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So, m'dear, would you say that the UCSD nano removal experiment using oscillating currents is kind of like putting a micro Lakhovsky coil in the blood? They're both using the same principle from what I can see! This makes me wonder if, when one uses the coil set up externally, would one be using the chelators either before, during or after exposure, be actively flushing out the nanotech?

I don't know if you've seen this yet, but SAM's SubStack is proposing a very interesting nano mitigation strategy using a blood sample on a slide being "treated" or more appropriately, nano being disrupted in a mirrored cube with two directly opposing lasers. The client sits near the cube with their blood sample being lasered and, from what I can tell, possibly time-reversed somehow. The treatment is based on quantum entanglement. Her clients are seeing very promising results

https://sam368.substack.com/p/sams-lasercube-the-prototype-is-ready

Here's what she says: "As already mentioned, synthetic biology uses a kind of communication grid, which is partly based on magnetism and non-linear optics, which means that it can tunnel through time."

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