Wednesday, October 05, 2011

Wait ... There's More ... !

The Nobel Prize Committee has been busy naming recipients for the yearly event. Perhaps they're not aware, not quite conscious of what they're doing in naming names and declaring prize-winners. They've fallen into a trap. It's that Jewish agenda at work again, to claim the podium on any and every occasion possible. For the final purpose, of course, of taking over the world.

Israeli scientist Daniel Shechtman won the 2011 Nobel Prize in Chemistry "for the discovery of quasicrystals," the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences announced Wednesday. Dr.Shechtman is a professor at the Technion - Israel Institute of Technology. His discovery, which was made in 1982, has "fundamentally altered how chemists conceive of solid matter," according to the academy.
Daniel Shechtman
Ariel Schalit / AP
Israeli scientist Daniel Shechtman poses for photographers during a news conference at the Haifa Technion, Israel, Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2011. Shechtman won the 2011 Nobel Prize in chemistry on Wednesday for his discovery of quasicrystals, a mosaic-like chemical structure that researchers previously thought was impossible. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

Three scientists who "revolutionised" understanding of how the body fights infection have shared this year's Nobel prize for medicine. Bruce Beutler, of the US, Jules Hoffmann from France and Ralph Steinman from Canada all shared the prize. Profs Beutler and Hoffman discovered how the body's first line of defence was activated. Prof Steinman discovered the dendritic cell, which helps defeat infection.

Ralph Steinman - a great scientist, an untimely death. Photo credit: Rockefeller University

As though that's not enough of a warning to those who are innocent of the true purpose of worldwise Jewry, yet another award has been announced. That of three astrophysicists whose remarkable discovery has given them, too, outstanding recognition. Joining the already crowded podium of prior-announced Nobel laureates over the years.

Nobel laureates Perlmutter, Schmidt, and Riess Three researchers behind the discovery that our Universe's expansion is accelerating have been awarded this year's Nobel prize for physics. Saul Perlmutter and Adam Riess of the US and Brian Schmidt of Australia will divide the prize.

At least 181 Jews and people of half- or three-quarters-Jewish ancestry have been awarded the Nobel Prize,1 accounting for 22% of all individual recipients worldwide between 1901 and 2010, and constituting 36% of all US recipients2 during the same period.3 In the research fields of Chemistry, Economics, Physics, and Physiology/Medicine, the corresponding world and US percentages are 26% and 39%, respectively. Among women laureates in the four research fields, the Jewish percentages (world and US) are 38% and 50%, respectively. Of organizations awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, 25% were founded principally by Jews or by people of half-Jewish descent. (Jews currently make up approximately 0.2% of the world's population and 2% of the US population.)
  • Chemistry (31 prize winners, 20% of world total, 27% of US total)
  • Economics (28 prize winners, 42% of world total, 55% of US total)
  • Literature (13 prize winners, 12% of world total, 27% of US total)
  • Peace (9 prize winners, 9% of world total, 10% of US total)4
  • Physics (47 prize winners, 25% of world total, 36% of US total)
  • Physiology or Medicine (53 prize winners, 27% of world total, 40% of US total)
See also data on "other Nobels":

Literature

World Peace

Chemistry

Economics



Medicine

Physics

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