Showing posts with label Polio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Polio. Show all posts

Thursday, May 21, 2026

SUZANNE HUMPHRIES: . . . the iron lung is now called a ventilator . . . and "Tonsillectomies were huge cause are some of the worst cases of poliomyelitis"

And that's the part that people don't understand. When they say, "What about polio?" because they, like you, just go "Well, there's no more iron lungs.  There's no more crippling.  There's no more poor little kids walking around with their cats."  Well, that's not true, because the iron lung is now called a ventilator.  So that's out the window. Transverse myelitis, which there are about 1300 cases a month diagnosed, in one particular . . . I put a quote in here on that, but transverse myelitis is actually something that would have absolutely . . . it follows the same pathology as polio.  It would have been called polio back in the day.  So we still have polio that we had in 1953, because in 1953 all you had to have to be diagnosed with polio,  anyone could diagnose you, just one examination with one set of muscles being paralyzed.  There was no time frame on it.  There was no testing done on it, and then it was considered a public service to do it because then you were eligible for funding.  

1:00.  Polyomyelitis is the definition of the actual pathology.  It basically means inflammation of the gray matter of your spinal cord.  That's what polio in Greek, poliomyelitis.  It means gray matter inflammation.  Poliomyelitis is what happens in the body.  If you want to talk about what causes it then okay maybe in some cases a polio virus causes it and all the other things we just mentioned arsenic, calcium arsenate, injections. Tonsillectomies were huge cause are some of the worst cases of poliomyelitis, and, in fact, injections, and tonsillectomies, and unnecessary surgeries were put on hold during the years where the epidemic were the worst.  So that's just proof that even the surgeons knew that.  

1:47.  Why has it affected?  

1:50.  Okay so if you happened to have polio myelitis circulating in your body that's not just sitting in your intestines, and say it made its way into your body, we can, things can go from your intestines into your body, and you happen to have it close to a nerve that's say up around your throat and then you go and take your tonsils out, then what you've done is you've given that access to the blood compartment, the lymph compartment, and the brainstem, which is right there, local.  So that is what people who would get Bulbar Polio which is the one that would put you on a ventilate it's highly lethal it's the worst kind of polio to get Bulbar polio and it was very well known to have been coincidence with tonsillectomies not only that but tonsillectomies change the structure the antibodies and the immunity that occurred in the throat and it changed it for the worse not for the better. Everybody's got their two vaccines they're two diseases that they are afraid of for the kid that makes them feel like they're at least doing something.

2:48.  Well, the polio one always gets thrown in my face.  They say it all the time.

What about polio?

I don't have the time to do this.  Read the book.  To explain to someone the whole DDT connection, and the fact that livestock was getting polio like this is a thing.  Like polio, dogs don't get polio.  They don't get human-derived polio.  It doesn't cross species.  But they were getting paralytic polio symptoms, because they were getting poisoned by DDT, right?  That was a big part of the whole thing that was very confusing.

3:22.  Well they started killing dogs in New York and that incident so told you about what the vaccine that gain a function strain skate people were throwing their cats out the window or something like 20,000 cats in New York City were killed during that time because there was a belief the cats bred the disease. 

3:42.  That's so crazy and it was a mutant man-made virus the man-made virus thing

It was a wound up made virus basically it was a natural virus that got wound up by . . . 

3:58.  So no I didn't have apprehension . . . I was like, this information, the US Polio Surveillance Unit Charts were supposed to be available in libraries.  And lo and behold, every Library I went to to find them I was told they're not here.  There's only one Library, the AMA Library you have to have special high security clearance to look at them well I won't say how but I got a hold of them and what those documents showed is that it wasn't just cutter Laboratories that had a problem with live polio it wasn't just all the vaccine companies we didn't talk about this but all the vaccine companies had a problem with live virus in their injectable vaccines during sulks years so 1954, 1955, up to 1959, they all were producing vaccines with live virus in it because Salk wouldn't listen to the scientist abroad who was saying his inactivation curve was . . . Where the sun doesn't shine.

So the beginning of that and just tracking all that down and asking the questions that you asked where did the polio go what was really causing the paralysis why don't we see it today and I had to answer all those questions and every question I answered it was so satisfying that I just wanted to go on to the next question and so there was never any hesitation because I just actually I was so single-minded that I didn't think about the threats that could happen as a result of that and it wasn't until after the book was out that the threats and I'm still here look I figured if anybody wants to do me in and now then the timing is really bad because this is pretty much out there now.  

5:30.  It's been out there for a while.  The Jonah Salk thing was also wild.  I thought Jonah Salk was this genius who created this incredible virus to save humanity.

Yeah so did I.  

5:40.  So many of our childhood fables turn out not to be true but that was a big one and it's still hard for a lot of people to believe . . .

Rising from the Dead, Suzanne Humphries, 2016.



Wednesday, July 2, 2025

DR. SIMONE GOLD: Cases of polio within 10 days of vaccination were classified as “unvaccinated,” and the definition of polio itself was rewritten to make the vaccine look more effective.

Polio was I think the most interesting vaccine because as an infectious disease it doesn't have the same kind of history.  Polio kind of appeared out of nowhere in the early 20th century, and there's a very good book by Forrest Maready [and more], The Moth in the Iron Lung: A Biography of Polio, 2018, but he talks about the pesticides that were used and the potential implications that had on children and the development of poliomyelitis.  And then Suzanne Humphries touches on the fact that they changed the definition of polio when the vaccine came out so that definition on its own would have reduced the amount of cases that we diagnosed as being polio with or without the vaccine.  In 1955, we imported Eli Lily into Switzerland and we started vaccinating in the schools, but I found out by accident as well that the biggest polio epidemic that we had here in Switzerland was in the year that we mandated smallpox vaccine on kids.  So polio is a very interesting one to look at also for the definition of being "inoculated."  Sorry not Meadow Bailey my name is sometimes escapes me.  He mentions that people who got polio within 10 days of being vaccinated were considered unvaccinated so we see how history repeats itself and if we continue to repeat history then it's just going to go on.  

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

SUZANNE HUMPHRIES: the world's worst polio epidemic on record in 1916 Lower Eastside Manhattan had an unheard of 25% mortality

Manhattan's population in 1916 was ~ 5 million.  

00:00.  I would have to say that the polio bunny trail was the darkest one of all.  I'm not making this up either.  In 1916, in Upper East Side Manhattan, there was a Rockefeller Lab [whose] specific stated goal was to try to create the most pathological, neuro-pathological strain of polio possible.  And they did that by taking monkey brains and human spinal serum and injecting it into monkeys and there was a big problem with that . . .  which was released into the public "by accident," and the world experienced the worst polio epidemic on record. 25% mortality, that's unheard of.  

Wikipedia corroborates this, 

The overall mortality rate throughout the city was estimated to be about 25%, and the disease left many more paralyzed.

Really freaked the public out, but as it, and as you can see the epicenter as it fanned out, and as it fanned out and as time went on, never heard of it again.  It attenuates as it moves through the body because it's a normal human commensal that goes back to its normal state when it's in a human, and that's generally what happens.  As far as polio goes, no, polio is only made more lethal by the stupid things that humans did around it to make it more invasive into the body.  Just like you can go do stupid things and end up with herpes outbreaks and, you know, staff outbreaks.  Polio virus is a normal commensal.  It used to be until we obliterated it with oral vaccines and replaced it with vaccine strains, but the wild strains are normal human commensals.

01:20.  So there's a vaccine strain of polio that just comes from a vaccine and is transmissible?

01:26.  Absolutely.

Tuesday, January 7, 2025

DR. SUZANNE HUMPHRIES on POLIO: So why were these legs paralyzed? . . . they were paralyzed because doctors decided to start cutting tendons on spasm[ed] muscles and putting children in casts for 2 years

TRANSCRIPT

There were trials done on the polio vaccine, and I think one of the biggest, interesting things is that they didn't release the data on that horribly fraudulent, very poorly designed trial with very bad interpretations of the statistics.  They didn't even give doctors at the time the data until 2 years later.  So doctors were pretty much rounded up and said here's the vaccine that we've all been waiting for.  Give it.  They weren't given information.  Even the doctors were told to give it and it was licensed in a matter of 8 hours.  That's pretty much a record for them in 8 hours.  They pressured the committee to license the vaccine the day that the Francis trial data was supposedly finished.  So I just say look, you have to look at the history of what happened around here.  That's what Dissolving Illusions is all about.  Why would this have been going on like this? What was making people die?  What was making people crippled?  Let's look at the history of how people were living, what were they bathing in and marinating in in society?  What are the drugs that people were using to treat?  I mean every disease that has the vaccine in history, the doctors were doing the most insane things to treat the disease.  So why were these legs paralyzed?  Good question.  I had to ask that.  I had to research that.  Well, they were paralyzed because doctors decided to start cutting tendons on spasm[ed] muscles and putting children in casts for 2 years.  So we have to look at the treatment of . . . it's same with COVID.  How are people being treated?  Completely poisoning them.  Wrong treatments.  Not allowing the right treatments to be given.  I mean it's, it's just there's so many amazingly easy arguments to kill this polio idea.  It's not even funny.  So it's an easy one.  Trap me in an elevator any day, polio is the one I can just nail in 5 minutes probably. 

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.  

 

Thursday, July 21, 2022

"Klenner stressed that dangerously ill patients should receive large doses of vitamin C when doctors need more time to make a diagnosis."

from Dr. Ken Walker @ Orthomolecular

What can history tell doctors about meningitis?  In 1949, Dr. FrederickRobert Klenner was a family doctor in North Carolina when the great poliomyelitis epidemic struck North America.  Klenner had no training in treating polio and no laboratory facilities.  But he was placed in charge of 60 patients suffering from early polio.  At that time, there was no specific treatment to prevent paralysis. 

In 1948, Klenner had previously cured several patients of viral pneumonia using intravenous vitamin C.  So he decided to give his polio patients up to 30,000 milligrams of vitamin C intravenously for 14 days.  None of these patients developed paralysis.  (Ironically, in 1949, I developed polio in my final year at The Harvard Medical School and I did develop paralysis.  But none of my eminent professors were aware of the benefits of massive doses of intravenous vitamin C). 

Dr. Klenner presented his monumental research to the annual meeting of the American Medical Association in Atlantic City, New Jersey on June 10th, 1949.  Klenner should have been awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine.  But his discovery failed to make headlines around the world and is still collecting dust. 

Spurred on by this scientific finding, Klenner later reported that he had cured meningitis, encephalitis, measles, and other diseases by large doses of IV vitamin C.  Since his death, other researchers have verified his findings. 

Klenner stressed that dangerously ill patients should receive large doses of vitamin C when doctors need more time to make a diagnosis.  And that, unless our white blood cells, needed to fight infection, are saturated with vitamin C they are like soldiers without bullets.  I believe his sage advice could save lives today and might have saved the life of this child. 

 

So why vitamin C?

McDonagh Med explains,

The function of vitamin C is to activate an enzyme in the white blood cell, called myeloperoxidase. The enzyme main function is to produce hydrogen peroxide (which gives rise to the highly energetic and bactericidal and viradical hydroxy free radical), which makes the white cells Super Killers as far as bacteria and viruses are concerned. 

By the way, this high-dose vitamin C protocol not only worked for polio, measles, meningitis, and encephalitis, but it also worked for multiple sclerosis.


Here is a brief history/synopsis of polio.  It's pretty good because it unearths some of the erroneous assumptions that we've made, or that doctors have made, about polio.  

Saturday, May 21, 2022

Jonas Salk vs. Albert Sabin: The War on Polio

 
Groubert says that the March of Dimes got its name from The March of Time, 1935-1951.  Wikipedia elaborates a bit, 

The March of Time  is an American newsreel series sponsored by Time Inc. and shown in movie theaters from 1935 to 1951. It was based on a radio news series broadcast from 1931 to 1945. The "voice" of both series was Westbrook VAn Voorhis.  Produced and written by Louis de Rochemont and his brother Richard de Rochemont, The March of Time was recognized with an Academy Honorary Award in 1937. 

Here is a 1938 The March of Time newsreel, titled, "Inside Nazi Germany."

March of Dimes wasn't in name only.  Everybody in the country mailed in millions and millions of dimes and raised over a million dollars in 1932.  This single-handedly funded the research.  

March of the Moms was where moms in the neighborhood would march around the neighborhood at night and collect the change thar families would leave out on the porch under a porch light.  

Of the 30,000 kids who were inoculated across the country, some kids began to die and the Salk vaccine national program was called to a halt and Salk was was called in to Congress.   

Sabin on Sunday where everyone in the country was given a sugar cube with the Sabin vaccine which had the live virus in it.  Salk, to his credit never gives up.  In 1954, Sabin goes before the American Medical Association in the Madison Square Gardens in front of 38,000 people and denounces Salk as a communist  

He says this is going to cause polio and he was right, the Sabin vaccine did cause polio all the way to today.  In fact, the only cause of polio in the world today is from vaccine-induced polio. 

At the 39:50-mark, Mark Groubert says "that's why the vaccine companies have immunity today." So I missed the lead in to that statement.  It's because of the Sabin vaccine lawsuit that vaccine companies have immunity today. 

The Fauci-ites hate Salk.  Sabin calls Salk nothing more than a kitchen chemist.  The refrigeration if the Albert Sabin vaccine is what kept the polio vaccine alive.  That's why you kept hearing about the polio vaccine in Africa and the polio vaccine in India.