Showing posts with label Germ Theory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Germ Theory. Show all posts

Sunday, February 19, 2023

Do Viruses Exist? If Not, Then What Is It that Virologists Are Seeing Under a Microscope?


Thanks to Karen De Coster @ LRC and her post, "A Farewell to Virology."

If this topic interests you, I highly recommend that you listen to the new Tom Woods podcast, “Do Viruses Exist?If this topic doesn’t interest you because you’ve been taught to never question the existence of so-called contagious viruses, you have an even better reason to listen to this podcast.

No, viruses do not exist, and finally, the case against the clown show known as virology is starting to be noticed among the podcast community. Tom interviews the heroic Dr. Mark Bailey, apparently, at the request of many of his listeners. Mark and his wife, Dr. Sam Bailey, are very adept at making the case against virology. Additionally, know that both of the Baileys are also well-versed in Austrian Economics.

Tom asks some good questions for a guy who is starting to explore this topic, and I love Dr. Bailey’s responses, especially as concerns his explanation of what an “anti-viral” really is, and what it really does. So much good stuff from Mark Bailey in this short interview. Problem is, Tom needs a Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, and maybe more with Dr. Bailey to touch on all of the foundational concepts of the topic. Here are a few links to browse.

Monday, June 27, 2022

The End of Germ Theory

Milton Joseph Rosenau is mentioned at the 1:47 mark in his "Experiments to Determine Mode of Spread of Influenza," along with the U.S. Navy and U.S. Public Health Service.    

The volunteers were all of the most susceptible age, mostly between 18 and 25, only a few of them around 30 years old; and all were in good physical condition.  None of these volunteers, 100 all told in number, had influenza; that is from the most careful histories that we could elicit, they gave no account of a febrile attack of any kind during the winter, except a few who were purposely selected, as having shown a typical attack of influenza, in order to test questions of immunity, and for the purpose of control.

Now, we proceeded rather cautiously at first by administering what they claim was a pure culture of the bacillus of influenza, meaning bacteria found in the boogers and lung fluid of people with Spanish flu symptoms called Pfeiffer’s bacillus, in a rather moderate amount, sprayed into the nostrils of a few healthy volunteers. 

EXPERIMENTS AT GALLOPS ISLAND

As the preliminary trials proved negative, we became bolder, and selecting nineteen of our volunteers, gave each one of them a very large quantity of a mixture of 13 different strains of the Pfeiffer bacillus, some of them obtained recently from the lungs of necropsy; other were subcultures of varying age, and each of the thirteen had, of course, a different history.