Offtopic

03 Mar 2022, 10:49pm
Yuna Sakashiro(...) I promise I'll stop posting links to scientific articles as soon as Artie adds science to the list of things not to discuss in Offtopic. (...)


This isn't science, that's pseudoscience made from bullcrap conspiracy theories akin to the people who believe 5G causes cancer or that Bill Gates released COVID-19, with masks storing microchips to track you. Then again people are wondering on why pandemic is still going on!

Oh wait, I forgot! There's no pandemic, it's all conspiracy theory to control us. /sarcasm
04 Mar 2022, 12:05am
Iwao KishiroThis isn't science, that's pseudoscience made from bullcrap conspiracy theories akin to the people who believe 5G causes cancer or that Bill Gates released COVID-19, with masks storing microchips to track you. Then again people are wondering on why pandemic is still going on!

Oh wait, I forgot! There's no pandemic, it's all conspiracy theory to control us. /sarcasm

Hmm, whom to believe? A bunch of professors from University of Oregon, Michigan State University, University of South Florida, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine who put their names and reputation on the line? Or some anonymous furry nutcase on a gamers forum who thinks science is just a capitalist conspiracy to slander the People's Republic of China? Tough choice...
04 Mar 2022, 1:26am
I was a little busy at the time Yuna posted the article so I didn't get a good look at it. Also I'm no scientist so a lot of what I did see didn't make much sense to me at all. That said I did notice the article appeared to be peer reviewed and was written by about a dozen scientists/professors from several universities around the world and had a few dozen studies/sources/references to back it. I'll be the first to acknowledge I may have completely misread what little I saw but what else am I missing? Why is it being jumped on as if Yuna posted a random anonymous conspiracy thread from some sketchy deepweb site with nothing backing it? The article has since been removed from the chat here and I don't remember where/what it was all about to find it again. I'm not taking a side in this argument, I'm just trying to figure out what's up.
04 Mar 2022, 4:16am
Light-HawkI was a little busy at the time Yuna posted the article so I didn't get a good look at it. Also I'm no scientist so a lot of what I did see didn't make much sense to me at all. That said I did notice the article appeared to be peer reviewed and was written by about a dozen scientists/professors from several universities around the world and had a few dozen studies/sources/references to back it. I'll be the first to acknowledge I may have completely misread what little I saw but what else am I missing? Why is it being jumped on as if Yuna posted a random anonymous conspiracy thread from some sketchy deepweb site with nothing backing it? The article has since been removed from the chat here and I don't remember where/what it was all about to find it again. I'm not taking a side in this argument, I'm just trying to figure out what's up.

I'm going to stay out of the details, suffice to say the meta takeaway on this is that COVID arguments are the new Godwin's Law.
04 Mar 2022, 11:38am
Light-HawkI was a little busy at the time Yuna posted the article so I didn't get a good look at it. Also I'm no scientist so a lot of what I did see didn't make much sense to me at all. That said I did notice the article appeared to be peer reviewed and was [claimed to be] written by about a dozen [probably fake, impersonated, or disreputable (like a doctor who believes in alien blood cures) 'scientists/professors' from several universities around the world and had a few dozen studies/sources/references to back it make it look legit.

FTFY.

The reality is if this paper was worth publishing an actual publisher, who's reputation would be on the line, would peer review it (something I don't think you understand correctly, which is understandable because those outside the field aren't expected to know what those in it do), and would add or subtract to their body of work that contributes to the field for all the SCIENTIFIC community to see and evaluate. Open access means anybody can write up anything, it gets glanced at by the website manager, and published. It is the Facebook of research media. Another way to look at it is this: This paper was rejected by 100 reputable publishers otherwise it would be found in one of their publications, not in an Open access dumpster.

Edit: and I would add that the Viral genome was determined within hours of it being isolated in 2020. A paper suddenly appearing now, years later, saying this sequence is terrorism just doesn't make sense. It's like translating a book from german to to english and suddenly 2 years later someone says 'oh hey, a whole chapter was plagarized from another book'. Anyone who's been to University knows this gets checked every time for everything, even your BS essays on what you think the word 'facts' means...


Last edit: 04 Mar 2022, 11:55am
04 Mar 2022, 2:01pm
Burstar or somethingA paper suddenly appearing now, years later, saying this sequence is terrorism

The paper says no such thing. This shows that the only conspiracy theory here is the one that you made up in your own head: that a bunch of professors from universities all over the world conspired to accuse Moderna of terrorism. No such thing happened. The paper merely says "Hey, we found this nucleotide sequence in the BLAST database, and we have no idea why it shows up in this virus but not in any other known coronavirus, please review." This is exactly what scientists are supposed to do when they make observations they can't explain: publish the findings and debate them with peers. Hence the OA.
04 Mar 2022, 2:54pm
Yuna Sakashiro
Iwao KishiroThis isn't science, that's pseudoscience made from bullcrap conspiracy theories akin to the people who believe 5G causes cancer or that Bill Gates released COVID-19, with masks storing microchips to track you. Then again people are wondering on why pandemic is still going on!

Oh wait, I forgot! There's no pandemic, it's all conspiracy theory to control us. /sarcasm


Hmm, whom to believe? A bunch of professors from University of Oregon, Michigan State University, University of South Florida, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine who put their names and reputation on the line? Or some anonymous furry nutcase on a gamers forum who thinks science is just a capitalist conspiracy to slander the People's Republic of China? Tough choice...


You twisted my own words as if I believed into them. The latter line was sarcasm about how some people see COVID, pandemic, restrictions and come up with absurd theories just because they are told not to harm other people by their careless behavior that may result in terminal disabilities till end of your life - or a painful death, alone, as anonymous patient in the hospital that not even family may see in their final moments.

What I meant was in the original post was sarcasm, even evidently labeled it. Made it even big letters for you to notice it, since you didn't the first time. However, if you keep twisting my words, I have nothing else to say to you. Especially when you immediately went on trying to diminish me for being a furry - and doing a personal attack en lieu of constructive evidence is usually employed by the side that has no arguments to continue on. I guess we're done here.

If I am a bit too heated about the subject, them I am really sorry. I lost friends to pandemic (as well as disinformation about it) and now I am about to lose other friends just because some moronic dictator decided to invade another country.


Last edit: 04 Mar 2022, 3:10pm
04 Mar 2022, 4:59pm
Yuna Sakashiro The paper says no such thing. This shows that the only conspiracy theory here is the one that you made up in your own head: that a bunch of professors from universities all over the world conspired to accuse Moderna of terrorism. No such thing happened. The paper merely says "Hey, we found this nucleotide sequence in the BLAST database, and we have no idea why it shows up in this virus but not in any other known coronavirus, please review." This is exactly what scientists are supposed to do when they make observations they can't explain: publish the findings and debate them with peers. Hence the OA.


Don't play stupid Yuna. You know exactly that is the subtext of this paper otherwise you wouldn't have posted it, because 'this is for debate amongst peers', not the likes of us right? And, you conveniently sidestep the 2 years to essentially do a google search for a gene sequence. No, this is to shit disturb and no other reason. Scientists make their observations and publish them in REPUTABLE JOURNALS to debate them amongst peers, hence the existence of reputable journals. To save everyone in the field from wasting their time looking at all the trash people would publish just for the attention if they could. Oh, wait they can now, hence the OA.
04 Mar 2022, 10:14pm
Burstar or somethingAnd, you conveniently sidestep the 2 years to essentially do a google search for a gene sequence.

I don't. In fact that's why I find this one so fascinating. The sequence fulfills three criteria at once: too long to be a random point mutation, absent from any other known virus, and proprietary. It's basically impossible to find by chance, you have to know where to look.

David Gorski, MD, PhD, editor of Science-Based Medicine (pro vax, anti lab leak) has peer-reviewed the paper. He writes:
Just for yucks, I did some BLAST searches myself, and after doing a number of them I concluded that this result was not easy to come by. I had to search the sequence patented by Moderna versus SARS-CoV-2 with the “loosest” parameters that allowed for the least degree of similarity; otherwise there were zero matches, largely because stricter parameters only find longer stretches of sequence similarity. That’s why I now rather suspect that the investigators searched the sequence for SARS-CoV-2 versus every sequence ever patented by Moderna, and the best they could come up with was this short 19 amino acid match, after which, even though it was the reverse complement and not even on the strand that codes for the protein, started searching other Moderna patents for the same 19mer and found a few more hits.
{...}
Whoever initially found this 19 nucleotide sequence did a lot of work to find it. Yet, this is the best they could come up with as slam dunk “evidence” that SARS-CoV-2 was engineered by Moderna, to the point where they have to do serious contortions make such a short stretch seem nefarious?

There you have it. A conspiracy against Moderna. Gorski confirms the match, but he has no clue how the authors found it, and that drives him bonkers. That's the irony here: In order to explain these findings away, you have to come up with your own conspiracy theory. None of the authors of the paper was suggesting that the proprietary sequence was inserted by Moderna. Even the Wuhan lab leak theory does not suggest this. In that sense the vitriolic reactions to the paper reveal more than the paper itself. That's some next level trolling right there.
04 Mar 2022, 10:59pm
Yuna SakashiroNone of the authors of the paper was suggesting that the proprietary sequence was inserted by Moderna. Even the Wuhan lab leak theory does not suggest this. In that sense the vitriolic reactions to the paper reveal more than the paper itself. That's some next level trolling right there.


If we shouldn't be reading into the subtext of this paper, and the authors don't say anything about insertion or whatnot directly... then how did this end up being brought up, anyway? I am wading into this conversation a bit late, but it feels like there are some double standards here.

In my opinion, it probably doesn't really matter which angle you're reading the paper from, considering the actual "results" are insignificant. It also doesn't go any way to countering the rest of the evidence that Covid is naturally-occurring. And it also doesn't make any sense if someone did dare to try and read into it as proof that Covid is engineered.
05 Mar 2022, 12:55am
I'll just put this here for other fans of Bodacious Space Pirates! IT'S TIME FOR SOME PIRACY!

05 Mar 2022, 9:16am
Yuna Sakashiro
Burstar or somethingAnd, you conveniently sidestep the 2 years to essentially do a google search for a gene sequence.


I don't. In fact that's why I find this one so fascinating. The sequence fulfills three criteria at once: too long to be a random point mutation, absent from any other known virus, and proprietary. It's basically impossible to find by chance, you have to know where to look.

David Gorski, MD, PhD, editor of Science-Based Medicine (pro vax, anti lab leak) has peer-reviewed the paper. He writes:
Just for yucks, I did some BLAST searches myself, and after doing a number of them I concluded that this result was not easy to come by. I had to search the sequence patented by Moderna versus SARS-CoV-2 with the “loosest” parameters that allowed for the least degree of similarity; otherwise there were zero matches, largely because stricter parameters only find longer stretches of sequence similarity. That’s why I now rather suspect that the investigators searched the sequence for SARS-CoV-2 versus every sequence ever patented by Moderna, and the best they could come up with was this short 19 amino acid match, after which, even though it was the reverse complement and not even on the strand that codes for the protein, started searching other Moderna patents for the same 19mer and found a few more hits.
{...}
Whoever initially found this 19 nucleotide sequence did a lot of work to find it. Yet, this is the best they could come up with as slam dunk “evidence” that SARS-CoV-2 was engineered by Moderna, to the point where they have to do serious contortions make such a short stretch seem nefarious?


There you have it. A conspiracy against Moderna. Gorski confirms the match, but he has no clue how the authors found it, and that drives him bonkers. That's the irony here: In order to explain these findings away, you have to come up with your own conspiracy theory. None of the authors of the paper was suggesting that the proprietary sequence was inserted by Moderna. Even the Wuhan lab leak theory does not suggest this. In that sense the vitriolic reactions to the paper reveal more than the paper itself. That's some next level trolling right there.


You see that this quote literally proves the point I'm making right? That your original linked article was garbage. I don't think you do because you're bolding and emphasizing words clearly being uttered sarcastically by the author as shown by the conveniently bypassed "Yet, this is the best they could come up with" portion of the statement. He's saying The 'research' was essentially 'inconclusive' (the sequence is short, inoccuous, and not even actually found in the virus), the methodology (which should be crystal clear and easily repeatable as that is one of the critical tenets to actual Scientific study) poorly described and only repeatable with the loosest of pseudo-related searches, and clearly only done for the purpose of 'next level trolling'. Also, he is criticizing the paper's authors for having an obvious bias. They were looking for Moderna sequences which is itself evidence they had preconceptions of a conspiracy. Pretty weird to have such obvious preconceptions if you're 'legit true scientists doing totally valid unbiased research' that can only be published in places nobody looks at it first...

The reaction isn't to the paper itself, at least by anyone whose opinion is worth caring about. I personally couldn't care less about its contents because it's not worth serious consideration due to its source: Open Access Publication. You realize that if the OAJ didn't exist, and this paper had to go through actual peer review before it was disseminated, that a whole lot of wasted effort by people whos time is a lot more relevant and valuable to the field than ours could have been avoided and actually is because, as I already linked previously, the ACTUAL Scientific agencies have already dubbed that OAJ as untrustworthy years ago.
05 Mar 2022, 2:44pm
Burstar or somethingYou see that this quote literally proves the point I'm making right?

What it proves is that the paper is factually correct.
05 Mar 2022, 6:48pm
Yuna Sakashiro
Burstar or somethingYou see that this quote literally proves the point I'm making right?


What it proves is that the paper is factually correct.

What it proves is you don't understand what words mean. The correct phrasing was 'what it proves is the paper is meaningless'
05 Mar 2022, 7:21pm
OH MY GOD C'MON PEOPLE.

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