Great article about the TRUTH of the virus, but LONG! Pass it on. Interesting that it is on the NIH website.
(www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
π₯ B O O O O O M π₯
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Bacteria is Nature's way of biodegrading 'poisons' (ergo, 'viruses'). To understand this is the 'key' to the kingdom. It is always the method that determines the outcome. To consider the complete environmental effects rather than limit oneself to a reductionist approach is crucial in understanding health.
The narrative really determines how one understands things. Is Koch's Postulate being followed when, for example, a 'virus' has never been isolated in all the history of Virology. No. This fact alone should make us question other 'settled' science like -- Does Germs (not worms or parasites) or bacteria cause disease?
Science is a continuum; a process of current understanding and is never really 'settled'. So, is it a 'guilt' by association scenario or are they merely associated with the real causes? The Correlation/Causation Fallacy is where two events occurring together are taken to establish a cause-and-effect relationship. This however is not the scientific method. Could the presence of the bacteria be for degrading the toxins that are present as a result of 'something' from the environment? Could the bacteria be Nature's cleanup crew for what is already diseased or dead?
We know in Nature bacteria is used to biodegrade what is dead or diseased in the environment. Why would we be any different from anything else in Nature? A poisoned dead pond will produce algae growth. The algae is not good for you and may produce its own toxins, but it exists in Nature to biodegrade the toxins in the pond. It is the poisoned pond that was the cause of the dead pond, not the algae biodegrading the toxins in the pond. We see this understanding at work in municipal waste systems.
The entire problem with Bacteriology and Virology is they fail to follow the scientific method. More precisely, they fail to follow Koch's postulates. What has occurred is their science is a one based on an 'assumption', but not fact.
I'm glad you asked. Virologists took some thirty years of research to realize the polio "virus" was a fecal pathogen; itβs transmission was fecal-oral - bad anal/hand hygiene or touching a contaminated surface, then virus-tainted fingers travel to the mouth.
Family- and communal-use squat toilets, pit latrines, flush toilets and open defecation are rarely addressed as critical issues up to WWII. The certitude the CDC conveys to the public, regarding respiratory transmission, is phrased as β...thought to spread mainly...It is possible...is not thought to be...It appears that...β.
The prevalence in contamination of fecal matter is ubiquitous. From house flies landing on food to shopping carts, it presence is everywhere. If one was to think of early 1900s and before, when animal husbandry and beasts of burden were prevalent everywhere from the big cities to rural areas. Those city streets were not paved and very little sanitation infrastructure existed at the time. NYC used the same water source for drinking water as all the street runoff and family-and communal-use squat toilets, pit latrines, and open defecation are rarely ever addressed as critical issues for the cause of 'old world' disease. There were no flush toilets because very little sanitation infrastructure was in place at the time. When it rained, the streets became a quagmire fusing animal feces with mud on the streets as a result of all the human traffic. As a result, it was constantly tracked in doors. When the floors were swept, the dust took to the air landing on everything. It's not hard to deduce that the lack of sanitation allows disease to form and spread.
Common diseases of the early part of the last Century were caused from the lack of sanitation and nutrition. It was a sanitation and hygiene issue. The prevalence of animal husbandry, the reliance of domesticated animals for travel, the lack of sanitation infrastructure, hygiene, and good nutrition contributed to widespread diseases.
While smallpox captured the imagination with its high death rate and gross manifestations on victims' bodies, less obvious infections claimed even more lives. For example, eighteenth-century Philadelphians drank water contaminated with fecal matter, which resulted in endemic typhoid, dysentery, and other intestinal diseases. Since polio was primarily transmitted in fecal matter, by simply improving sanitation infrastructure reduced the occurrence of polio cases.