Wow! Did you do all that research, Renee? Well done. Very informative and I agree with it all! Except I am going to research if there was a female who helped Watson and Crick in discovering the double helix of the DNA...I remember reading it once, and cheering for us womenfolk who are dropped by name and effort in most of the "big" disoveries!
Rosalind Franklin made a crucial contribution to the discovery of the double helix structure of DNA, but some would say she got a raw deal. Biographer Brenda Maddox called her the "Dark Lady of DNA," based on a once disparaging reference to Franklin by one of her coworkers. Unfortunately, this negative appellation undermined the positive impact of her discovery. Indeed, Franklin is in the shadows of science history, for while her work on DNA was crucial to the discovery of its structure, her contribution to that landmark discovery is little known..."
Wow! Did you do all that research, Renee? Well done. Very informative and I agree with it all! Except I am going to research if there was a female who helped Watson and Crick in discovering the double helix of the DNA...I remember reading it once, and cheering for us womenfolk who are dropped by name and effort in most of the "big" disoveries!
I had a conversation with my mothers oncologist re/ glucose feeding cancer cells.
She said cancer is clever, if it doesn’t have sugar, it will feed off of something else, she dismissed the theory.
Not saying it is right or wrong, just stating what she said.
More on the Warburg Effect caused by Endotoxin in Jabs.
https://geoffpain.substack.com/p/warburg-effect-caused-by-mrna-jab
Found her!
"A crucial contribution.
Rosalind Franklin made a crucial contribution to the discovery of the double helix structure of DNA, but some would say she got a raw deal. Biographer Brenda Maddox called her the "Dark Lady of DNA," based on a once disparaging reference to Franklin by one of her coworkers. Unfortunately, this negative appellation undermined the positive impact of her discovery. Indeed, Franklin is in the shadows of science history, for while her work on DNA was crucial to the discovery of its structure, her contribution to that landmark discovery is little known..."