Re: It's The Muppet Show! - Neil Ferguson
Posted: Wed May 17, 2023 1:55 pm
Thanks for that @Marfer . From it I managed to find a September 2016 event.
https://www.imperial.nhs.uk/about-us/ev ... s-diseases
I'm not convinced the guy above is the same individual as the poor quality webcam footage we continually see from 2020 onwards each time Neil Ferguson is paraded by the government/media as an expert.
Photo from 2007 BBC article:
Current photo on Imperial College London website:
Twitter photo, update unknown:
I would say the first and second are the same person, the third is hard to tell, it's almost the face of the ones before, and the hairline of the one after. The fourth I think is a different guy, taken from the Neil Ferguson twitter account. What I've discovered from that is quite interesting in itself and I'll discuss in the next post. But what stands out to me here, the lens magnification on his glasses appears to be greater on the fourth image compared to the previous three, and I think that goes hand-in-hand with the poor quality webcam recordings, and it's about someone else pretending to be the person in the earlier pictures.
https://www.imperial.nhs.uk/about-us/ev ... s-diseases
Predicting and preventing infectious diseases
Infectious diseases are one of the leading causes of death worldwide. Understanding what factors shape how they spread in populations and the specific processes of how individual pathogens take effect are essential to tackling infectious diseases.
In the third event of the Imperial College Academic Health Science Centre (AHSC) seminar series, two experts will talk about their research into the spread and prevention of infectious diseases.
The talks will be delivered by Neil Ferguson, Professor of Mathematical Biology at Imperial College London and Sarah Fidler, Professor of HIV and Communicable Diseases at Imperial College London and honorary consultant physician in HIV and GUM at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust.
Professor Ferguson will discuss his research modelling the spread of infectious diseases, such as zika, ebola, BSE and flu. He will discuss how his analysis can help optimise both clinical and policy interventions.
I'm not convinced the guy above is the same individual as the poor quality webcam footage we continually see from 2020 onwards each time Neil Ferguson is paraded by the government/media as an expert.
Photo from 2007 BBC article:
Current photo on Imperial College London website:
Twitter photo, update unknown:
I would say the first and second are the same person, the third is hard to tell, it's almost the face of the ones before, and the hairline of the one after. The fourth I think is a different guy, taken from the Neil Ferguson twitter account. What I've discovered from that is quite interesting in itself and I'll discuss in the next post. But what stands out to me here, the lens magnification on his glasses appears to be greater on the fourth image compared to the previous three, and I think that goes hand-in-hand with the poor quality webcam recordings, and it's about someone else pretending to be the person in the earlier pictures.