
Retired Surgical Tech/Nurse
Mike
I read a paper that said instead of graphene oxide in the shot, it is graphene hydroxide. The author said graphene hydroxide is difficult to detect. He did his dissertation on graphene hydroxide, which he said is nonbiodegradable, and therefore, the time it would be in someone's body could be much longer than thought. He also said that graphene hydroxide is very difficult to impossible to detect in an autopsy.
I put out a feeler on Substack to see what people thought, but they didn't really address the Hydroxide question.
It was a Substack of physicians discussing the shot, but maybe I need a chemist to ask.
Can you or someone else answer my question: "Would it be outside the realm of possibility for what we think is graphene oxide to actually be graphene hydroxide?"
This could be a game changer - not one we might prefer, but a game changer nonetheless. Pl let me know.
@pathfnd1 I believe it , the hydroxide meets with the iron in the oxygenated blood (hemoglobin), and creates the oxide. Something like that.