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Found 10 results for "83677b094af1e1ba8498fcc1902fd4fb" across all boards searching md5.

Anonymous /vg/532587054#532744779
7/26/2025, 1:26:53 PM
Anonymous Slovenia /sp/149934387#149946430
7/25/2025, 2:56:20 PM
Anonymous ID: nOiF6fnNIreland /pol/510696459#510700999
7/18/2025, 9:42:33 AM
>>510700641
Mozzarella doesn't look like kitten puke last I checked.
Anonymous ID: ciy9He2DGermany /pol/510595178#510610908
7/17/2025, 9:52:51 AM
>>510610835
LMAO only 10 posts >>510595430
if you lurk long enough your jewdar becomes like a sixth sense
Anonymous ID: xqOybLaoSweden /pol/510424439#510434609
7/15/2025, 11:57:57 AM
Anonymous /tv/212286018#212288103
7/3/2025, 5:46:00 AM
Anonymous /b/936571611#936571691
7/3/2025, 5:46:00 AM
Anonymous /vg/529566893#529585458
7/2/2025, 1:59:51 AM
Anonymous /co/149230667#149235568
7/2/2025, 1:25:33 AM
>>149235069
>proof?
Anonymous /news/1408667#1408667
5/29/2025, 10:02:48 PM
After Donald Trump and his White House team unveiled “The MAHA Report: Making Our Children Healthy Again” last week, The New York Times noted, “The document echoes talking points Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has championed for decades.”

That was among the obvious red flags surrounding the report. Kennedy is, after all, notorious for pushing unscientific conspiracy theories and claiming, among other things, that Wi-Fi causes “leaky brain.” Any document reflecting his ideas related to health care policy should reflexively be treated with skepticism.

With this in mind, no one was especially surprised when the White House report started crumbling under scrutiny. The Washington Post reported, “Some of the report’s suggestions ... stretched the limits of science, medical experts said. Several sections of the report offer misleading representations of findings in scientific papers.”

That was last week. This week, NOTUS advanced these concerns, reporting that the administration’s “Make America Healthy Again” report “misinterprets some studies and cites others that don’t exist, according to the listed authors.”

For example, the administration’s document listed epidemiologist Katherine Keyes as the first author of a study on anxiety in adolescents — except she didn’t write it.

“The paper cited is not a real paper that I or my colleagues were involved with,” Keyes told NOTUS. “We’ve certainly done research on this topic, but did not publish a paper in JAMA Pediatrics on this topic with that co-author group, or with that title.”

>https://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/maddowblog/trump-administrations-maha-report-cites-nonexistent-scientific-studies-rcna209732