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.  

Public Health Officials?

While repairing the vagus we cleanse the colon and provide enzymes to the small intestine to help it while it recovers.

8 Unexpected Benefits of COFFEE You've Never Heard Before


THE NEGATIVES

1.  Negatively affects your sleep.  

2.  Raises your cholesterol.  Never knew that.  

3.  Can affect cardiac rhythms and give you cardiac arrhythmia.  

THE BENEFITS

1.  Improves your cognitive function. 

2.  Can improve your physical performance. 

3.  Positively affect your mood, but there are 8 additional benefits.

ADDITIONAL BENEFITS

1.  Coffee has the ability to lower your risk of Dementia, Alzheimer's, and Parkinson's Diseases.  Coffee helps prevent the oxidation of neurons, and it does that through a very protective, special gene called, NRF2-ARE.  Protection against the death of the neuron from oxidative stress.

2.  Coffee can lower the risk of gall stones because coffee has certain phytonutrients that can stimulate the production of bile, the flow of bile, and the hormones that control the gall bladder control and relaxation.  Coffee can help thin the bile which sometimes becomes congested and back up in the bowel ducts and cause all sorts of pain in the gall bladder area, in the liver, that can radiate to your right side.  But remember, if you're putting a bunch of crap in your coffee, like sugar and syrup and things like that, I'm not talking about that coffee.  And the reason that I bring that up is when you're consuming conventional coffee with all the pesticides, that can put a strain on your gall bladder and your liver.  

3.  Coffee lowers the risk of kidney stones.  Can help counter chronic kidney disease.  

4.  Coffee can give you an anticarcinogenic effect.  So it's anticancer: against the prostate, colorectal cancer, skin cancer [as in melanoma], liver cancer. 

5.  Coffee has an anti-inflammatory effect.  So if you have inflammation from arthritis, bursitis, tendonitis, or any of the itis-es, coffee can help.  

6.  Coffee helps with metabolic syndrome, where the person has insulin resistance or too much insulin.  Metabolic syndrome is a combination of high blood glucose.  It's high blood pressure.  It's high cholesterol, and it's definitely involving blood sugar issues and insulin resistance.  

7.  Coffee has the potential to decrease the risk of all-cause mortality.  Coffee can help you live a little longer.  

8.  Coffee is hepatoprotective, which means it protects the liver, meaning that it protects against getting a fatty liver.  Coffee decreases the complications from Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C as well as the complications from liver cirrhosis.  

A lot of people who are on keto do the BulletProof coffee.  Add a little MCT oil and butter, and that will help you fast longer.  Both of these fats added to coffee can spike your ketones and give you more cognitive benefits. 

MELATONIN: NOT JUST A SLEEP AID BUT ". . . THE MOST POWERFUL ANTIOXIDANT TOOL IN THE WORLD"?

I love her claim that melatonin is a more powerful antioxidant than glutathione, which is considered the master antioxidant.  Imagine the healing that could take place if you took both glutathione AND melatonin.  Be sure to open up that thread by clicking on Natural Immunity's Twitter link.  Melatonin benefits go beyond anticancer.  It keeps our skin healthy and youthful [through] two major mechanisms. It has antioxidant effects that neutralize oxidative damage from the sun, and by stimulating growth receptors in the skin.  NaturalImmunity goes on to say that 

Melatonin may have a profound effect on stroke & heart attack! 🙌 Take w/in 1st 2 hrs. Based on studies, if were me, I'd take ~2000mg, since oral bioavail is low (& that amt has been shown 2b safe). Then 100mg+ every hour or so for 24/48 hrs. (Not medical advice)!

Christopher Wark of Chris Beat Cancer interviews Dr. Russell J. Reiter.  A powerful interview here on how necessary darkness is for our circadian rhythms and our health.  Modern life with night lighting is fairly new in our evolution, disruptive of natural processes, and disease generating.  So embrace the darkness.  Be sure to check out the show notes in the link, "Chris Beats Cancer" above.  Here is a sampling from those notes:

Melatonin acts as an antiviral [37:24]
-How sunlight helps with the production of melatonin [44:35]
-Melatonin can reduce the likelihood of metastasis [50:45]

Clearly, the antioxidant action of melatonin is quite powerful as an anti-cancer compound. Bill Sardi included it in his nutritional compound regimen for cancer, in fact, 15-30mg of melatonin per night.  So there is credible consensus on the anti-cancer benefits of melatonin.


I have to say that any time I hear or read about the anti-aging benefits of melatonin, or any product, my ears perk up.  Antiaging means that you only slow down the aging process.  In some cases, it may be possible to reverse aging processes, like alopecia, or hair loss, this can be reversed with Rutin, Pumpkin Seed Oils, and B5.  This video, which I didn't have the time to watch all the way through, highlights that 1) Melatonin is an ancient molecule.  That's interesting, but what is the relevance of that?  What benefits are derived from its ancient characteristics?  2) It's found in bacteria and every organism between bacteria and mammalians.  Its structure has never changed throughout its evolution, what that means is that the structure of melatonin in bacteria is identical to the structure of melatonin in humans.  Whoa.  Now that is something, but what does that tell us?  That melatonin means life itself?  3) it is not toxic at any dose. 4) it exists in every species that is currently living or that has ever existed.  I mean what is not to like?  For optimal cellular physiology.  Melatonin exhibits in the blood circadian rhythm.  [7:38] "Melatonin is a very strong anti-cancer agent."  It influences the immune system, metabolism, gastro-intestinal function.   


Show Notes from Chris Beat Cancer

How Dr. Reiter got into melatonin research [1:23]
What melatonin does in the body [3:28]
How blue light inhibits melatonin production [7:05]
How melatonin is passed to the fetus and newborn [12:00]
The anticancer benefits of melatonin [15:25]
How pharmaceutical drugs suppress melatonin production [18:40]
When should melatonin be taken during the day? [22:47]
Does taking melatonin affect natural production? [24:36]
Older people need more melatonin [29:20]
How melatonin can reduce the impact of Covid-19 [31:15]
The impact of alcohol and caffeine on melatonin production [34:45]
Melatonin acts as an antiviral [37:24]
How sunlight helps with the production of melatonin [44:35]
Melatonin can reduce the likelihood of metastasis [50:45]