is often one of the things they study/work on for a better understanding. doesn't seem like such a high-conspiracy when some undergraduate talks about it in such a banal manner.
Yep, pretty much. E. Coli was one of the first things I worked with when I had a few biochemistry courses.
Yeah, lots of people work with E. coli and do cloning vector experiments with it and such to confer antibiotic resistance, but the interesting thing is how this particular specimen found its way into the food supply.
SonderKommando
Eat, Lift, Grow, Repeat....
+564|6899|The darkside of Denver

DesertFox- wrote:

Shocking wrote:

Uzique wrote:

one of my friends does biochemistry here at uni and was just saying the other night, actually, about this news... that they regularly do shit like this for practical experiments, changing all sorts of bacteria and viruses and messing around. he said it's incredibly common and e.coli is often one of the things they study/work on for a better understanding. doesn't seem like such a high-conspiracy when some undergraduate talks about it in such a banal manner.
Yep, pretty much. E. Coli was one of the first things I worked with when I had a few biochemistry courses.
Yeah, lots of people work with E. coli and do cloning vector experiments with it and such to confer antibiotic resistance, but the interesting thing is how this particular specimen found its way into the food supply.
this.
Camm
Feeding the Cats.
+761|5208|Dundee, Scotland.

DesertFox- wrote:

Yeah, lots of people work with E. coli and do cloning vector experiments with it and such to confer antibiotic resistance, but the interesting thing is how this particular specimen found its way into the food supply.
That's the best word to use here, it's just such an odd coincidence.
for a fatty you're a serious intellectual lightweight.
Benzin
Member
+576|6238
The article also says that a strain that randomly develops such resistance is impossible. Exhibit A: life on this planet. If the events that created life on this planet had been slightly off, life wouldn't have happened and we would have just a barren rock hurtling through space. That whole article is filled with inaccuracies and fanatic doomsday predictions. You can't take something like that seriously when you have that kind of writing style.

One of my favorite parts: the EU "ban" of herbal remedies... lol: http://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/ind … -products/ Take a look at that.
Spark
liquid fluoride thorium reactor
+874|6915|Canberra, AUS
holy shit that's bad. just... no. stop trying. stop speaking. end yourselves and make the world a smarter place.
The paradox is only a conflict between reality and your feeling what reality ought to be.
~ Richard Feynman
globefish23
sophisticated slacker
+334|6564|Graz, Austria
Bacteria don't need to be exposed to antibiotics to acquire immunity due to mutation pressure. They can simply acquire DNA/RNA fragments and whole plasmids containing the respective genes.
Happens all the time in nature, and for E. coli this can well happen where they like to meet and greet  - in our colons.

Also, normally all the bacteria used in laboratories to "mess around" with, are genetically engineered to have a faulty metabolism, so that they need to be fed basic nutrients in their laboratory Petri dishes, and die if released in the wild.

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