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suzannegoh

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Posts posted by suzannegoh

  1. Go to the CMU Engineering Faculty and ask to speak with the head of the Mechanical Engineering department.  They can be very helpful.

    Or maybe Civil Engineering. Mechanical Engineering is a broad profession that can include anything from structural mechanics, to thermodynamics, to metallurgy, to computer programming.
    • Like 1
  2. O those nasty Europeans! who do you think is really calling the shots, surely you are not naive enough to think that America is taking all these actions for the good of the world!

    I won't have a personal dig, quite why people like you feel the need to insult people on a anonymous forum because there views are different is not very nice you know!

     

    What part of that insulted you?

     

    The illumatnti is calling the shots, with support from the Bilderberg Group.

     

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  3. True!
     
    In CyberGhost it shows the country used, not the origin country and that is the same outcome if I use the speed test from ADSLThailand: http://speedtest.adslthailand.com/
     
    In my router I use the OpenDNS Server and not the TRUE DNS Servers. Maybe that is why it shows the used country while on CyberGhost.


    DNS leaks are one thing that can give away your location, or at least give a clue that you are using a VPN. That's one thing that VPN users should test for (not all VPNs have DNS leaks but some do). The location services on Android are separate from that though, since that can access GPS data and cellular assisted location data and pass such data onto whatever app you are running.
  4. A test that you can do to see if Android is giving away your true location despite the location services seeming yo be turned off is to connect to your VPN and then run the Ookla Speedtest app. If the server that it selects is in Thailand then something is leaking your true location.

  5. One thing that can happen on Android is that an app might use the device's "Location Services" to figure out your true location rather than just looking at your public IP address. In such cases it won't help to use a VPN. Perhaps the "Location Services" are disabled on your Android box but enabled on your phone and tablet.

  6. No.

    When someone relies on logical fallacies to 'win' an argument they automatically loose.



    Sent from my Honor 7x using Tapatalk



    Bless your heart. Jesus loves you but hates math
  7. This must be a out on though, he can't really have a degree in Patristics.  Are you pretending to be an antivaxxer to discredit the movement?

  8. 9 minutes ago, Nick ZepTepi said:

    Yes I agree.


    Your qualifications are utter bullshit. 555

    Sent from my Honor 7x using Tapatalk
     

    You are holding out the author of that article to be an authority because he has a PhD in patristics.  Patristics is “Christian theology that deals with the lives, writings, and doctrines of the early Christian theologians”.  So basically he’s an authority because he’s a Christian?  That’s good to know, because then I can save money on our medical bills by consulting with our reverend instead of with a doctor.

  9. 30-60% effective for this season's strain? Although I haven't googled it (and don't have time now), I heard on the news that this year it is only 10% effective. If I have time this evening I will ask a friend who is a doctor.


    Either way, it's a lot less effective than in previous years. When you get up to around 80 or 90 percent efficacy you have pretty good protection because the protection comes from two sources - the direct protection that the vaccine gives you and the protection that comes from it being less likely that you will come into contact with infected people (because they too were vaccinated).
  10.  

     

    He has a PhD from Oxford, provides excellent references to his research, and offers alternative perspectives to geopolitical events. Well worth some reading if you can hold more than one point of view on a topic at a time.

     

    Sent from my Honor 7x using Tapatalk

     

     

     

    I have to call BS on that. There is no new data in that article, he just counts up the number of articles that were previously published, and claims causation of "diseases with unknown causes" on the basis of changes in the vaccine protocol having occurred around the same time frame. It's the type of pseudoscientific hokum that scientific illiterates eat up but it's just that, pseudoscientific hokum.

     

     

     

  11. 36 minutes ago, StevieAus said:

    That seems to be about the same problem here one Christmas card arrived  3 birthday cards failed to arrive.

    Has never been like this before problem is what is the solution?

    One solution is to use a mail forwarding service that will receive mail for you in your home country and once every so often send you accumulated mail to you in Thailand by DHL.

  12. The airstrips were built by America so I think America feels they should keep access to them. The strips were built for Vietnam war and USA probably feels they should have use of them if they go to war in the area. Perhaps just high expectations on the USA side.
      And they would definitely find out if it was against Thailands interest they would not get access. You are right they would not act as a colony.
      


    There's also a cooperative defence treaty between the US and the former SEATO nations to which Thailand is a signatory.
  13. Here's a factual study on correlations between the increase in auto immune diseases and mass influenza vaccination.  

    I'm not an advocate for either side, informed choice is much better, and the balance of information seems heavier to one side on this topic.

     

    Analysis here. https://gizadeathstar.com/2018/02/vaccine-meta-analysis-unknown-causes/

     

    Source here

    https://medium.com/@WorldMercury/diseases-with-unknown-etiology-trace-back-to-mass-vaccination-against-influenza-in-1976-b87cc064d849

     

    Clip from it.

     

    "Ca. 1975-76, something drastically changed: the number of articles about "new" diseases with unknown origins began a sharp upward rise, as evidenced in Lyons-Weiler's graph, and that trend has continued to this day. The question then, is what happened in that time period that might correlate with this dramatic rise? Lyons-Weiler does not mince words:

     

    What changed was national mass vaccination against influenza."

     

     

     

    Sent from my Honor 7x using Tapatalk

     

     

     

     

    Probably you are basing you conclusion on other things as well, but that particular article does not strike me as very compelling. It seems to boil down to saying that "there was a big increase the number of articles published about diseases with unknown origins in the mid-70's, and there was a change to the vaccine protocol in the mid-70's, therefore A was caused by B". Yeah, maybe, or maybe it was caused by Nixon resigning or the Bee Gees issuing their first disco album.

     

     

     

    • Like 1
  14. Going to the US soon where the flu season seems to still be escalating. 
    Is it possible to walk into Ram or other hospitals without an appointment and get a flu shot?


    Depending upon how worried you are about the flu, delaying the trip might be the most effective preventative measure. Part of the reason why this is a bad flu season is because the vaccine for this year's strain is not as effective as in previous years.
  15. I subscribed to TotalVPN and they have a Sydney server listed but it is totally useless when I try to log onto it. Trying to figure out which VPN is totally useful is an expensive mind game.

     

    Just out of curiosity, I tried speed testing to Sydney from a restaurant in Chiang Mai both with and without being connected to PIA's VPN server in Sydney. Without a VPN I get 5.51 Mbps down and 12.05 up. Connected to PIA's VPN server in Sydney I get 10.03 Mbps down and 11.27 up. So based upon speedtest.net results, PIA's VPN actually speeds up connections to Australia (from Chiang Mai, on an Android tablet).

     

    From that same restaurant I am getting 25 Mbps down and 11.0 Mbps up to/from Bangkok with no VPN. I think that the ISP is CAT.

     

     

     

     

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