Health Ranger posts new microscopy photos of covid swabs, covid masks and mysterious red and blue fibers

Health Ranger posts new microscopy photos of covid swabs, covid masks and mysterious red and blue fibers

Image: Health Ranger posts new microscopy photos of covid swabs, covid masks and mysterious red and blue fibers

 

(Natural News) What follows is a series of microscopy photos of covid swabs (a synthetic swab, then a cotton swab), a covid mask and some zoomed-in photos of mysterious red and blue fibers found in the masks.

The magnification range for these photos is 50X to 200X. Most were taken with white light, but several (as indicated) were taken with UV light.

The images shown here are 600 pixels wide. We have higher resolution images available to researchers and indy media journalists; contact us for those hi-res images.

More microscopy investigations are under way, and new images will be posted as they are finalized.

First, this series shows the carbon fiber layer of a covid mask, illuminated with UV light:

Here’s the same carbon fiber layer under white light, shown at different magnifications:

Notice the adhesive film between carbon fiber strands:

Some areas of the carbon fiber strands appear to surround “egg sac” looking objects, but they might simply be bump textures in the white fiber layer:

Here’s a look at the outer layer of a China-made covid mask. This first photo is shown at around 50X.

Here’s 200X, which reveals huge gaps in the fibers, revealing such masks to be essentially pointless when it comes to stopping airborne virus particles:

Many masks appear to contain mysterious red and blue fibers. Here’s one such fiber in a China-made mask:

This next photo shows a Taiwan-made mask with a far more dense fiber weave, meaning it would be more effective against airborne particles:

Here’s a closer look at some of the blue and red fibers found across all the masks we examined. We do not know why these fibers are there, and we are not claiming them to be Morgellon’s fibers. Their origin and purpose is entirely unknown at this point:

Some of the mysterious fibers are black or gray and appear to be shaped like small hooks or fragments of hooks:

In order to reveal more contrast in the images, I stained the masks with iodine (a common technique in microbiology). This helps to show the mysterious fibers in more detail:

Here’s a cotton fiber nasal swab used for covid testing:

A closeup (200X) of the cotton swab:

This is a UV-illuminated snapshot of the synthetic fibers found on a covid swab, stained with iodine:

We took a time-lapse photo series and aggregated the photos to reveal strange sparkles coming off the synthetic swab strands when exposed to UV light:

This is taken at about 200X magnification. Notice the translucent synthetic fibers on the right. These are the fibers whose tips are swabbing your upper nasal passages during a covid test:

Here’s a look at the iodine-stained swab under normal white light:

Zoomed in a little more:

These may look like “worms” but they appear to be synthetic fibers. We aren’t yet sure about the topography of the tips yet, but will examine those more closely in future microscopy sessions:

Here’s what a covid test swab (synthetic) looks like under white light:

Pay close attention to this last image which is a digital zoom of a bluish fiber shown above. This is taken from a China-made covid mask. First, notice that one fiber which crosses horizontally in front of the fiber is nearly transparent and refractive (where it crosses the blue fiber). Is this a natural fiber, or something synthetic?

But more importantly, look at the spikes coming off the “head” of the strange fiber on the lower left of this image:

That “head” appears to be some sort of spike structure or gripper structure, and we don’t normally see this sort of structure from natural fibers. This raises real questions about what these fibers are, where they came from, and what their purpose might be in covid masks.

Many people experience difficulty breathing while wearing covid masks. Media reports have already warned that graphene fibers have been found in some masks, contaminating the respiratory pathways of people who wear them. What other structures or fibers might be deliberately added to these masks?

We don’t know all the answers yet, but we are looking closely to see what else we find.

Feel free to use these photos. Please credit NaturalNews.com. We are working hard in the lab to acquire more photos and videos that are relevant to all this. Thank you for your support as we conduct more laboratory investigations in the interest of public health.

April 26th: Covid swabs and masks appear to contain “hooks” and strange fibers that can be inhaled directly into the lungs

Image: April 26th: Covid swabs and masks appear to contain “hooks” and strange fibers that can be inhaled directly into the lungs

 

(Natural News) Over the weekend we published a series of nearly 40 microscope photos showing strange fibers, structures and even “hooks” that are embedded in the fibers of covid nasal swabs and masks. Many of these fibers appear to possess properties that would cause them to adhere to soft tissue such as lung tissue. Their presence in covid masks is very disturbing, given that these fibers are very likely easily inhaled and may lodge in lung tissue.

There are currently zero standards of efficacy or quality control enforced against covid masks. No studies that we know of have looked closely at mask contaminants and how they might interfere with healthy respiration in humans. Despite the complete lack of quality control, safety or effectiveness testing, masks are now being pushed onto infants as young as two years old.

Those who claim masks prevent transmission of the coronavirus are lying. There is no evidence to support the propaganda, and just like with social distancing, the “masking” push is rooted in quackery and fraud, not legitimate science.

In today’s Situation Update podcast, I narrate the microscopy photos that show bizarre structures in masks and swabs. Here are just a few of the photos to give you a glimpse of what we found.

What is this egg sac-like structure in this first photo from a carbon fiber mask?

Why are there red and blue fibers scattered throughout the mask materials?

And why do some black or gray fibers resemble hooks?

Why do nasal swabs appear to contain fields of “spikes” when viewed under ultraviolet light?

And what is the spiked “gripper” end of this blue fiber that was found in a covid mask from China?

These unedited microscopy photos raise serious questions about the safety and composition of covid masks and nasal swabs. It’s clear that the masks and swabs are transferring materials to the body, not merely sampling materials or filtering materials. In other words, masks and swabs are themselves medical interventions with unknown health consequences.

In today’s Situation Update, I explain all the photos and how they were taken, using iodine stains and ultraviolet light in certain cases:

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