The truth about Tetanus and vitamin C pic.twitter.com/GkjaIlEDjZ
— Cleanse Parasites .com 🧹🪱 Herbal Cleanse Co. (@parasitedetox) April 8, 2025
For tetanus, you need rotten meat, okay. That's how the tetanus vaccines is made with rotten meat. If anyone is worried about tetanus, what we are shown is a picture of a soldier from like the 1800s. He's naked. His back is arched. If you just Google Tetanus right now and you look for images, you'll get this image.
So that's what we are told will happen if we get tetanus. It's a sure thing. You're just going to get tetanus. You're going to die. The fact of the matter is that when I started doing my deep dive, in World War I, look, it was fought in the trenches with horses. That's where you get tetanus from ruminant animals. It lives in their gut and it goes in the soil, and it's just a spore. It doesn't do anything until it gets into an area that doesn't have oxygen. So you get a cut. You get a certain . . . they close you up real nice without cleaning it out properly and you're a setup for tetanus, which will transform from a spore to a different kind of a microbe and start releasing a toxin that can, at first, it starts as numb, numbness usually in that limb. The extreme case is in that soldier who would have been malnourished, stressed out, probably vaccinated for smallpox before he hit the fields and exposed to enormous amounts of tetanus, possibly a gunshot wound, or a slice somewhere, and then sewn up. So, yeah, his nervous system could have had a real big dose of toxin and nobody did anything about it. That's a worst-case scenario. You don't want that to happen. You see I've treated tetanus let's just put it that way. I've treated several cases of tetanus. One of the cases was a neurologically diagnosed tetanus. So tetanus is treatable. You can get on it early. Rabbit studies have shown that if you give vitamin C if you have a good high vitamin C level before you put glass with tetanus spores on it inside the skin of a rabbit, you can prevent tetanus from happening. Even if you give the vitamin C at the time of the injury, you can prevent it from happening. If you give it after the event, the death rate goes down very, very low if not zero. So vitamin C is a main factor, but the biggest factor is cleaning a wound and keeping the wound open if you think it's a dirty wound, not to close it straight up which is why nails . . . You say stepping on a nail is the classic because rust can kind of hold the old spores inside of it. You step on the nail, you get inoculated, and then you wait for it to heal over. You have to open that wound if that's going to happen.