13 August 2023
I'm not an expert on human medicine; I know only what someone far smarter than I can tell me about what's going on. I ran across this intriguing interview.
The specialist being interviewed claims that the whole COVID "spike protein" business is a massive fraud. Nobody has isolated a single incidence of spike proteins coming from any human body. It's not that it cannot be tested, but that the tests exist, and nobody is doing them. Instead, the labs are testing for a derivative biological response -- antibodies. Except, they proceed with assumptions about antibodies that are demonstrably false.
According to this expert, there are only 5 antibodies altogether, and they have never been specific to any single threat. This is the part that seems like a radical revision of common teaching. If this is true, then the whole theory of vaccines goes down the tube.
Over the past couple of months, there has been a thread of recurring posts on Lew Rockwell's blog claiming that viruses don't cause disease in the first place. Here is just a sample (the links from this item cascade into a far greater volume of information). The video says that viruses -- as a vector of infection -- have never been isolated, never proven to exist. However, viruses have been shown to exist in laboratories. The problem is that there is no direct link between what was found in the lab and what happens in the human body.
And there is a reasonable claim that the indirect evidence is mistaken at best, and outright fraudulent at worst. From what I know about organizations and operational theory, I'd frankly be surprised that there isn't some fraud involved, in the sense that some groups of true experts do know this is bogus and promote it for dishonorable reasons. It may be money, but there are plenty of other things people desire. Keeping the world under your thumb could have all kinds of payoff.
I'm not sure what to make of all this. While I am not in a good position to evaluate the debate itself, I suppose it's not that hard to construct a set of habits based on the implications. The biggest chore would be changing the way you think about it.
The world is filled with "knowledge" that isn't worth anything at all.
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