The Virus Hunter Dr. Stefan Lanka: Belief in
“Viruses” is a Religion
As the COVID-19 plandemic unfolded in 2020, honest journalists not employed by the pharma-funded corporate media did real investigative research into this “new” deadly “virus,” and it was quickly discovered that this “virus” had never in fact been isolated and seen, and that the PCR tests used to “detect” it were meaningless. However, the fact is that no virus has ever been isolated and detected, and one scientist who has been blowing the whistle on this false belief in viruses, stating that belief in viruses is a “religion,” is German microbiologist Dr. Stefan Lanka. Dr. Lanka gained worldwide headlines in 2017 when he offered an award of 100,000 Euros to anyone who could prove the existence of the measles “virus.” The medical establishment tried to call him out on his statement to collect the award, but Dr. Lanka disputed their evidence, and the matter went into the German court system, where the German Federal Supreme Court confirmed that there was not enough evidence to prove the existence of the measles virus. Dr. Lanka’s assertion that viruses do not actually exist goes back decades before this event, however, back to the days when HIV research was being done.
“Viruses” is a Religion
As the COVID-19 plandemic unfolded in 2020, honest journalists not employed by the pharma-funded corporate media did real investigative research into this “new” deadly “virus,” and it was quickly discovered that this “virus” had never in fact been isolated and seen, and that the PCR tests used to “detect” it were meaningless. However, the fact is that no virus has ever been isolated and detected, and one scientist who has been blowing the whistle on this false belief in viruses, stating that belief in viruses is a “religion,” is German microbiologist Dr. Stefan Lanka. Dr. Lanka gained worldwide headlines in 2017 when he offered an award of 100,000 Euros to anyone who could prove the existence of the measles “virus.” The medical establishment tried to call him out on his statement to collect the award, but Dr. Lanka disputed their evidence, and the matter went into the German court system, where the German Federal Supreme Court confirmed that there was not enough evidence to prove the existence of the measles virus. Dr. Lanka’s assertion that viruses do not actually exist goes back decades before this event, however, back to the days when HIV research was being done.
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