https://rumble.com/v1al81j-the-end-of-germ-theory-featuring-dr.-tom-cowan..html
This video is packed with great info about the scam of Germ Theory.
Some of it is stuff I have never heard before, and I have been studying this subject quite a bit.
How about this:
At about 16:00, he gets into the Spanish Flu. Turns out, it was caused by toxic vaccines.
The US Army carried out a large scale vaccination program in 1917-18, funded by Rockefeller, and supervised by Frederick Gates.
That program began in November 1917, and the "Spanish Flu" became a "pandemic" immediately thereafter. (The EXACT timeframe of Covid 19.)
The outbreaks began not in Spain or anywhere else in Europe, but in the USA. An overlay map of breakouts and US Army bases is an exact match.
This was the first time in history that multiple vaccines (up to 25) were injected into people at the same time.
It was clearly an exeriment, not a treatment. The results were massive illness with multiple "diseases," not just the sympoms of "Spanish Flu." (Same thing we are seeing today with the fake Covid vaxx.)
Some people in polio experiments lost their sense of taste and smell due to the poisons on the test swabs. (interdasting ...)
So much info in this video that I cannot summarize it all. Massive resource.
Howdy Corrbrick, long time!
Yes indeed. These ideas can't be accepted straight away. And in my experience, about 80% I mention them to dismiss the suggestion straight away. Basically this modality demolishes "victim consciousness", which is horrifically predominant in our present society. As such, I totally understand why people recoil at first glance.
I've found that the only way to really introduce this to someone is if they have a current dis-ease and/or a clear memory of a dis-ease that affected them profoundly in their lives. At which point, I can provide an initial diagnosis of the psychological conflict they were suffering from. When they can begin to accept the possibilities and wonder about the correlation, contemplating "how I knew" they were going through such-and-such a situation, the light bulb finally goes off, and not a moment sooner.
Case in point, if you've never had lung cancer, you can't relate to what somebody was going through who did, making the diagnosis appear speculative at best. And further, because our psychological ruminating is 100% subjective, the next default response people have is "well then every soldier who went to war should get lung cancer" because surely they were all afraid to die". But this is also a faulty assumption, for 3 primary reasons. First, the vast majority of people who "get lung cancer" never even know it as it always resolves itself naturally if left alone. Second, the intensity and duration of the psychological conflict determines the severity of the symptoms; i.e. "all day every day" is a world of difference from a soldier who is only "afraid to die" in the heat of battle. And third, many soldiers overcome their fear of death by directly facing their mortality early on. I have such a friend who was deployed in Iraq and he was scared stiff after his first combat engagement. He says he suffered tremendously for about 2-weeks but then accepted the ultimate inevitability of death, after which he claims he has never been scared to die since that day. And judging from some of the extracurricular activities he likes to partake in (sky-diving, hunting, auto racing, etc.), I believe him!
Hey Morpheus,
I'm hangin' in there waiting for the dam to burst and wondering how I'm going to come out on the other side, just like everyone else.
I can see most of what you write about be dismissed out of hand. But when one begins to learn that so much of what he knows is a sham, the time is right to entertain all hypotheses that can make a credible case. Throwing out what we know not to be so can take a large part of the blame for the mess we find ourselves in. Keep it up!
Indeed, totally agreed. It takes time and much contemplation - never happens overnight.