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  • Good post, Dee! How can we forget how the US military gave smallpox-infected blankets to the helpless American Indians and then denied them treatment?

    OBTW, the Wahun Lab was leased from China by the US government, and US & Chinese scientists were conducting experiments with bats, paid for by US taxpayers. 

    • That is the truth. But it was started in Chapel Hill, NC and shipped to our lab on Wuhan

       

  • Sure sounds like it was! 

  • Probably yes. Hypothesis: According to Dr. Bryan Ardis, all antibiotics cause cataracts and or glaucoma. He states the info is buried in the technical papers. Question: Has anyone in here been warned of this the last time antibiotics were needed and prescribed?

    I have never been advised of this. 

    Dr. Ardis also states unequivacably that nicotine was never addictive until the govco made it addictive. He says more, even about childbirth practices. 

    • Nicotine is a natural substance in the tobacco plant like cocain is in the coca plant, both addictive! Perhaps synthetic nicotine is more addictive, or can be made more addictive.....never looked into it! 

    • Check out Dr. Ardis. That's what his research uncovered. I believe him. He's a good man.

      He also, to a small degree but not followed through on it, has spoken out about how hospitals do childbirth. They lay the Mother flat on the back to go through what we have been led to think of as the way to do childbirth.

      When Ardis's was wife was due to deliver he demanded the nurses go find the birthing bar that came with the bed. The nurses had no idea of what he was speaking. But they found it in the cleaning closet.  Brought it in. He showed them how to set it and had then help get his wife's arms over the bar. And basically hang there.

      Each hospital bed comes with a bar to attach over the sides. That bar is for pulling the pregnant, soon-to-be Mother's armpits over that bar, utilizing gravity. making the whole birthing process easier, less painful with fewer interventions needed.

      Like the Africans do. If you've ever seen their birthing chairs it makes so much sense. Knees up, body opened up, gravity doing it's job. Safer. Faster. Fewer uncalled-for expensive interventions 

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