7 Comments
Aug 23, 2022Liked by Sebastien Powell

Fun idea: Collect up a bunch of these passages from the literature and surreptitiously release it as a long-lost Joseph Heller novel!

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Aug 21, 2022Liked by Sebastien Powell

The lying is epidemic

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I'm so glad to read these words I've been trying to tell people this since hiv and not recommended any flu jab.

I had the hep b jab as a nurse but unduress and with no argument following a needle stick injury collecting urine from a catheter. If I had been alone I'd a not mentioned it but ancedotaly later. I did have the full 3jabs but just one then never went back.

That's when I got the whole virus scam. Probably a good thing virology wasn't in my nursing degree but I still researched out if interest. We then had the human injected virus(HIV) and it's spread. Well trying to convince people it was a myth was like getting them not to believe in father Christmas...

It's only 40 years later but it's never too late thank you and Caroline

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Aug 21, 2022Liked by Sebastien Powell

The contradictions in what they say are absurd when they keep lying , pushing the ( now debunked)1861 Germ theory ( belief) that has no scientific( knowledge) backing.

The truth does not contradict itself.

Rockefellers medical system is in the business of making up disease$ . Misdiagnoses industry the solution is snakes oil can be sold to the diagnosed labelled-for-life victim . Creating more symptoms and stress leading to tissue breakdown.... a self fulfilling prophesy.

Its no wonder we have in this "modern medical system"( haha) record numbers of patients with chronic illness and chronic pain.

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Bacteria -not viruses- cause pus

pox (n.)

"disease characterized by eruptive sores," late 15c., spelling alteration of pockes (late 13c. in this sense), plural of pocke "pustule" (see pock (n.)). Especially (after c. 1500) of syphilis.

pock (n.)

"pustule raised on the surface of the body in an eruptive disease," Middle English pok, from Old English pocc "pustule, blister, ulcer," from Proto-Germanic *puh(h)- "to swell up, blow up" (source also of Middle Dutch pocke, Dutch pok, East Frisian pok, Low German poche, dialectal German Pfoche), from PIE root *beu- "to swell, to blow" (see bull (n.2)).

French pocque is from Germanic. The plural form, Middle English pokkes "disease characterized by pustules" (late 14c.) is the source of pox.

pock (v.)

"to disfigure or mark with pustules or the pits left by them," 1841 (implied in pocked), from pock (n.). Related: Pocking.

pustule (n.)

"small, inflammatory sore or tumor containing pus,"

blain (n.)

Old English blegen "a sore, blister, pustule, inflammatory swelling on the body," from Proto-Germanic *blajinon "a swelling" (source also of Danish blegn, Dutch blein), from PIE *bhlei- "to swell," from root *bhel- (2) "to blow, swell."

papule (n.)

"pimple, small inflammatory elevation of the skin," 1864, from Latin papula "pustule, pimple, swelling" (see pap (n.2)). Papula in the same sense is attested in English from 1706. Related: Papular.

pus (n.)

yellowish-white inflammatory exudation, consisting of white blood cells, etc., produced by suppuration, late 14c., from Latin pus "pus, matter from a sore;

https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/249182#causes

https://www.healthgrades.com/right-care/symptoms-and-conditions/pus

https://www.healthline.com/health/pus#location

DO CHEMICALS CAUSE PUS?

https://www.bing.com/search?q=can+chemicals+cause+pus&search=&form=QBLH&sp=-1&pq=can+chemicals+cause+pus&sc=9-23&qs=n&sk=&cvid=A450392DB0BB4FDB8BA237F99A1763CE&ghsh=0&ghacc=0&ghpl=

Well.... at least 2 things cause pus: bacteria, & arsenic -in the form of rashes.

toxin (n.)

"organic poison," especially one produced by bacteria in an animal body, 1886, from toxic + -in(2).

bacteria (n.)

1847, plural of Modern Latin bacterium, from Greek bakterion "small staff," diminutive of baktron "stick, rod, staff, cudgel." So called because the first ones observed were rod-shaped. Introduced as a scientific word 1838 by German naturalist Christian Gottfried Ehrenberg. A classical plural sometimes also erroneously used as a singular.

The Greek word is from a PIE *bak- "staff used for support, peg" (compare Latin baculum "rod, walking stick;" Irish bacc, Welsh bach "hook, crooked staff;" Middle Dutch pegel "peg, pin, bolt"). De Vaan writes, "Since *b was very rare in PIE, and Celtic shows an unexplained geminate, we are probably dealing with a loanword from an unidentified source."

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The work in Suzanne Humphries' book dissolvingillusions.com is very enlightening with regard to so-called viral diseases. As Andrew Kaufman says, it literally is all about the terrain. There has never been any proof of the existence of pathogenic viruses. Yes indeed, the symptoms of conditions like measles and chickenpox are the body's attempt to get rid of toxins via the skin. Nutritional deficiencies play a large part too, and would have been absolutely rampant among the poor in earlier eras. As a naturopath, I am careful about good nutrition, and was surprised to develop chickenpox in my 50s. I simply applied a nutritional antiviral program, and the red spots disappeared in two days without any itching or other problems.

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deletedAug 22, 2022Liked by Sebastien Powell
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