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Create problem. Instigate reaction. Create solution . . .

The human mind seems programmed to want to fix all these terrible problems it sees in nature. But to paraphrase Alan Watts: For every solution we come up with we also create a new myriad of dreadful problems. There is no effect without a cause, and for every cause there is an effect.

In the early 1900s there was a dramatic spike in the polio disease. This was occurring simultaneous to the newly developed inventions of blood refrigeration and antibiotics. The refrigeration was preserving the polio virus along with the blood. And the antibiotics were destroying many people’s gut immunity particularly those consuming lots of sugar (at the time, particularly the children of the rich.) And then at zero hour the first polio vaccination was discovered by research scientist and epidemiologist Bernice Eddy to be more deadly than the disease, itself.

The nascent polio vaccination contained a cancer causing virus protracted from the kidneys of the lab monkeys they were using. You can imagine the helter-skelter cover-up that ensued. All this is well documented in Ed Haslam's fascinating and highly informative book, Dr. Mary’s Monkey (and the Secret Virus Lab in New Orleans).


I encourage you to do your own research on the subject.

The unfortunate day that we are begging for mandatory vaccinations may not be the Panacea we are looking for. Be careful what you ask for, you might just get it.


Oh the things we were never taught in school . . .



















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