Forwarded from ESS
THIS TRANSHUMANISM BOOK IS FOUND IN YOUR LOCAL LIBRARY AND PUBLIC SCHOOLS
TAKE YOUR CHILDREN OUT OF SCHOOL 🚨
TAKE YOUR CHILDREN OUT OF SCHOOL 🚨
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Lara Logon speaking about the border crisis and its potential to be exploited to unleash a 'virus bomb'
Bechamp or Pasteur? A Lost Chapter in the History of Biology (Terrain vs Germ Theory)
https://ia802607.us.archive.org/7/items/bechamporpasteur00hume_0/bechamporpasteur00hume_0.pdf
https://ia802607.us.archive.org/7/items/bechamporpasteur00hume_0/bechamporpasteur00hume_0.pdf
Pasteur invented pasteurization and vaccines for rabies and anthrax and discovered that many diseases are caused by invisible germs. Béchamp argued that microbes became dangerous when the health of the host—its “terrain” or environment—deteriorated.
The thinking basically goes, and this is something I think you will find timely during these precarious times, is that the severity of the infection will correlate with the patient’s health status. In other words, the unhealthier the lifestyle, the more out of balance a body is, the more susceptible they will be to disease. Further, the disease will be much more severe in that person compared to a body that is physiologically stable and healthy.
The germ – or microbial – theory of disease was popularized by Louis Pasteur (1822 – 1895), the inventor of pasteurization. This theory states that there are fixed, external germs which invade the body and are the direct cause of a variety of separate, definable diseases. If you truly want to get well, you need to kill whatever germ made you sick, and do whatever possible to make “sure” that you never allow a microbe to enter your body in the first place.
With this theory comes Western medicine and its tools and technology that treats the symptoms of an unfriendly microbe rooting itself in the internal environment, through things such as drugs, surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy. Taking it a step further, in order to try and avoid an infection in the first place, various vaccines have been introduced to attempt to keep the disease from invading our body in the first place.
The germ theory was partly shaped around Pasteur’s idea that the human body is sterile, meaning it is a blank slate devoid of any germs. With this notion in mind we could conclude that we have to combat germs all the time in every way possible, and that preventative measures through things like nutrition are basically useless.
So, if you are to closely follow the germ theory, you need to be vigilant against various types of infections through prevention (primarily vaccinations), and destruction (antibiotics, surgery, radiation, chemotherapy) of any external microbe that ever attempts or succeeds to get inside our body.
Anything else is basically fruitless against disease prevention.
With this theory comes Western medicine and its tools and technology that treats the symptoms of an unfriendly microbe rooting itself in the internal environment, through things such as drugs, surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy. Taking it a step further, in order to try and avoid an infection in the first place, various vaccines have been introduced to attempt to keep the disease from invading our body in the first place.
The germ theory was partly shaped around Pasteur’s idea that the human body is sterile, meaning it is a blank slate devoid of any germs. With this notion in mind we could conclude that we have to combat germs all the time in every way possible, and that preventative measures through things like nutrition are basically useless.
So, if you are to closely follow the germ theory, you need to be vigilant against various types of infections through prevention (primarily vaccinations), and destruction (antibiotics, surgery, radiation, chemotherapy) of any external microbe that ever attempts or succeeds to get inside our body.
Anything else is basically fruitless against disease prevention.