HEALTH MANAGEMENT NARRATIVES     DAVID SKRIPAC

https://twitter.com/SenseReceptor/status/1768016040443699394 

It has never really been shown that any vaccines work against viruses... I came to realize I had been making a great mistake. And all of this [vaccine science] was fraudulent from the very beginning." 


Sucharit Bhakdi, a retired Professor Emeritus of Medical Microbiology and Immunology and former Chair of the Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene at Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz, describes for Charles Kovess (@CharlesKovess) et al. how he's come to the conclusion that the vast majority of "vaccine" science is fraudulent. Bhakdi, who's been an outspoken critic of the COVID injections, highlights a lack of placebo-controlled trials for "vaccines," as well as faulty mechanisms of action. 

Bhakdi begins his criticisms of vaccines by highlighting the smallpox "vaccine," which he claims was "the Big Bang of the medicinal-military complex." 

"[T]his compulsory vaccination against smallpox was a fraud, the whole thing was a fraud," Bhakdi says. "It's not true that smallpox eradication has come to be because of this vaccination; this vaccination never worked. This is something that people don't know, but they must know." 

Likewise he says that the polio "vaccine" was/is "such a fraud," along with the "vaccines" for yellow fever and dengue fever. (He notes the latter injections were responsible for the deaths of "hundreds of children" in the Philippines.) 

Furthermore, Bhakdi says that "flu vaccines have never worked... and will not work and cannot work... [as] airborne viruses that don't enter the bloodstream cannot be stopped at the door [i.e. mucous membranes]." He adds, "because it's the front door of your house and you're sitting in your living room, and that's where the bloodstream is, and that's where the antibodies are... so we do not have these antibodies against the virus, and even if we had them, they would be overrun because... the number of antibodies on mucosal surfaces are limited..."

Interestingly, Bhakdi does believe that the rabies "vaccine" is worthwhile, as that viral infection occurs after a bite (meaning it enters the bloodstream). He believes the same for the tetanus "vaccine." 

Bhakdi notes that for 40 years he taught that "vaccine" science was sound, but then changed his mind post COVID.  

"[T]his COVID story has put me on the track [to the truth about the fraudulent science], because I started reading up," he tells Kovess, et al. "I came to realize I had been making a great mistake. And all of this was fraudulent from the very beginning." 

The Best Thing We Can Do for Our Health

Today is World Sleep Day, which is a good occasion for me to make a confession. I’d like to start by quoting Paul’s letter to the Romans (7:15). As the verse is translated in the Christian Standard Bible translation, Paul wrote:

For I do not understand what I am doing, because I do not practice what I want to do, but I do what I hate.

It seems to me that Paul’s confession is an apt expression of why I so rarely get a good night’s sleep. Take yesterday and last night for example.

Yesterday I didn’t have time (or make the time) to go on my morning jog because I had a long to-do list. Suffering an afternoon slump, I drank I double espresso at 2:45 p.m. Yesterday evening I attended a dinner party at which I ate too much and drank too much wine. After the party, I stayed up late reading a document on my laptop.

The aggregate of all of these actions wrecked my sleep last night. What is especially regrettable is that I knew these actions would wreck my sleep last night, but I did them anyway.

Dr. McCullough has occasionally given me a hard time about my lack of sleep hygiene, reproaching me along the following lines:

You wake up sleep deprived and the stress hormones kick in, so you drink enough caffeine to kill a Cape Buffalo, which produces more stress hormones. By the end of the day, you crave a few glasses of wine to settle the dust, which destroys your sleep architecture, and the vicious cycle repeats the next day.

In other words, like so many good things in life, consistently getting a good night’s sleep is the hard-won result of consistently practicing good habits.

What are these habits?

1). Go to bed and rise at the same times every day.

2). Get at least ten minutes of sunlight as soon as possible after Helios rises.

3). Only drink coffee in the morning hours, preferably before 9:00 a.m.

4). Each day, prioritize doing the nagging and annoying things on your list. If you leave them undone, your mind will race around them at 3:00 a.m.

5). Exercise daily, preferably in the morning.

6). Take a Vitamin D supplement, especially if you aren’t getting daily sunshine.

7). Cease looking at electronic, light-emitting devices after sunset.

8). Avoid heavy meals for dinner.

9). Avoid alcohol.

10). For at least a couple of hours before bedtime, do relaxing things like listening to classical music, playing an instrument, meditating, or reading an amusing book. Do not read or watch distressing things before bedtime.

I know that if I could just manage to follow this routine most of the time, it would do wonders for my mental and physical health. I suspect that most of the country would also feel a lot better if they did the same. Much of the crazy agitation that we see in the public forum today may be partly explained by the fact that 1 in 3 American are chronically sleep deprived.

Over the years I have contrasted my lack of sleep—the outcome of bad habits—with the sleep deprivation expressed in this famous LIFE magazine photograph of Dr. Ernest Ceriani.