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Mr. Bitey
Location: Milwaukee, WI Gender: Male Total Likes: 848 likes
Meow Meow Fudder Mucker!
| | | Re: abandoned-Dexter's Lab < Reply # 5 on 2/14/2019 12:31 PM > | Reply with Quote
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| Give abandonment a reason for its sacrificial reclamation to nature. Love it. Remember it. Take a picture. Share it. Leave the decay to nature. Lifetime member of The Anti-MyInstaTubeTweetFace consortium. |
| kathryn_nj
Location: NJ Gender: Female Total Likes: 6 likes
| | | | Re: abandoned-Dexter's Lab < Reply # 11 on 2/14/2019 4:58 PM > | Reply with Quote
| | | Posted by Max Power @strangeplaces
In my video, we found "breast tissue." Now, I'm no expert, but last time I checked, Kidneys were not located in the tities. We also stumbled upon substances that are used when producing vaccines (monoclonal mouse anti-human cytokeratin). Good job Dr. Dumbass. You have just earned your PHD in headassery for your "Kidneys in the tities" hypothesis.
| If you're going for the title of biggest jackass on the internet, then I commend you. However, if you would open your god damn eyes and look at the plaque literally attached to the building, you could find the expansive history behind it as a research facility for hematology. They primarily researched sickle cell anemia given the locations proximity to the relevant population. There's dozens of different medical journals backing this up over the years that even include the address of the building right on the papers if you have enough brain power to look it up. This hospital has no major records of receiving any grants or publishing any studies relating to "infectious diseases" other than one study on nosocomial microbial infections, which is a big difference. Also, I enjoy your vast knowledge on producing vaccines as well. The cytokeratin and the tissue you found go together and were likely leftover from a series of test samples showing how to detect carcinomas from breast tissue. Certain cancer cells will basically latch onto the cytokeratin and "glow" under certain conditions. I've attached a photo I took the other day at work of a FNA of a Spindle Cell Carcinoma that is just stained with gram stain for comparison. Spoiler alert though, I'm not an expert, but I'm also not completely retarded like you.
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