Sunday, January 5, 2025

JOHN BEAUDOIN on CONNECTICUT'S FAILURES

CT Memo Vol. I Sudden Kidney Failure and Hospital Homicides

From official government records

Facts found nowhere else in the world - 2 signals

SummaLogicaLLC dot com

Corroborated by Phinance Technologies
@DowdEdward in total excess kidney failure USA ~153,000 dead.  

SUZANNE HUMPHRIES: Nature didn't leave out vitamin K from babies, and that until babies are 6 months old they're not actually having a full coagulation, normal coagulation, so there's a reason

afterward in most societies that [umbilical] cord is clamped right away, which is a problem because you're not only leaving behind up to 40% of that baby's blood that belongs to that baby, but you're also leaving behind stem cells, which have the potential to go in and clear up any of the problems that happened in the brain or elsewhere.  Now if you thicken the blood, what is it, 2000 times more or something like that, then how is that going to affect the ability for those stem cells to go where they need to go?  --Suzanne Humphries

00:08. What is your opinion on vitamin K being administered to newborns?  

00:14. My opinion is that the more I read about vitamin K, the more I can't believe that it is injected into newborn infants.  My scientific endeavors have really shown me that by and large nature overall didn't make mistakes like this.  Nature didn't leave out vitamin K from babies, and that until babies are 6 months old they're not actually having a full coagulation, normal coagulation, so there's a reason . . . just like babies are programmed to be anti-inflammatory, I believe that babies are programmed to not have numerously higher levels of coagulation than adults.  If you look at the coagulation, the supposed deficits, that a baby has, it's not just the vitamin K factors.  So I would suggest that you read a lot about it and consider . . . if you feel better about giving it, then only give the drops.  But most people I know, who understand the difference, don't give any at all.  And if you do give it, maybe it would just be maybe if there was an extremely traumatic birth. 

01:34.  But you have to understand some of the things that medical interventions do at birth.  For instance, when the baby is born what happens is that it's a very tight passageway, as we all know, and so the baby is squeezed very tightly.  The brain, I'm sorry, the cranium is made so that it can compact in on itself.  The brain is squeezed.  There's trauma all throughout the body.  About 30% of babies will have micro hemorrhages from a normal delivery.  Now afterward in most societies that cord is clamped right away, which is a problem because you're not only leaving behind up to 40% of that baby's blood that belongs to that baby, but you're also leaving behind stem cells, which have the potential to go in and clear up any of the problems that happened in the brain or elsewhere.  Now if you thicken the blood, what is it, 2000 times more or something like that, then how is that going to affect the ability for those stem cells to go where they need to go?  When you have these vitamin K factors, those areas that bleed tend to clot and it's a little harder to clear that out than if you just leave it that way.  The concern is always the minority, this vastly small percentage of children who can develop an inter-cranial hemorrhage and it can be problematic.  We are now treating everybody for this problem.  So I think it's important to understand the full spectrum before agreeing to the injection, and it should be your personal decision that you feel comfortable with AFTER knowing what there is to be known about vitamin K, which I believe in the USA has been given since 1970s something like that, but before that, we weren't giving it.  

03:29. The other thing is that if the baby's clotting is not full until 6 months of age, how long is your injection going to work for?  So it's not completely logical [to give] a huge injection on the first day of life.  Is it going to protect them over the long term?  But I think that it's always a good idea for mothers to consume lots of greens during, the entire pregnancy if possible, because not only do you get vitamin K that can be delivered to the baby in normal amounts if they need it, but you're also getting folic acid, magnesium, and lots of other minerals that are required to build a baby.  

Dissolving Illusions: Disease, Vaccines, and the Forgotten History, Suzanne Humphries MD (Author), Roman Bystrianyk (Author), 2013.

METABOLIC SOURCE OF CANCER: Amino Acid and Glucose Fermentation Maintain Energy in Mouse and Human Malignant Glioma Cells

 
 Here is their paper, "Amino Acid and Glucose Fermentation Maintain ATP Content in Mouse and Human Malignant Glioma Cells," Lee, D. C., Ta, L., Mukherjee, P., Duraj, T., Domin, M., Greenwood, B., … Seyfried, T. N. (2024). ASN Neuro16(1). https://doi.org/10.1080/17590914.2024.2422268

from Seyfried's presentation above: 

00:12. Amino acid fermentation can also participate in the dysregulated growth of the tumor cell and the amino acid that we're speaking predominantly about is glutamine and we tested all the other Amino acids. All 20 amino acids we interrogated, the cancer cells both mouse and human glioblastoma cells.  We interrogated them to ask what fuels could they use to maintain their growth?  Then we do this is very simple we just take the tumor cells and we grow them in Saline salt solution and, of course, there's no food there's nothing for them to eat and then you take and time them to see how fast they die with no food and mouse cells because they have a very high basil metabolic rate seven times faster than that of the human they die quick when you take away their fuels Mouse cells will die in 24 hours human cells human cells will die in about 72 hours, 48 to 72 hours with no fuel in what we call a buffered sailing solution.  And then what we do, we simply add individual amino acids back in and we see whether or not the viability of the cells is improved, and what we see is we do this both in the presence and absence of glucose.  Glucose alone will keep the cells alive longer but then they die because they don't have any nitrogen source.  And then we do it without glucose.  So we just do in pure nothing and then we add glucose and then we add individual amino acids back, and what we see is when we at amino acid glutamine these cells explode in growth capacity relative to all other amino acids.  Now we found a little bit of stimulation from glutamate because it's the first product that glutamine is metabolized to, but it's not nearly as powerful as glutamine.  None of the other amino acids had any come close to how powerful glutamine is so the question is when you have glucose and glutamine the two pathways are synergistic and provide all of the metabolites and all of the energy needed for rapid dysregulated growth.  So the question is how is glutamine able to facilitate the growth of the tumor is it respired through the respiration it's called and aplorotic respiratory process where the carbons glutamine entered into the TCA cycle to produce reducing equivalents allowing oxidative phosphorylation to operate producing energy or is the glutamine fermented which is generating energy through mitochondrial substrate level phosphorylation in the sucks you will call a ligase step Within the Krebs cycle or the TCA cycle so what we did and why we this paper is so important is we were able to test this hypothesis this is many different ways so many different ways so we would take all of the glucose away from the tumor in the presence of oxygen and then give glutamine with oxygen and glutamine in the absence of glucose but then that doesn't tell us whether the glutamine is fermented or has respired so we repeatedly experiment this time removing all the oxygen we grew them in a deep hypoxia in the acid of glucose and we still got ATP production in these cells yes it was significantly reduced but it was still being produced ATP was still being produced in the cancer cells in the absence of oxygen and in the absence of glucose and in the absence of glucose so the question is where is that ATP coming from so we think it's coming from the substrate level phosphorylation in the T c a cycle and we were able to show that when we use labeled glutamate glutamine C-13 glutamine we were able to see C-13 succinic acid as a waste product, that's the end product of the glutaminolysis pathway. 


Saturday, January 4, 2025

When people say "No one's coming to save you," they're not talking about no one's coming to help you to reach your goals. They're talking about how no one's coming to save you from yourself

The Lost World of Communism, East Germany, 2009




11:30  Berlin was then the espionage capital of the world.  and for those like Ursula, living and working on the front line of the Cold War, East Germany could be a lawless place.  
I went to the Fredericstrasse.  There, two gentlemen addressed me by name, inviting me to get into their car, telling me that they would take me to my work at DEFA.  We drew very fast for quite a while.  I was a bit surprised by this because my office wasn't that far away.  I've been kidnapped and nobody knew.  
Protesting her innocence, Ursula was sentenced to 15 years hard labor for espionage by a military court and transported almost 2,000 miles away to a labor camp in Vorkuta, Russia.
We were close to the Polar Sea.  There was a wind with ice crystals.  Summer was almost worse.  The tundra around for Kunta was a marsh land.  There were hordeCaliforniaCarlshorsttoes.  To work in 45 ° centigrade heat without sun protection, without water for 12 hours every day.
From 1945 onwards, tens of thousands were sent from East Germany to Siberia, many of them never to return.  Ursula, one of the lucky ones, was released only years later, which she revealed that she had, in fact, worked for British intelligence since before her arrival in Berlin. 
I would do errands for the English.  I worked as a courier.  In retrospect, it seems very naive.  I don't understand how I could have been that stupid.
Six months after Ursula's kidnap on the 17th of June 1953, the workers rose up against the worker and peasant state.  One of the governments strike amongst construction workers was overpaid soon turned into wider demands for free elections and the resignation of the government itself by late morning Soviet troops stationed in East Germany had to intervene.
At 11:30 we heard the tanks, the chains of the tanks, then we realized the Russians were coming.  The crowd started howling and when the people at the end of the demonstration refused to give way, the soldiers fired in the air.  And when you hear gunfire, you start running automatically.  --Horst Kreeter  

Horst Kreeter, a Berlin petrol pump attendant, was in the thick of the action that day.  

We threw stones at the tanks. Seeing the tanks fire in your direction, the sheer sound of it causes you to piss in your pants. Someone had died on the Marx-Engles Square that day.  He was run over by a tank.  There was a blanket and a wooden cross, which said, 'Murdered by the Soviet Army.'  It was a day of glory for me.  We showed them what could be done.  The police could do nothing.  The government could do nothing.  The secret police, the Stasi, could do nothing.

Over 50 civilians were killed that day.  In the clamp down that followed, more than 20,000 were arrested, scores were executed.  The country's leaders had been caught off guard.  From now on, security and the control of the people would be the government's overriding concern.  

16:00. People themselves were concerned  about simply getting by.  The 1950s were austere times and food and goods were in limited supply.  Families and organizations of West Germany sent aid packages to the east.

We were so happy and surprised as we lived such a frugal life.  When the package arrived, we couldn't believe our eyes.  The wrapping was so attractive and colorful.  We'd never seen anything like this.  

Roland, the youngest, couldn't open the presents fast enough, helping Wolfgang beaming at his discoveries.  

In 1954, my father received the 8mm camera AK8.  These are the first films he recorded at Christmas I'm the baby 18 months old that's his self-made gramophone we lived in Berlin in Carlshorst, which is under soviet occupation