A study of the history of science will reveal that the binomial names of species are a naming convention, and they change based on who is doing what research and when. Both names were used for the same bacterium species.
Genera are not at all static constructs, scientists shuffle those around quite a lot, it's a good thing creatures don't read textbooks or they might get an identity crisis! 😆 Scientific names are one of those "the map is not the territory" kinds of things.
I dutifully got TDap every ten years until I read a Forbes article that said they lasted at least thirty years. My last one was 2010. My naturopath runs a tetanus titer with my other bloodwork every few years. It still shows antibodies. Which shut up my primary care physician. But I’ve since fired her anyway for pushing the Covid death shot. Haven’t missed her!
Whoever does your artwork needs a raise. For some reason, the visual makes the articles more compelling, like it tells the story before reading the article.
The artwork is AI generated I believe. It is so consistent across every article, and I also am drawn to it. I have printed many of the articles and always print the cover page with the artwork in colour.
The artwork is AI generated I believe. It is so consistent across every article, and I also am drawn to it. I have printed many of the articles and always print the cover page with the artwork in colour.
In our family, a story passed down over many decades (from 1940s?) and concerned a young lad (Jeffrey) who apparently died from tetanus. He climbed a tree in a horse enclosure, fell and broke his arm. He was transported to where ever broken bones were attended to in his small town. The doctor put a plaster cast on the boy and he was sent home. Details after that become hazy, but it would seem there was a small cut/lesion (?) under the plaster that was not attended to at the time. Nevertheless, Jeffrey's condition deteriorated over the coming weeks and he *apparently* succumbed to what the local doctors called tetanus. Unfortunately, Jeffrey died aged eleven, and his death was apparently attributed to tetanus.
Many years ago I was washing dishes in hot soapy water and got a deep cut on my hand from a glass that broke while being washed. I had to go to the ER for stitches. And of course, the doctor gave me a tetanus shot. I didn't know better back then. Of all things for a wound in a hand emersed in hot soapy water, a tetanus shot.
Great article. I am now properly informed, and will never be tempted into accepting a tetanus shot. Considering the evidence, on a personal level, I have been extraordinarily successful in self treatment of significant wounds, and have never had tetanus, even though some of the wounds would have been ideal for the condition to be declared as requiring treatment to prevent "tetanus". I feel so much better now, having some evidence from this article to support my innate confidence in self treatment of wounds. Frankly, I would now be quite apprehensive of having a wound treated in a traditional hospital setting knowing what I have learned. I own my own scalpel, and have used it several times, by necessity to free up an embedded object that could not be removed without an incision... disturbing but true. Healing was consistently very rapid once the wound was cleared of detritus, carefully cleaned, well bled, and the edges of the incisions aligned. As noted in the article, drainage is critical. Also critical is keeping the wound dry, avoiding water on the wound for several days. Wounds must be protected against reopening, to avoid infection. Two doctors, on different occasions, when medical help was finally available for consultation, complimented me on the wound treatments and the consequent clear healing. Both would have required anesthetic and stitching, but were way too far away from medical help. One wound was a chainsaw gash across the knee, and the doctor said he had never seen a chainsaw wound so finely repaired, the other wound was a machete gash across the calf, cleaned with a hunting knife, "stitched" using Kleenex as the cross linking, held in place with black electrical tape, and a 12 hour trek out of the bush. Kleenex causes a firm "stitch" when exposed to fresh blood, and helps to close a wound when stitching is not an option. When the doctor finally saw the bandaging, too much time had passed, and stitching was no longer a reasonable option. He said, "we'll just leave it like that... it looks great". I can see that any suggestion of a 'Tetanus shot" would have been ridiculous.
"In Pasteur’s day, carbolic acid cauterization prevented hundreds of cases of the post-wound neurological cascade that was then called hydrophobia."
In Pasteur's day, I'd have consulted Béchamp.
Thanks for the great detail in this article. I've been clawed and bitten often by cats and people always ask about the tetanus shot. My response has always been to ask:
1 when was the last time you heard about someone with tetanus?
Or
2 which other 'vaccines' are taken after the supposed infection?
Thank you for the, ''Explain it to a six year old section.'' I am one among the many. Who appreciate law, medicine, engineering. And all the mind bending, brain twisting subject matter. That fills a grin inducing, brag worthy CV. Albeit, struggled mightily & failed gloriously. To find my inner autodidact.
Oh, it makes me wonder. OOh it makes me wonder just what’s in the tetanus shot. What type of slow motion killer is in it can it cause adult Asperger‘s or the standard stroke, heart attack, and cancer or are they attacking your testicles. The satanic forces of government have no moral boundary. You’re suffering and eventual death gives them glee. Tell everyone you know that tetanus shots cause monkeypox Ebola and male pattern baldness that’s your only chance.
Not trying to be confrontative: is it Bacillus tetani or clostridium tetani or both?
I read the data several years ago regarding actually contracting tetanus. Based on those numbers, I have opted out taking the shot.
Your summary far exceeds what I knew, though. Thank you for tge education.
A study of the history of science will reveal that the binomial names of species are a naming convention, and they change based on who is doing what research and when. Both names were used for the same bacterium species.
Interesting, Bacillus & Clostridium are certainly different genera.
Genera are not at all static constructs, scientists shuffle those around quite a lot, it's a good thing creatures don't read textbooks or they might get an identity crisis! 😆 Scientific names are one of those "the map is not the territory" kinds of things.
This link from Grokipedia talks about the taxonomy: https://grokipedia.com/page/Clostridium_tetani#taxonomy-and-characteristics
I finally went to GROK. They are very different Thanks
I dutifully got TDap every ten years until I read a Forbes article that said they lasted at least thirty years. My last one was 2010. My naturopath runs a tetanus titer with my other bloodwork every few years. It still shows antibodies. Which shut up my primary care physician. But I’ve since fired her anyway for pushing the Covid death shot. Haven’t missed her!
Whoever does your artwork needs a raise. For some reason, the visual makes the articles more compelling, like it tells the story before reading the article.
I have been drawn to the art work as well.
The artwork is AI generated I believe. It is so consistent across every article, and I also am drawn to it. I have printed many of the articles and always print the cover page with the artwork in colour.
I thought it might be. I do like the connection to the essay.
The artwork is AI generated I believe. It is so consistent across every article, and I also am drawn to it. I have printed many of the articles and always print the cover page with the artwork in colour.
In our family, a story passed down over many decades (from 1940s?) and concerned a young lad (Jeffrey) who apparently died from tetanus. He climbed a tree in a horse enclosure, fell and broke his arm. He was transported to where ever broken bones were attended to in his small town. The doctor put a plaster cast on the boy and he was sent home. Details after that become hazy, but it would seem there was a small cut/lesion (?) under the plaster that was not attended to at the time. Nevertheless, Jeffrey's condition deteriorated over the coming weeks and he *apparently* succumbed to what the local doctors called tetanus. Unfortunately, Jeffrey died aged eleven, and his death was apparently attributed to tetanus.
On September 8, 2025, as Commander in Chief of the U.S. military, Trump called ALL vaccines “poison,” “EVERY. SINGLE. ONE.”
Why then are military members still subjected to them and with zero tolerance for religious accommodation/exemptions for those forced injections?
https://www.instagram.com/reel/DOWoC4ADy0y/?l=1&hl=en
At what point does it become mockery?
"At what point does it become mockery?"
Centuries ago.
Many years ago I was washing dishes in hot soapy water and got a deep cut on my hand from a glass that broke while being washed. I had to go to the ER for stitches. And of course, the doctor gave me a tetanus shot. I didn't know better back then. Of all things for a wound in a hand emersed in hot soapy water, a tetanus shot.
The evil genius of John D Rockefeller - control disease, and you control humanity:).
Great article. I am now properly informed, and will never be tempted into accepting a tetanus shot. Considering the evidence, on a personal level, I have been extraordinarily successful in self treatment of significant wounds, and have never had tetanus, even though some of the wounds would have been ideal for the condition to be declared as requiring treatment to prevent "tetanus". I feel so much better now, having some evidence from this article to support my innate confidence in self treatment of wounds. Frankly, I would now be quite apprehensive of having a wound treated in a traditional hospital setting knowing what I have learned. I own my own scalpel, and have used it several times, by necessity to free up an embedded object that could not be removed without an incision... disturbing but true. Healing was consistently very rapid once the wound was cleared of detritus, carefully cleaned, well bled, and the edges of the incisions aligned. As noted in the article, drainage is critical. Also critical is keeping the wound dry, avoiding water on the wound for several days. Wounds must be protected against reopening, to avoid infection. Two doctors, on different occasions, when medical help was finally available for consultation, complimented me on the wound treatments and the consequent clear healing. Both would have required anesthetic and stitching, but were way too far away from medical help. One wound was a chainsaw gash across the knee, and the doctor said he had never seen a chainsaw wound so finely repaired, the other wound was a machete gash across the calf, cleaned with a hunting knife, "stitched" using Kleenex as the cross linking, held in place with black electrical tape, and a 12 hour trek out of the bush. Kleenex causes a firm "stitch" when exposed to fresh blood, and helps to close a wound when stitching is not an option. When the doctor finally saw the bandaging, too much time had passed, and stitching was no longer a reasonable option. He said, "we'll just leave it like that... it looks great". I can see that any suggestion of a 'Tetanus shot" would have been ridiculous.
"......and the bundling itself reveals what the program is really doing."
What does it reveal exactly?
"In Pasteur’s day, carbolic acid cauterization prevented hundreds of cases of the post-wound neurological cascade that was then called hydrophobia."
In Pasteur's day, I'd have consulted Béchamp.
Thanks for the great detail in this article. I've been clawed and bitten often by cats and people always ask about the tetanus shot. My response has always been to ask:
1 when was the last time you heard about someone with tetanus?
Or
2 which other 'vaccines' are taken after the supposed infection?
Has anyone published the stats on diphtheria and pertussis?
I don't know about stats but given the regularity of pertussis outbreaks in my area, the vax is not effective.
Thank you for the, ''Explain it to a six year old section.'' I am one among the many. Who appreciate law, medicine, engineering. And all the mind bending, brain twisting subject matter. That fills a grin inducing, brag worthy CV. Albeit, struggled mightily & failed gloriously. To find my inner autodidact.
Oh, it makes me wonder. OOh it makes me wonder just what’s in the tetanus shot. What type of slow motion killer is in it can it cause adult Asperger‘s or the standard stroke, heart attack, and cancer or are they attacking your testicles. The satanic forces of government have no moral boundary. You’re suffering and eventual death gives them glee. Tell everyone you know that tetanus shots cause monkeypox Ebola and male pattern baldness that’s your only chance.
Thank you! Very informative!!
This is information we have long needed!!