From Brownstone Institute, Aug. 27, 2023 Source: Are you Ready to Get Injected? – by Robert W Malone MD, MS The Biden administration has requested funding from congress to develop a new COVID vaccine and is recommending that all Americans get this mystery “vaccine”. Please keep in mind that, despite years of intense effort, there has never been a safe and effective... Read more
Archive for the ‘Math/Statistics’ Category
Visibility of Vaccine Adverse Effects “no longer needed”.
August 29 | Posted by mrossol | 1st Amendment, American Thought, CDC NIH, Disinformation, Health, Math/Statistics, Science, Transparency[non], VaccineUS nursing home data shows clearly that the COVID vaccines made things much worse
August 20 | Posted by mrossol | Health, Interesting, Mandates, Math/Statistics, Science, Transparency[non], VaccineSource: US nursing home data shows clearly that the COVID vaccines made things much worse
What do the real stats look like for geriatric practices and nursing homes post-vaccine?
August 10 | Posted by mrossol | Critical Thinking, Math/Statistics, Science, Transparency[non], VaccineSeems like a pretty basic question: If product X is promoted to cause result Y, well, is there more Y when product X is used? mrossol Source: What do the real stats look like for geriatric practices and nursing homes post-vaccine? Please take this very important survey. We never hear of any success stories from nursing homes about how the all-cause... Read more
A Computer-Assisted Proof Solves the ‘Packing Coloring’ Problem
July 2 | Posted by mrossol | Interesting, Math/Statistics, Personal DevelopmentSource: A Computer-Assisted Proof Solves the ‘Packing Coloring’ Problem | WIRED
These Are the Most Bizarre Numbers in the Universe
May 25 | Posted by mrossol | Interesting, Math/StatisticsSource: These Are the Most Bizarre Numbers in the Universe – Scientific American
How Randomness Improves Algorithms
April 7 | Posted by mrossol | Interesting, Math/StatisticsSource: How Randomness Improves Algorithms | Quanta Magazine ince the very first days of computer science — a field known for its methodical approach to problem-solving — randomness has played an important role. The first program to run on the world’s first general-purpose electronic computer used randomness to simulate nuclear processes. Similar approaches have since been used in astrophysics, climate science... Read more