13 Comments
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INGRID C DURDEN's avatar

As usual, the money decides what will be investigated. Allopathy is like a blind man chasing an egg on a rope... and so many people suffering from whichever disease keep running to the doctor who has no idea and does not look any further... this is so sad. So much suffering could be solved by just thinking out of the box. Read Pollack and saw his presentations on the Tube. Thank God for computers. At least now we can look things up ourselves, even without chemical, biological or medical degrees, and thank you for putting an easy to understand analogy at the end of your articles that helps us no-degree people grasp the essence!

Go Your Own Way's avatar

Keep in mind that money is all privately raised. There is no research outside this.

Angela Morris's avatar

Thank you for this. I have a family member with CF, but they are fully bought in to the allopathic model and won't explore outside of it. This is an important article. The other side of this is that the treatments, like the vests, are insanely expensive and don't address any potential for healing and vitality for those with this condition.

Klaas Proesmans's avatar

Louis Pasteur discovered microbes and for much of his life believed they were the primary cause of disease. By the end of his life, however, he concluded that the body—or the “terrain”—is everything: a healthy environment can neutralize pathogens, while a disrupted terrain allows disease to emerge, regardless of which microbe is present.

Dr. Tom Cowan applies a similar perspective to cystic fibrosis. While the conventional genetic explanation focuses on the CFTR gene and its mutations, research shows that the gene or mutation is neither necessary nor sufficient to cause the disease. Cowan argues that the real cause lies in the disruption of water structure in tissues and the resulting imbalance of electrolytes and salts. Just as Pasteur realized that a microbe alone cannot cause illness without a susceptible environment, CF demonstrates that a genetic mutation explains little without the underlying disturbed “terrain.”

In short: in both infections and cystic fibrosis, the state of the environment—the terrain—determines disease, not merely the presence of a microbe or a gene mutation.

Factscinator's avatar

As with viroLIEgy, all kinds of mischief become possible when the IV — the virus/DNA your entire field depends on — is missing in action and has never once shown up for parade inspection.

CK_'s avatar

CF might be charge-related per Dr. Mike Yeadon.

https://lionessofjudah.substack.com/p/dr-yeadon-comments-on-what-is-the

Also, Pollack's new "Charged" book is well worth reading. It says gravity is electrical, not a separate force.

Ray Horvath, "The Source" :)'s avatar

The book, while correct in a few details, places the emphasis where it doesn't belong.

Protein manipulation is most likely the nearly exclusive cause of modern illnesses. Although they used to come primarily from "vaccines", these days, one can eat, drink, or inhale the agents, or just smear them on the skin. Synthetic pharmaceuticals seem like a preferred option, too:

https://rayhorvaththesource.substack.com/p/the-symbiotic-human-body

"Madicine" hides behind genetics, when it cannot or doesn't want to reveal the actual causes. Even DNA theory looks like a cover-up:

https://rayhorvaththesource.substack.com/p/how-is-life-encoded

Crixcyon's avatar

..."The question is what is making them sick."....could it be as simple as some kind of toxin or poison disrupting the body's systems? I don't think genes exist in the way medicine tells us. I don't think proteins exist either. Fats, sugar and carbs...yes. Remember that 99% of the medical system is invented to find sick people and profit from them. 19% of our economy depends on more and more illness and diseases being treated...not patients becoming well.

Elsa's avatar

Very interesting. I have just sent to a friend with a son who has been diagnosed with cyctic fibrosis.

soothing hex's avatar

George de Mohrenschildt, of JFK assassination lore, and his third wife, Wynne "Didi" Sharples, had two children who died of cystic fibrosis. Didi got very active in securing funds for research into the disease. She set up the National Cystic Fibrosis Research Foundation. Nancy Wertz Weiford states: "Through Didi de Mohrenschildt's sheer will, the perception of cystic fibrosis was reaching nationwide levels."

https://substack.com/profile/151050586-soothing-hex/note/c-209180485

Baldmichael's avatar

Genetic flaws a good excuse to cover up toxic poisoning from vaccines etc. I see Cystic Fibrosis anagrams to;

- ifs bossy citric

Does excess acidity in the body create the issue?

coords1306's avatar

I was looking into Retinitis Pigmentosa (RP) a year ago as I had heard it was genetic and I reflexively flinch when I hear that now as it sounds fatalistic. Some of what I learned about it lines up with this. Yes, there is a subset of patients where its genetic but the more the look into the more variations of mutations they find. Meanwhile the onset of the disease is so varied. The more I looked into the more it seemed like perhaps there was another issue. It did seem also that RP was one of the early 'success' stories for genetic causes of disease. And yet, I think only a minority of cases of the extreme variety with earlier onset, were hard and fast genetic. You are so prolific (I struggle to even skim over all you are producing) I'd be curious how quick you could dig into it and compare it to the case you make here about Cystic Fibrosis.

Frankly, the amount DMSO was being promoted by A MidWestern Doctor made me wonder if that whole operation was out to sell the stuff the entire time and made me tune out for a bit. But I had to search it and sure enough DMSO may help with (RP) but I'm not a Dr so I'm not going to go around recommending it to people. But I know it be one of the things I would try. I also found it curious that Vitamin A is something recommended to RP patients that made me think of Measles and wonder if RP could be an effect of a measles infection, or the measles vaccines. I bounced it off ChatGPT For awhile and it slowly wore me down into thinking that they have enough evidence in there mouse models and with the onset and with the heredity of the condition that maybe this really is genetic. Regardless I remain curious if all this activity in alternative health is going to start leading to hard results in the form of superior care. And hope somehow this finds you and you can create some content touching upon it.

Thanks