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)
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“Bernard was right; the pathogen is nothing; the terrain is everything.” — Louis Pasteur’s deathbed words
Winifred found an excellent source of background info about that quote on the Wellness Directory of Minnesota website. They devote an entire page to this fascinating bit of medical and cultural history. Here are some excerpts:
The man after whom Pasturization is named
“…UNESCO proclaimed 1995 as “The Year of Pasteur.” Just prior to that, Pasteur’s family proudly released his notes and research. Gerald Geison, a science historian, was among the first people to thoroughly review those notes. In 1995, The Year of Pasteur, Geison wrote an article in the New York Times proclaiming that Pasteur had lied about his research on vaccines and germs and that most of his ideas had been plagiarized from his contemporaries. His article, “Pasteur’s Deception” claimed that Pasteur was, in the end, a fraud…”
“…In researching medicine, following the money has always led to the truth. The money, in Pasteur’s case, has led to unnecessary and mandatory vaccination programs. Wouldn’t we all like to own a company that gets support from a government that will enact laws to make the purchase of our product mandatory?
Where to begin? Well, let’s begin with the Germ Theory.
As discussed in The Lost History of Medicine, the Terrain is more important than the Germ.
“…It was Bechamp who discovered the pleomorphic nature of germs, and later on Bernard described the “milieu” or environment that affected/caused those changes. Bernard is the one responsible for our theories today on pH and how the nature of the microorganisms change as the body moves from an alkaline pH to an acidic pH.
On his deathbed, Pasteur recanted, saying that Bernard was right; the Terrain is everything, the Germ is nothing.
However, since the Germ is so profitable, the medical world has written off his final statements as the madness of a dying man. We should all be so mad.
I regret to inform you it is not "bullshit". No one said it was Pasteur's last words. The quote is one he spoke on his death bed.
UNESCO proclaimed 1995 as "The Year of Pasteur." Just prior to that, Pasteur’s family proudly released his notes and research. Gerald Geison, a science historian, was among the first people to thoroughly review those notes. In 1995, The Year of Pasteur, Geison published his book entitled "THE PRIVATE SCIENCE OF LOUIS PASTEUR".
Geison discovered from Pasteur's own notes that he'd deceived the public a number of times, "borrowed" heavily from his competition (ergo, Antoine BeChamp, Bernard). Geison's book reveals that Pasteur's own notes show that the results of his experiments failed to put to sleep the concept of spontaneous generation and that Pasteur would simply make up a new explanation for his failures.
However, 'medical' history seems to portray only Pasteur's 'successes' and has buried the work of his contemporaries because these other theories were not going to make people rich.
The germ theory of medicine has made billions of dollars for the pharmaceutical industry, probably trillions over the years (if you take into consideration inflation). Had Pasteur's contemporaries, such as Bernard and Bechamp, won the spotlight, medicine today would be enormously different and far more advanced. Why do I say this?
'Germ theory' is giant con. It was funded for establishing Allopathic medicine throughout the general public. Instead of road side shows, it would be sold off the shelf in 'pharmakeia' oriented stores.
Imagine this,
The image of the heartless huckster preying upon the trust of the general public to swindle them out of their hard-earned savings. With a bottle of useless tonic and the help of a plant in the audience, the snake oil salesman made a living out of lies and deceit.
In these respects, William Levingston was your average snake oil salesman.
He used a made-up title, billing himself as-- “Dr. Bill Levingston, Celebrated Cancer Specialist” despite being neither a doctor nor celebrated nor a cancer specialist.
He was an inveterate cheat and liar, having abandoned his first wife and their six children to start a bigamous marriage in Canada at the same time as he fathered two more children by a third woman.
And like every snake oil salesman, he had a cure-all tonic to hock. He called it "Rock Oil" and charged $25 a bottle for it, equivalent at the time to two months’ salary for the average American worker. Claiming it could cure all but the most terminal cancers, there were always desperate souls in every town who could be duped into buying a bottle.
As near as anyone can tell, “Rock Oil” was in fact just a mixture of laxative and petroleum and had no effect whatsoever on the cancer of the poor townsfolk he conned into buying it. But “Dr. Bill” didn’t have to worry about the consequences when his customers discovered they’d been had; he never stayed in any one place for very long.
Yes, in almost every respect, William Levingston was your run-of-the-mill snake oil huckster, someone who had no compunction about preying on the weak and the innocent in his pursuit of wealth and power.
There was one thing that set him apart however. His name was not in fact “Levingston.” That was an identity he had assumed after being indicted for raping a girl in Cayuga in 1849. His actual name was William Avery Rockefeller, and he was the father of John D. Rockefeller, founder of the infamous Rockefeller dynasty and our medical industry.
In the late 19th century through the early 20th century, New York became the home of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research (now Rockefeller University). The Institute is where the modern pharmaceutical industry was born.
John D. Rockefeller also funded the pharmaceutical research and vaccines. The 1918 Spanish flu pandemic has the earmarks of Rockefeller vaccines all over it. From January 21 – June 4, 1918, an experimental bacterial meningitis vaccine cultured in horses by the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in New York was injected into soldiers at Fort Riley. The first cases of bacterial pneumonia in 1918 trace back to a military base in Fort Riley, Kansas.
During WW1, the Rockefeller Institute also sent the anti-meningococcal serum to England, France, Belgium, Italy and other countries, helping spread the epidemic worldwide. “The American Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research and its experimental bacterial meningococcal vaccine may have killed 50-100 million people in 1918-19” is a far less effective sales slogan than the overly simplistic ‘vaccines save lives’.” – Kevin Barry
The pharmaceutical industry hasn't really changed much since the days of Dr. Bill 'Levingston' selling snake oil and preying on the unfortunate. No, it hasn't changed one bit. All of it is based on Germ Theory.
On further review, I stand corrected. There is no evidence of Pasteur stating this. However, it is not for the reason you stated though.
Everything else I've stated I stand by though as absolute truth.