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A pox on both their houses.

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We live in an era of environmental contaminants, most of which if ID'd as source of disease would lead to lawsuits. Consequently it has been necessary to invent a bug of some kind, usually a virus, to protect polluters. Zika, according to mainstream doctors, caused microcephaly (small heads at birth), but according to Argentinian doctors microcephaly was caused by pesticides used in that area by a Japanese subsidiary of Monsanto*. Polio was caused by lead arsenate and later, DDT, so it was necessary to invent the polio virus. The disease subsided along with less use of the pollutants, and the reduction was credited to vaccines. It's a closed circle to protect polluters.

*Noam Chomsky wrote in the early 90s about the rise of pygmy-like infants in that area. It most likely coincides with Monsanto's presence.

Symptoms: I doubt specific symptoms exist that are unique to specific diseases. Rashes and pustules occur with just about any infection. Monkeypox and molluscum contagiosum are probably the same thing. Do I not recall at one time suspicion that monkeypox was being used to cover for Covid vaccine effects? Also, Covid symptoms were a psychological ploy to place in our minds the presence of that virus when the symptoms,, common to colds and flu, had and would continue to arise during annual detox seasons. (I looked up one time the difference between cold and flu at an 'authoritative' source, and learned that colds are caused by a wide variety of viruses, while flu can be traced to only two. I realized at that time that not only was I not threatened by Covid, but that I had never had the flu in my entire life.)

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Yeah, I've read Ebola is a cover for cyanide poisoning from gold mining. And I don't feel as though I've ever had the flu myself - just colds which vary a little in intensity so why would you get a flu shot in that situation especially? It's so ridiculous.

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maybe they’re trying to whip up the fear … I hope this time it’s a dud again.

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Aug 18·edited Aug 18Author

I really do think it will be. "Monkeypox" simply has an alien feel to it that I think people simply cannot relate to ... even if ironically molluscum contagiosum is a scary-looking condition albeit not all that uncommon and pretty harmless.

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Aug 18Liked by Petra Liverani

That's why they calling it mpox.

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Well...they are building up to something. Or so they claim.

About a month ago, o' Klaus-y the Swabie made one of his ominous proclamations when he said,

"We will have to bring the Great Reset about by force." Cool your jets, Klaus-y.

Unless what I watched was a deep fake since I can't find the video any longer. This is all becoming so stupid. I'm going to go plant some flowers for the bees and fill the hummingbird feeder...

In other news - A new study was published where high school students were asked what they want to be when they grow up and the #1 answer was - Influencer. #1 by far apparently.

Thanks, Petra.

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author

Influencer? That is so sad.

Planting flowers and filling the hummingbird feeder are eminently sensible things to do in the circumstances, PS.

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In a sense, I hardly blame the kids. Stay inside and make money eating junk food or applying mascara VS. going out into this insane world and doing what, exactly?

At best becoming Kanye or Trump and living out an episode of Succession or The Serpent Queen or some other psycho drama?

This world is toast. Burned beyond consumption.

Okay, back to the bees and hummingbirds. Feeling a dark shade of midnight blue today.

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Yeah, I'm glad I'm not a young person in this world ... being an older person isn't great either but the world feels so very very different from when I was young.

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Aug 23Liked by Petra Liverani

It does seem incredible that people would be taken in by this but for some reason they are want it in people’s consciousness.

I was at my daughter’s home for a long weekend last week. On Monday morning everyone was getting ready for work etc but the tv was on in the background (which I hate btw), and monkey pox was raised a few times on breakfast news. Of course they weren’t watching it but it will have been planted in their subconscious, the idea will be more familiar, more acceptable maybe?

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Aug 23·edited Aug 23Author

Just sitting with a friend now who had the mandated jabs ... and more ... and asked her if she was worried about catching it and she just laughed and said no ... so I think thats hopeful. I think they overestimated our gullibility with that name. Their big fat laugh on that one backfired. I just don't think its going to fly.

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Aug 23Liked by Petra Liverani

I think you’re right. It worried me that when I asked my grandson (aged 26) how they were going to get this off the ground, perhaps they would use the old asymptomatic ruse, he said “don’t worry, there haven’t been many cases” and he was serious 😳 Cynicism is obviously not genetically inherited.

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Aug 23Liked by Petra Liverani

Regardless if this current surge of Monkeypox is genuine, one thing I can say is that it's been heavily overblown by the media and their gov't cronies to induce fear in the population and possibly bring back the draconian lock-downs and vaccine mandates we've seen with COVID-19 just a few years prior.

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Aug 23·edited Aug 23Author

Yeah, but I don't think people will buy it. As suggested by commenter, sacky boi, they've changed the name to mpox to make it sound less alien but I think monkey pox is still the more popular term and somehow it just doesn't have the desired impact. I guess the fact that "monkey" has connotations of unserious as in "monkeying around", etc people just don't take it seriously - not to mention of course that we don't see any evidence of it whatsoever whereas with covid people do actually get sick with colds and flu while symptoms that can be assigned to "monkey pox" are much less common.

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I sure hope so. But then again, most people are gullible morons, so they can fall for anything "experts" say, and have. Only time will tell.

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hola, petra. excellent article.

since you mentioned 'mad cow disease', have you read that that was a psyop to cover manganese poisoning and copper starvation in the diet?

yup, another psyop.

The Science(tm) of Mad Cow Disease; Copper and Manganese debunk the science(tm)

by Mark Purdey:

From the March 2004 Idaho Observer: "Mad Cow disease: Is it really Manganese Madness?"

https://www.proliberty.com/observer/20040301.htm

and interesting article. and two of the people associated with the work died under mysterious circumstances.

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author

Thanks so much, Guy. I've added the link to my article. I do remember reading about it being a cover although I didn't remember what for. I now generally take the attitude that any scary condition where ludicrous action is taken will never be what it is purported to be and it seems the author of your article tends to think the same way.

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yup.

overreaction to the threats to life solved by killing life. always a puzzle. now, not a puzzle, part of a well orchestrated plan.

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Aug 23·edited Aug 23Liked by Petra Liverani

The explanation that the "mad cow" disease is caused by copper deficiency and manganese overconsumption in the environment certainly makes far more sense to me than anything I've heard from officialdom, so far. Until someone has or can conclusively prove otherwise, I'm open to this explanation as being truthful.

And to supplement this thread with more info, here's an article written by Mark Purdey himself detailing his experience on this subject and its history:

https://www.ourcivilisation.com/madcow/madcow.htm

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Aug 23·edited Aug 23Liked by Petra Liverani

This has also been taken up at more respected scientific platforms such as Science.org, which ran an article suggesting that researchers have found excess manganese or copper consumption can induce abnormal prions, which is said to cause Mad Cows disease and similar ailments.

"Too much manganese or copper can convert normal prions to a disease-associated shape .... Exposure to high levels of metals can coax proteins called prions to adopt an abnormal disease-causing conformation, the researchers found. That could explain why outbreaks of prion diseases have popped up in Iceland, Slovakia, and Colorado--regions with soils high in manganese. .... At one time a skeptic, Multhaup says the new findings and prior evidence are starting to convince him that exposure to metal-enriched food and soils "is a risk factor" that increases susceptibility to prion diseases."

https://www.science.org/content/article/mad-cows-and-metals

NOTE: considering how similar these researchers' findings are to those of Purdey et al., I suspect that they may have taken inspiration from Purdey and his ilk's work. By then, he and others like him have already gained some traction online and elsewhere, despite being largely ignored and shunned by the mainstream press and scientific establishment, so it's not far-fetched to consider that Gerd Multhaup et al. at the Free University of Berlin had heard of them.

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Thanks so much Hinah. I will look into this and insert links into the article. Obviously, it's better to be able to cite "respected" platforms for those who tend to be mainstream thinkers.

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i suspect that the the over consumption of copper is part of the false narrative to keep this 'safe to publish'.

it turns out that the body requires copper and iron to function properly electrically. back in the 70s and 80s, it was deemed imperative to fortify our bodies with extra iron, and that copper was a poison to be avoided.

it turns out that almost all foods have iron, that iron deficiency is improperly measured by haemoglobin measures not cellular measures and that iron accumulates in the body and causes problems as we age including premature death. that women have a tendency to live longer is likely a indirect and subtle measure of their having menstruation.

and that copper insufficiency is often a health problem for people depending on the environment because it may not be present sufficiently 'naturally' in their food and/or water.

that was one of the turning points in my understanding that the fda and cdc were deliberating looking to make people unhealthy. and that the agenda of genocide is very old.

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"back in the 70s and 80s, it was deemed imperative to fortify our bodies with extra iron, and that copper was a poison to be avoided."

Which is ironic because excess iron consumption can also be lethal, which probably explains why iron was pushed more heavily than copper as a panacea for good health. Inducing metal or mineral imbalance appears to be one way the psychopaths can attack humanity. I also find it to be no coincidence that iron supplements were increasingly popular as substitutes for what's naturally occurring in food. Imagine the additives that are in those, too.

"High-dose iron supplements can also cause gastrointestinal effects, including gastric upset, constipation, nausea, abdominal pain, vomiting, and diarrhea [5,89]. .... Case reports, some involving doses of 130 mg iron, suggest that some people develop even more serious gastrointestinal effects, including gastritis and gastric lesions (along with iron deposits in the gastric mucosa in some cases) [90-93].

Acute intakes of more than 20 mg/kg iron (about 1,365 mg iron for a person weighing 150 lb) from supplements or medicines can lead to corrosive necrosis of the intestine, which might lead to fluid and blood loss, shock, tissue damage, and organ failure, especially if food is not taken at the same time as the iron [89]. In severe cases (e.g., one-time ingestions of 60 mg/kg, or about 4,090 mg iron for a 150-lb person), overdoses of iron can lead to multisystem organ failure, coma, convulsions, and even death [27,94].

Between 1983 and 2000, at least 43 U.S. children died from ingesting supplements containing high doses of iron (36–443 mg iron/kg body weight) [27]. Accidental ingestion of iron supplements caused about a third of poisoning deaths among children reported in the United States between 1983 and 1991."

https://ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/Iron-HealthProfessional/#h20

And copper deficiency is just as bad as overconsumption, of course. Furthermore, one of the groups most affected by this are celiacs - that is, people allergic to gluten. May this also explain the rising "gluten-free" fad of the last few decades, as it's been shown that celiacs tend to suffer from deficient copper levels? You decide.

"Based on studies in animals and humans, the effects of copper deficiency include anemia, hypopigmentation, hypercholesterolemia, connective tissue disorders, osteoporosis and other bone defects, abnormal lipid metabolism, ataxia, and increased risk of infection [1,17,18].

In a study of 200 adults and children with celiac disease, of which 69.9% claimed to maintain a gluten-free diet, 15% had copper deficiency (less than 70 mcg/dL in serum in men and girls younger than 12 years and less than 80 mcg/dL in women older than 12 years and/or CP less than 170 mg/L) as a result of intestinal malabsorption resulting from the intestinal lining alterations associated with celiac disease [19]. In its 2009 clinical guidelines for celiac disease, the American College of Gastroenterology notes that people with celiac disease appear to have an increased risk of copper deficiency and that copper levels normalize within a month of adequate copper supplementation while eating a gluten-free diet [20]."

https://ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/Copper-HealthProfessional/#h7

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Perhaps so. And, of course, the government intentionally sickening the population ain't surprising, either.

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Aug 24·edited Aug 24

Another controversial topic that's been heavily misconstrued by the mainstream is smoking, which is often portrayed as one of the leading causes of health problems such as lung cancer. The reality appears to be far more nuanced, with smoking in some instances actually helping people combat lung cancer and other health-related issues (although it probably varies on the kind of cigar/cigarette being used, as often commercial smoke products are laden with many chemical and even radioactive particles - all of which are determinental to human health. Organic cigars and cigarettes are touted by some to be better alternatives to their conventional counterparts).

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/04/220411113733.htm

https://www.sott.net/article/226999-Smoking-Helps-Protect-Against-Lung-Cancer

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7576958/

https://pros-versus-cons.com/health-wellbeing/smoking-cigarettes/

https://www.echelon.health/nicotine-the-good-the-bad-and-the-ugly/

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yes.

i've recently come into tobacco as medicine.

you may find these interesting as well.

via:

SMOKERS ARE THE WINNERS!

Ever wonder why governments worldwide worked so hard to stop us smoking? Well - click this and find out.

https://francesleader.substack.com/p/smokers-are-the-winners

FRANCES LEADER https://substack.com/@francesleader

MAR 19, 2024

Tirion https://substack.com/profile/42474699-tirion

2024.03.19. https://francesleader.substack.com/p/smokers-are-the-winners/comment/52031537

Plant Teachers: Ayahuasca, Tobacco and the Pursuit of Knowledge

Jeremy Narby Rafael Chanchari Pizuri

Book:

Plant Teachers: Ayahuasca, Tobacco, and the Pursuit of Knowledge (2021)

https://bookshop.org/books/plant-teachers-ayahuasca-tobacco-and-the-pursuit-of-knowledge/9781608687732

"Although Western medicine treats tobacco as a harmful addictive drug, tobacco bridges the physical and spiritual realms. Along with ayahuasca, tobacco forms a part of treatments designed to heal the body, stimulate the mind, and inspire the soul with visions.”

https://bioneers.org/plant-teachers-ayahuasca-tobacco-and-the-pursuit-of-knowledge-jeremy-narby-ze0z2111/

traditional tobacco medicine man on tobacco as powerful medicine: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphar.2020.594591/full

Robert Koch https://substack.com/profile/103161556-robert-koch

Apr 25 https://francesleader.substack.com/p/smokers-are-the-winners/comment/54770100

Hi Frances, are you familiar with Joe Jackson's (yes, THE Joe Jackson) brilliant essays on smoking?

If not, here's a link where you can download them:

https://memberdata.s3.amazonaws.com/jo/joejackson/files/3765647615810.pdf

also, dr. ardis did a deep dive on the addictive nature of nicotine in the 'journals' of science. when he read the full studies, no where did he find a shred of evidence that nicotine is addictive.

he also found that most everything we eat has trace elements of nicotine with eggplant having the 2nd highest amount after tobacco.

the nicotinic acetylcholine receptors are a huge part of our body's health mechanism and nicotine helps clear them function. venom binds to them and nicotine and ivermectin clear the venom from those receptors.

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Ironically, these same people used to promote smoking as the panacea for all ailments before later demonizing it. Read many of the medical and news periodicals from the 50s and before, where they recommended smoking as a viable treatment or laxative, even for pregnant women.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1470496/

This goes to show that, like everything else, they've controlled both sides of the debate from the start and profited generously from it. And I suspect they've deliberately poisoned commercial cigars and cigarettes to weaken its human users and later use that as the catalyst for scapegoating tobacco - with the complicity of the industry, of course.

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Thanks for the links. I've always been suspicious of the whole scare surrounding smoking. Considering the negative repercussions that came from this staged overreaction, it certainly had nothing to do with protecting "public health" from anything. Otherwise, had they actually cared, they would've banned the numerous carcinogenic additives reportedly found in commercial smoke brands like Marlboro's - and in all or most products in general - and instead promote cleaner, 'organic' tobacco and foodstuffs to the masses.

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Aug 20Liked by Petra Liverani

Skin is the largest organ of detox in the body. These peoples immune systems have been destroyed by Western medicine. Do not consent to anything!

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Aug 19Liked by Petra Liverani

My hot take on why some conditions are ‘human specific’: animals don’t consume microwaved garbage, soda, pills and psychological poison.

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Aug 19·edited Aug 19Author

Interestingly, pets can be influenced to love junky food and some of those who are food-driven will eat whatever they can find (this drive no doubt being bred into them) ... but yes in general wild animals consume a healthy diet where it is available to them.

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Oct 5Liked by Petra Liverani

Interestingly, molluscum contagiosum is said to be prevalent in the Democratic Republic of Congo, which is also an alleged hotspot of m-pox.

I think both are just repackaged contact dermatitis from the chronic pollution in that region resulting from poorly regulated cobalt mining.

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Thanks for that. Sounds quite likely - similar to the alleged Ebola being caused by poorly regulated gold mining in Liberia and Sierra Leone.

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Thanks, Mary-Ann. I've added a link to your article and to Ray's in my article at the bottom.

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Thank you too, because you are doing a really great job!!!

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Aug 18Liked by Petra Liverani
author

Actually, that article looks familiar although I hadn't liked it which I would have thought I'd do. What intrigues me though is that I've never heard of molluscum contagiosum before as being one of the poxes and it seems that the images for it are the ones they use - at least mostly - for monkey pox. I mean it could be that chicken pox, measles, MC - and, of course, smallpox, are really all just variations on a theme. The thing is we just don't really know what these conditions are if we reject "virus".

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Aug 18Liked by Petra Liverani

far too coincidental in the run-up to mail-in ballots.

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Just like with COVID-19 and the 2020 elections. Both psyops, just like the present ones.

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Aug 18Liked by Petra Liverani

Mick Jagger said it best, "I'm a mooooonkey Man."

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Toxins

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I vote Hell, No.

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