Coronavirus Test Inventor Critiques Dr Anthony Fauci

In the public interest.

The tests for COVID-19 are called RT-PCR tests. They can’t tell you that you are sick (Kary Mullis).

The inventor of PCR never said it wasn’t designed to detect infectious diseases.

The PCR test is used to justify lockdowns and a raft of measures to stop the spread of a virus. It’s inventor says those at the top don’t know and they have an agenda. Make up their own rules. Dr Fauci he says lies directly to the camera. He sees the public unable to judge a good scientist. Fauci was asked to debate Kary Mullis. He said Fauci wouldn’t do it.

The White House says allowing Fauci to appear at a House coronavirus panel would be “counterproductive.”

https://www.vox.com/2020/5/2/21245061/white-house-anthony-fauci-house-committee

Kary Mullis dies at age 74

Biochemist received Nobel Prize for invention of PCR and attracted controversy for positions on climate change and AIDS

by Celia Henry Arnaud
Chemical & Engineering News

20190814lnp2-mullis.jpg

Credit: Alamy Kary Mullis

Kary B. Mullis, Nobel Laureate in Chemistry, died Aug. 7 of pneumonia at the age of 74. He won the 1993 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his invention of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method for copying and amplifying DNA. Mullis invented the PCR method in 1983 as a chemist at Cetus Corporation.

The original version of PCR that Mullis developed uses repeated cycles of elevated temperatures to separate DNA strands, which are then copied by a heat-stable DNA polymerase. Repeating the cycle many times leads to an exponential increase in the quantity of DNA. In this way, even traces of DNA can be amplified into amounts that can be easily sequenced or quantified.

PCR amplification played a key role in the Human Genome Project, in which most of the DNA blueprint of one person was sequenced.

“The initial scientific goals of the Human Genome Project were actually established before PCR had become a routine laboratory method,” says Eric D. Green, director of the National Human Genome Research Institute at the National Institutes of Health and participant in the Human Genome Project. “In retrospect, the widespread development of PCR-based methods ultimately turned out to be critical—in many ways essential—for the Project’s success.”

PCR also made its mark in forensic science. “Prior to the development of the PCR, forensic scientists utilized very awkward and insensitive techniques” to identify people from DNA samples, says Bruce McCord, a professor of forensic chemistry at Florida International University. “The development of the PCR revolutionized forensic DNA testing. Suddenly there was no need for radioactivity or chemiluminescence-based detection, as the PCR could produce millions of copies of DNA from only a few cells.”

Beyond his work on PCR, Mullis was also known for his controversial views disputing humans’ role in climate change and HIV’s role in AIDS. He also was open about taking hallucinogenic drugs like LSD and synthesizing some when in graduate school.

Mullis was born in Lenoir, North Carolina, in 1944. He received a bachelor’s degree in chemistry from the Georgia Institute of Technology in 1966 and a PhD in biochemistry from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1972. He joined Cetus in 1979. In 1986, he became the director of molecular biology at Xytronyx. And starting in 1987, he worked as a consultant on nucleic acid chemistry for multiple companies.

He is survived by his wife, three children, and two grandchildren.

___
https://cen.acs.org/static/about/aboutus.html This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink. ← WEATHER WARFARE IN THE GULF: Is Hurricane Delta yet another geoengineered weather weapon aimed at the conservative Deep South??COVID-19 Test Produces Up To 90% False Positives →