Professor Martin Neil uses artificial intelligence (“AI”) to calculate
the relative and absolute risk of meningitis, given the symptoms and
test results.
AI “hallucinated” the supporting science papers
and resisted Prof. Neil’s initial assertion. It “then completely backs
my subsequent line of questioning and reasoning,” he said. Bottom
line is that there are 66 false positives for every true case, and
about a 1 in 67 chance a student diagnosed as having meningitis actually
has it.
Even more damning is: When asked, AI calculated that
about 30% of students at the end of a weekend would be labelled as
“suspected cases” of meningitis purely from hangovers, colds and
background noise.
UK news has been chock full of scare stories
about the meningitis “outbreak” in Kent, England, accompanied by the
vaccination of students and with high-strength antibiotics handed out
like sweets.
Being busy on other things, we’ve ignored it, but
now news is coming out in the press that the “cases” are now being
downgraded and are now “past their peak.”
Astute readers will, of course, have twigged that this whole panic has been confected from the start.
The parallels to covid are obvious, especially so when you take into account operation Pegasus, which ran in Kent in 2025 and was celebrated as the largest pandemic preparedness simulation in UK history.
Also
relevant is that the reported epicentre of the outbreak is a nightclub
called Chemistry in Canterbury, a University town in Kent.
Peter McCollough has even claimed that this outbreak is evidence of a laboratory-leak. So, yet again we see the usual fear-mongering canards rearing their ugly heads ....<<<Read More>>>....
