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Germ theory, Covid 19 and the contagion myth thoroughly debunked and destroyed

Danke

Top Rated Influencer
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Nov 6, 2007
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https://www.bitchute.com/video/92QOfUA4wAQL/

[FONT=&quot]Germ theory, Covid 19 and the contagion myth thoroughly debunked and destroyed. Game over. Period. If you believe in viruses, mutated strains, herd immunity, 99.7% survival rate and any other such nonsense, you won't after you see this.[/FONT]
 
Interesting stuff. Pretty long, but lots of detail. I'd never heard of somatids before.
 
Interesting stuff. Pretty long, but lots of detail. I'd never heard of somatids before.

on the other hand, even doctors who are against the vaccine think this virus is real. Who knows.
 
on the other hand, even doctors who are against the vaccine think this virus is real. Who knows.

"Who knows" is right. I buy into the terrain idea that toxicity and/or vitamin deficiencies will make one more susceptible to disease (and cause some). But there's plenty of anecdotal evidence that people catch things from each other. The video rightly says that you can't catch someone's acne, but what about the chicken pox parties we had decades ago? Kids just coincidentally got the same symptoms and it had nothing to do with proximity or contact? I need to re-watch the exosome theory vs germ theory stuff.
 
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I don't think germ theory itself is getting that much debate. I think most will accept that bacteria and fungi can cause transmittable infections.

I think where it gets murky is viral theory. The idea that a virus is a nonliving organism that force other cells to duplicate it. This theory seems to have some glaring holes. If a virus is "nonliving" how can it be killed? Even conventional vaccines usually use a supposedly dead virus, with a living virus being better at providing immunity, but causing more risk at actually contracting the infection. How can that be true, if a virus is a nonliving organism?

Personally the way I see it, viruses as we know them are infectious organisms that can't be classified as either a bacteria or fungi. Beyond that, I think the understanding falls short. It does seem like there's something there, whether it's the flu or something else.
 
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