virus
You cannot catch a virus. Here’s why...
‣ Viruses do not ‘exist’ outside of petri-dish solutions or a living body.
‣ Viruses cannot enter through the skin or eyes. Such vectors do not work because the mucus membranes and the immune system discard small amounts of foreign proteins such as viruses.
‣ Viruses cannot enter through wounds because we bleed outwardly, not inwardly.
‣ Viruses cannot function without a host cell that manufactures them and encodes them, and viruses cannot replicate without a host cell.
‣ Viruses do not ‘infect’ or ‘invade’ cells. They are not alive to do so in the first place.
‣ Viruses almost never dissolve living tissue, unless in specific circumstances such as polio and degenerative nervous system diseases where metal toxicity is present.
‣ Viruses’ primary function is to dissolve dead matter.
‣ Cells produce different viral strains depending on the condition of the tissue involved.
‣ There are 320,000 viral strains inherent to the human body, and each cell contains the viral protein makeup to manufacture each strain when the body calls for it.
‣ Viruses are sequenced/encoded by blood cells via RNA/DNA to break down specific dead and dying tissue and waste.
‣ Viruses are very specific protein structures.
‣ Coughing, sneezing, and spitting is not a vector for the transmission of viruses. Saliva and mucus membranes break down any such particles.
‣ Skin is not a vector either because viruses cannot cross dead skin layers.
‣ Viruses are a result of internal toxicity caused by the environment.
‣ Viruses are not living organisms or living microbes.
‣ Viruses do not have a respiratory system, nor do they have a nucleus or digestive system.
‣ Viruses are not alive.
‣ Viruses are not contagious.
References thebernician. net Béchamp Or Pasteur? A Lost Chapter in the History of Biology by E. Douglas Hume. The Blood and Its Third Element by Antoine Béchamp. Immunization: The Reality Behind the Myth, by Walene James (discusses Béchamp’s ‘Terrain Theory’ of bacteria and viruses) The Dream & Lie of Louis Pasteur, R.B. Pearson
You’re welcome! 12:44 PM · Aug 27, 2024 · 35K Views Donald Farmer 🙂