Claims: about pcr tests

5 claims
Narrow claims Pick any combination. Press Enter to apply typed text.
Clear filters
Speaker
Target
Topic
Certainty
Claim text
Date range
13 Dec 2025
Between 86 and 90% of COVID tests using PCR methods were false positives.

Today we're going to be looking at research from Germany that shows that between 86 and 90% of COVID tests using the PCR preliminaries chain reaction methods were false positives. In other words, COVID was massively overdiagnosed.

13 Nov 2025
A baby adopted from Romania tested negative for HIV in Romania but tested positive after arriving in America.

By the way, another Duisberg story is that there's a couple that adopted a baby in Romania. They're covered in this documentary, House of Numbers. And they adopt the baby. It's tested for AIDS in Romania, tested for HIV, and negative. It gets to America. They do another test. Uh-oh, the baby is HIV positive.

09 Mar 2020
Reports of coronavirus reinfection are likely due to false negative tests or residual viral DNA detected by PCR tests, not actual reinfection.

There are not many cases of reinfection that have been found, but experts who have looked into it are of the opinion that there are a couple explanations that are the most likely. The first is that these people who, you know, these are people who got false negatives in the tests that deemed them recovered. So it's not actually a reinfection as much as it is them still being sick, but having gotten inaccurate negative tests. That doesn't sound possible. It's possible, but it seems probably unlikely. Since to be discharged from these hospitals, people have to test negative in two consecutive tests one day apart. It is unlikely, but it's also not impossible since false negatives are more common than false positives. Right. So it's possible, and that's one explanation. Well, considering the kit rollout that we've seen, like there's all there's all kinds of possibilities. Absolutely. Absolutely. And the other possibility that they often bring up is that the PCR test that's being done that found them positive after recovering could be picking up remnants of the virus because it's a super sensitive test. This New York Times article points out that PCR tests still, quote, detect remnants of the measles virus months after people are no longer contagious. So there are those possibilities. There are other explanations than this virus keeps coming back.