Sunday, October 16, 2022

JIM OSTROWSKI: "Refugees like the right to bear arms apparently"

4 scientists in charge of work of the flu vaccine during the 1960s found it to be ineffective. Said they refused to give it to their own families. Two were transferred to other work, a third left the division.


Today, the Federal Communicable Disease Center acknowledged the flu vaccine and the recommended dosage is ineffective, while in a larger dose it can be harmful.  However, the flu vaccine is still recommended for old people and the chronically ill.  

Last month, the Senate Sub-Committee, headed by Abraham Ribokoff charged that the Federal Government wasn't doing a good enough job of informing the public of ineffective vaccines.  [Ribicoff, 1910-1998, served as President Kennedy's Secretary for Health, Education, and Welfare for 18 months from 1961-1962.]

Scientists at the Division of Biologic Standards test vaccines for their potency and safety before licensing them for public use.  However, the division does not determine the effectiveness of the vaccine.  That is left to the manufacturers.  A case in point is the influenza vaccine.  Four scientists in charge of work of the flu vaccine during the 1960s found it to be ineffective.  Said they refused to give it to their own families.  Two were transferred to other work, a third left the division.  And over the entire ten-year period, not one word of their unfavorable findings was allowed to be published.  But a more serious case involving the relationship between the leaders of the division and their scientists involves the adenoid virus vaccine, a vaccine given to thousands of American soldiers to prevent certain cold-like symptoms.  When it was shown that the vaccine contained a contaminant, which caused cancer in laboratory animals, it was taken off the market, but that was 3 years after the division's own scientists had pointed out the danger.  Dr. Murray [Dr. Frederick Murray, Division of Biologic Standard] had justified the use of the vaccine said it took 3 years to examine the evidence against it.   

It is more important to use the vaccines than to take them off the market and remove the agent.  Since the agent couldn't be removed, there was no other course [than to inject it into thousands of service members]. 

Thus, for three years, American troops were injected with a cold-preventing vaccine which was causing cancer in some of the laboratory animals.  And some of the division scientists charged that they were prevented from publishing results from experiments which showed some of the vaccines to be ineffective.  

[James Turner, 1940-2022, Consumer Lawyer

The control officer in 1960, who has grave doubts about the potency of the influenza vaccine.  These doubts were made known to the Director of the Division and through the proper channels . . . 

Here is a decent timeline on immunization.  

"If they're on record bribing physicians and fudging test results, a $2.3 billion dollar fine . . ."

ACT test scores fall to lowest levels since 1991

"High dose thiamine improves symptoms of fibromyalgia, Freidreich's ataxia, Parkinson's disease, and in biotinthiamin responsive basal ganglia disease, suggesting the expanding role of epigenetics."

Make sure that you get the fat-soluble forms of thiamine, like Allithiamine, Benfotiamine, or Lipothiamine.  Remember that Thiamine is a B vitamin, vitamins that we take for granted because there are so many forms of them as well as so many dietary sources of B vitamins.  But buyer beware.  We're more at risk of losing B vitamins today than we are at gaining them.  One reason for this are the B-blockers, foods and drinks that block the absorption of B vitamins.  And if we consume these B-blockers on a daily or regular basis, we also risk the developing a condition where we're no longer able to absorb B vitamins adequately.  So it's a serious trade-off. 

Bonnie Fields @ needs.com provides us with sobering reminders,

thiamine plays a pivotal role in the metabolism of glucose as well. The ingestion of an excessive amount of refined simple carbohydrates, such as sodas, fruit juices, sugary snacks, etc. automatically increases our need for thiamine.

A number of naturally occurring compounds produce anti-thiamine activity and anti-thiamine factors, like thiaminase enzymes. Thiaminase enzymes are found in tea, brussels sprouts, red cabbage, mussels, oysters, and urinary thiamine levels are reduced when a person consumes coffee. 

Fields makes an important observation, 

Thiamine deficiency has been implicated in restrictive weight loss surgery, in the use of parenteral nutrition, optic neuropathy, anorexia nervosa, and congestive heart failure." Dr. Lonsdale also points out that "the initial symptoms of thiamine deficiency beriberi are those of dysautonomia, a broad term that describes any disease or malfunction of the autonomic nervous system." He further cites references showing that "High dose thiamine improves symptoms of fibromyalgia, Freidreich's ataxia, Parkinson's disease, and in biotinthiamin responsive basal ganglia disease, suggesting the expanding role of epigenetics." 

Basal ganglia disease?  Why that's exactly what the spike protein is causing tens of thousands if not hundreds of thousands of vaccinated people.  Does this mean that fat-soluble thiamine is a remedy for basal ganglia disease?  I would certainly try this compound if I had the jab or if I had spike proteins in my system.  

In his book "The Natural Way to a Trouble-Free Pregnancy: The Toxemia/Thiamine Connection," Dr. John B. Irwin explains that thiamine supplementation, preconceptually and throughout pregnancy, is as important as folic acid supplementation, but is often overlooked. 

And to press the point to just the right end, 

fat-soluble thiamine or thiamine tetrahydrofurfuryl disulfide (TTFD), sometimes referred to as allithiamines, easily diffuses through plasma membranes, which strongly increases thiamine activity throughout our blood stream, red blood cells, cerebrospinal fluid, and urine. 


Articles referenced in the Fields' article.