Tulsa Studies Validate Quantum Upgrade

Research shows Quantum Energy Speeds up Human Cell Recovery

A release yesterday from Schoerfling, Austria, heralds new research conducted in the biochemistry lab at The University of Tulsa demonstrating that Quantum Upgrade® helps accelerate the recovery of human cells after the cells are “scratched” with a laser.

Quantum Upgrade is a technology service that provides a continuous flow of quantum energy to people in many environments, including homes, cars, and businesses. The studies of the effects of Quantum Upgrade on human dermal fibroblasts exposed to the stress of laser scratching were conducted over 12 months by Dr. Robert Sheaff, PhD, an Associate Professor of Biochemistry.

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Manufacturing Career Fair Thursday

Tulsa Community College with the Oklahoma Employment Security Commission, will host a Manufacturing Career Fair on Thursday, April 25 at the TCC Northeast Campus.

Designed to showcase opportunities within the manufacturing sector, the career fair will feature numerous employers from the region. These companies are eager to connect with potential candidates who are interested in exploring career paths in manufacturing with great starting wages.

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Child Vaccines and the Autism Epidemic

For decades, children who developed autism after receiving routine vaccines have been denied justice. Their parents have been ridiculed, gaslighted, left to cope on their own. Kids suffered.

All because the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program (NVICP) determined vaccines didn’t cause autism in three “test” claims. Those three claims determined the fate of over 5,000 children in the NVICP’s Omnibus Autism Proceeding (OAP) — and those 5,000 children represented hundreds of thousands of vaccine-injured children.

This twisted miscarriage of justice directly affected the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Bruesewitz v. Wyeth, largely shielding the pharmaceutical industry from liability for vaccine injury.

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Election Board Decides Complaint

Beginning local conflict in the current election cycle, Democrat candidates for the office of Tulsa County Commissioner District 2 faced off at an administrative hearing of the Election Board Tuesday morning in a two-on-one attack.

Maria Barnes, the complainant, asserted that Jim Rea had not lived in the district for the full six months prior to filing as required by law. Sarah Gray, running for the same office also as a Democrat, was beside her helping Barnes make the case.

Rea closed on the purchase of a residence in District 2 September 29 and updated his voter registration October 1, 2023. The new home is a few blocks from his previous residence which was not in the district and Rea declared he purchased the new home specifically to run for the county office.

Complainants Sarah Gray, Maria Barnes vs. Jim Rea, Laurie Phillips
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