Saturday, December 7, 2024

SUZANNE HUMPHRIES

The 80 pages that are in this book are the summary what I can say is that I was startled by what I found when I started researching polio and that polio is still alive and well today.  You can look at diseases that put people on ventilators that they're neurological diseases where people end up on ventilators are very common.  And hundreds of them per year would have been called polio in the past.  But because when the vaccine was invented and mass-marketed, they changed the definition of what polio was, they changed the diagnostic criteria for polio.  Even Dr. [Bernard G.] Greenberg and other doctors back in the day testified in front of Congress and they said that "Even if a vaccine were never invented, the rate of polio would have gone down by 60% or more."  I think it might have been higher than that.  So the diagnostic criteria change was a major foul play as far as I'm concerned.  Just one little incidence of that, in the beginning before the vaccine, if you had one group of muscles paralyzed on two different exams 24 hours apart, you were diagnosed as polio.  And it was considered a benefit to do that because you qualified for public assistance and services, etc.  After the vaccine was mass marketed, it was changed so that you had to have two exams 60 days apart, and the 60-day period, if you still have that muscle group paralyzed after 60 days among other things, you could still be considered a polio case.  But the vast majority of paralytic polio will reverse in 60 days. The old story about the treatment of the disease was actually causing mass hysteria because that's a lot of the problem.  Even measles was mistreated back in the day.  We know that tuberculosis was mistreated with mercurials and all kinds of other neurotoxins, which actually can cause polio . . . 

Fits in here with limbs that were stiff and seem to be paralyzed and they would sever the tendons and would put them in a cast for up to 2 years and if you do that to mice that are healthy you'll find that the limbs will atrophy and they'll become unusable just because of the immobilization so it's a really complicated story in that polio what I've determined my belief is that the polio virus is a normal commensal that lives within healthy human intestines it's been shown that Indian tribes in South America where they have all three strains of the intestines.  Nobody knows of anybody that died, that's paralyzed, they weren't throwing babies off of cliffs, nobody had polio down there.  And then you get into civilization, and you see where people are starting to smoke and eat food that's not biocompatible, being injected with mercurials, smoking arsenic-laden cigarettes because it's supposed to be good for the lungs, there are all kinds of crazy medical practices, not just today been going on for a long time that actually can cause the syndrome of poliomyelitis, so poliovirus is just one thing that becomes invasive usually due to other factors, like removing tonsils or doing surgery at the time that there's circulation.  And then there's poliomyelitis which is the physical entity that affects a particular area of the spinal cord or brain stem with various manifestations that can be just like PNH, which can be very benign or very severe depending on the background of the person and what the medical system has done to them.  We have to distinguish poliomyelitis from polio.  Poliomyelitis is still alive and well all over the world in terms of transverse myelitis would have been poliomyelitis back in the day.  A lot of syphilis was poliomyelitis, arsenic poisoning, DDT, so there's a curve that looks at the DDT production.  DDT production goes down, polio goes down.  Polio is still really high in India.  You can still get DDT in India if you want it; go into most stores and just pick it up.  Then the vaccines came in.  There was the injectible vaccine and there were problems with that because, guess what, that causes poliomyelitis.  

 

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