Archive for March, 2023

Animals Injected With mRNA Technology & Hardly Anyone Knows About It

**UPDATE**

http://

Good Ranchers Takes Stance Against Experimental Gene Therapy Shots

3/4/24

Good Ranchers delivers individually packaged and flash frozen, 100% American sourced beef, chicken, and seafood to your door.

What is this doing to our food supply?

BTW: corrupting the food supply is another arm of this dystopian nightmare on steroids.  As Lyme/MSIDS patients we understand that food is medicine.  I’ve posted repeatedly on how the “climate change” agenda is yet another arm.  Globalists are using this arm to insist we need to eliminate meat as a solution, but this Frankinfood has now been shown to cause cancer via the immortalized cell lines used to manufacture it, but true to form, ‘fact-checkers’ are busy spinning.  Don’t forget that the folks behind the Frankinfood are paying the ‘fact checkers.’

https://rumble.com/v2bavkg-100-million-animals-have-been-injected-with-mrna-technology-and-hardly-anyo.html  Video Here (Approx. 2 Min)

100 Million Animals Have Been Injected With mRNA Technology, and Hardly Anyone Knows About it

Dr. Bryan Ardis: “They’re already injecting mRNA technology into vegetables … And in China, they’re already mRNA injecting cattle — for our beef supply.”

Full Video: https://rumble.com/v2b6c2m-dr.-ardis-is-back-on-diamond-and-silk-chit-chat-22323.html

In case you feel this is complete hogwash:

https://rwmalonemd.substack.com/p/mrna-vaccines-in-livestock-and-companion

mRNA Vaccines in Livestock and Companion Animals are here now

The current (public) receipts are included in this essay, and more are on the way

Excerpts:

“Before we can discus mRNA vaccines for livestock, pets and wildlife, we must first address the elephant in the room. That is, how come the public is able to access human clinical trial information, but is not able to do the same for clinical trials involving animal health?

With animals, there is no such database.  mRNA vaccines in the “animal health” or veterinary markets are difficult to track until the company or the USDA is ready to release information on that product’s development or release. The USDA and/or the NIH have no mechanism for tracking potential new vaccines, drugs or biologics for the animal market.

Therefore, one must rely on press releases, the occasional peer reviewed paper, conference notes, USDA grant and contract notifications, university websites and company profiles for discovery of such new products. Not adequate, in my opinion, and most definitely not transparent. By federal law, the public should have open access to the results of this type of federally funded research.”  

(See link for article)

_________________

**Comment**

  • Bayer Partners with BioNTech to develop mRNA “vaccines” drugs for animal health
  • Pfizer animal health goes by the name Zoetis
  • Zoetis clearly does not make its animal vaccine developmental stages known to the public. Internet searches do not reveal much inside the workings of Zoetis, in terms of mRNA vaccines. However, we can safely assume that development of mRNA vaccines and therapeutics for “animal health” are underway
  • there are mRNA vaccines for COVID-19 for wildlife that have been developed and authorized for distribution by the USDA

Read on……

More on Zoetis:  https://www.zoetis.com/products-and-science/center-for-transboundary-and-emerging-diseases

Excerpt:

“Zoetis initiated development activities for its COVID vaccine in early 2020 when the first dog was reported to be infected with COVID-19 in Hong Kong.  The initial development work and studies were completed in dogs and cats, and our scientists shared their work at the World One Health Congress in the Fall of 2020 and the Veterinary Medicine Exposition and Conference in January 2020.

In January 2021, Zoetis donated its experimental vaccine for emergency use in the Great Ape population at the San Diego Zoo.

Since then, Zoetic has donated over 26,000 doses of its COVID vaccine to more than 200 zoos and conservatories in the United States, Canada, plus a dozen other countries.

Our COVID vaccine has been used safely in over 300 mammalian species in these zoos.

In April 2022, the U.S. Department of Agriculture granted Zoetis a conditional license for mink for this vaccine.”

https://www.zoetis.com/our-company/corporate-sustainability/access-to-veterinary-care-in-emerging-markets

Excerpt:

“In March 2023, Zoetis announced the launch of A.L.P.H.A. Plus, a newly established agreement between Zoetis and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation that will aim at further developing and integrating solutions to advance veterinary care and diagnostic services that will ultimately improve the livestock health, productivity and food security in one of the most rapidly developing regions in the world.  The grant will help Zoetis to expand its original African Livestock Productivity and Health Agreement (A.L.P.H.A.) initiative in new markets where population growth and the need for sustainable protein source are the greatest – such as Kenya, Ivory Coast, and other markets from East, West, and Central Sub-Saharan Africa.

The A.L.P.H.A. Plus initiative will span from December 2022 to November 2027 with a 15.3M$grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation focusing on the most impactful livestock species in the region: poultry, dairy and beef cattle, and aquaculture.”

For more:

8X More People Died from Clot Shot Than of COVID & Spike Protein Found in Brain of Vaxxed Parkinson’s Patient

https://expose-news.com/2023/03/01/covid-vaccination-8x-deadlier-than-disease/

8x more people died due to C-19 Vaccination over 6 months than died of COVID-19 over 18 months according to UK GOV.

Important excerpts:

When you consider that testing was compulsory in hospitals, despite it not being written in law, and they used the PCR test notorious for producing false positives, it’s not hard to see how the Government managed to mix tens of thousands of people who actually died of other causes into the Covid-19 death statistics.

But after months of trying to conceal the data, the Office for National Statistics published a report which contained figures on deaths by vaccination status.

But those figures may have actually been published by accident.

report published by the ONS on September 13th 2021 misled the public into believing the majority of Covid-19 deaths were occurring among the unvaccinated population. But the date parameters used in their report – January 2nd 2021 to July 2nd 2021- include a huge swathe of deaths that were suffered during the second alleged wave of Covid-19 in January 2021, when barely anybody was vaccinated.

(See link for article and graphs)

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http://

Link

DarkHorse Podcast Clip Feb. 28, 2023
  • Immunohistochemistry for SARS-CoV-2 antigens (spike and nucleocapsid proteins) was performed.
  • Only spike protein but no nucleocapsid protein could be detected, within the foci of inflammation, brain and heart
  • Spike protein detected in the endothelial cells of small blood vessels.
Quotes from the paper

Since no nucleocapsid protein could be detected, the presence of spike protein must be ascribed to vaccination rather than to viral infection. The findings corroborate previous reports of encephalitis and myocarditis caused by gene-based COVID-19 vaccines. A causal connection of these findings to the preceding COVID-19 vaccination was established by immunohistochemical demonstration of SARS-CoV-2 spike protein. The methodology introduced in this study should be useful for distinguishing between causation by COVID-19 vaccination or infection in ambiguous cases. Clinicians should take note of such case reports for the sake of early detection and management of such adverse events among their patients.

A thorough post-mortem examination of deaths in connection with COVID-19 vaccination should be considered in ambiguous circumstances, including histology.

For more:

Interview: Balsam Fir Needles Kill Ticks

https://www.globallymealliance.org/videos/balsam_fir

Dr. Timothy Sellati, GLA’s Chief Scientific Officer Interviews Dr. Shelley Adamo, a Professor and Researcher at Dalhousie University in Canada. They discuss her latest discovery that balsam fir needles are effective in preventing ticks from surviving winter.
So many of our readers were interested in this story, that we decided to learn more about this exciting discovery!
Watch below:

A transcript of this video is below:

note: transcript has been edited and condensed for clarity.

Dr. Timothy Sellati:

So what I’d like to do is ask you about how you determined that balsam fir needles could kill ticks, and in particular, why does it seem to only work or work better under very cold temperature conditions?

Dr. Shelley Adamo:

So what I had noticed, and this is sort of the way science works, is observation. And I know that’s why citizen science can be so powerful: You’ve got lots of people observing. So I was observing, and I just noticed that I didn’t see a lot of ticks coming out in the early spring, where there were a lot of balsam fir trees. And it was just a hunch, and so I thought, “Well, let me see.” So I brought in ticks, into the lab, and then we also had balsam fir needles, and we chopped them up, and we put them in an incubator. So it was a winter-like condition for the ticks, and they died. It took a long time to kill them, though, so it didn’t kill them right away. It took a few weeks for them to be sitting in balsam fir before they died. So then I thought, “Well, I wonder if I could make this more powerful.”

I was working with my colleague, Nicoletta Faraone, at Acadia University, who’s a chemist, and we distilled the essential oil out of the balsam fir needles. And when I used balsam fir oil, that was a lot more lethal. Now, the problem with essential oils, as probably people know, is that they evaporate, and so at warm temperatures, they disappear. So it still takes a while to kill ticks. So essential oils, particularly at the low percentages I wanted to use, because I was thinking ahead. And I know one of the questions you’re going to ask is, “Where is this going?” I wanted to make sure this wasn’t going to be lethal to other organisms, or as low lethality as I could get. So I was using very small percentages, and because of the small percentages, I needed cold temperatures, so that the essential oil would last long enough to have this slow effect on the ticks; they would slowly die. And it turns out to be amazingly effective, and that’s what we found.

So what we did was we just had the ticks in these little cotton balls, and they were each one tick per tube, and we put them in incubators to simulate winter temperatures, and we added small amounts of balsam fir essential oil, and that was in the paper. And we found that as long as the temperatures were cold, we could get 100% lethality, but if the temperatures were warm … I’m going to use Celsius, but feel free to change that to Fahrenheit for yourselves. If it’s above 12 degrees Celsius, it hardly worked at all, and it had its best effect if temperature stayed below four degrees Celsius. So we’re looking at 36, 38 degrees Fahrenheit below that.

Dr. Timothy Sellati:

So what are the next steps for the study?

Dr. Shelley Adamo:

Well, so the study is now complete, and I published those results. So what we’re working on now is something a little new for me, at least, is I would like to have a practical application to this. And ideally, what we’re working on right now is: Can we turn this into as low-toxicity product as we can, so that people could put it on their yards, for example? And over the winter, it would slowly get rid of all the ticks.

Now, there are a couple things we need to do. We realized very quickly that one, I wanted something non-toxic, so we’re only using food-grade ingredients, so literally, stuff you can eat. And also, we wanted to use very small percentages, so that we wouldn’t have toxicity on other organisms. And we needed to get into the leaf litter for this to be practically useful to people. Because maybe you don’t know: How do ticks get through the winter? They burrow into the leaf litter, and it’s like an insulating blanket. I don’t know if you had there, where you are, but we had some very cold weather recently. It went down to minus 20 Celsius, very cold. You would think all the ticks would be dead, because they’re not actually cold-loving arthropods.

But it turns out, probably not, because we had sensors. Laura Ferguson, who’s another colleague of mine, Acadia, we have sensors in the leaf litter, and it only went down to minus five Celsius, which ticks can handle. So that’s why ticks can get through the winter. So if we want to get those ticks, we have to make sure the balsam fir can go through the leaf litter and find them where they’re sleeping, basically.

And so that is our goal right now, and of course, we don’t want to use petroleum products, and we want to use literally, just food-grade materials. And I think we can do it, and we’ve got a handle on it, but we need to perfect it. So that’s one thing.

The other thing we’re doing is we need to ensure this has minimal toxicity and is ecologically safe, so we’re looking at off-target effects. Fortunately for us, most of the pollinators are not out at the wintertime, and very few of them are in the leaf litter where the ticks are. But we do need to do our due diligence, so that takes some time, and that’s what we’re working on now.

Dr. Timothy Sellati:

I mean, that’s the aspect of your work that I find most intriguing, is the idea that this provides an opportunity to apply an acaricide, something that can kill ticks, during the winter season. You talked about how the ticks can overwinter, because they’re hiding under the leaf litter. I know from my own research experience that if you don’t want the ticks to move around much, if you’re using them in the context of a mouse infection study, you keep them on ice.

But my own observation this winter, living here in Danbury, Connecticut, is that we’ve had some relatively warm days, and I’ve unfortunately had to pull ticks off of myself and off of my dogs that are playing around in the back yard, because the ticks become active again. And that’s something that’s very unusual. I think it is a reflection of the warming winters and the shorter time period that the ticks are subjected to very cold weather.

Dr. Shelley Adamo:

It’s also a function of the way ticks overwinter. Ticks are not insects, so I’ll say arthropods. Many arthropods that overwinter, they go into what’s called a winter diapause, and they are truly hibernating. So even if there’s little warm bumps in the winter, they tend not to wake up, because their bodies are physiologically changed. They’ve pumped themselves full of antifreeze proteins, and they’re just waiting.

Ticks do not do that; they just lightly slumber. You can see; that’s from their southern heritage. They didn’t evolve in Connecticut; they evolved further south. And they keep some of those traits, and you would think that that would make them susceptible to cold, and if they didn’t hide under the leaf litter or wood. But what it does mean is they are opportunistic. So as soon as temperatures go above … I’m trying to convert in my head. About four degrees Celsius. It’s got to be 40 degrees or so.

Dr. Timothy Sellati:

32 degrees Fahrenheit, yes.

Dr. Shelley Adamo:

Yeah, they wake up. It’s easy for them to wake up, because they haven’t switched their whole physiology. They’re in a light behavioral quiescent state, but it’s not a true diapause. So that’s why whenever winter temperatures get warm, and they’re desperate at that point, especially the adults. So the adult ticks that are overwintering are adult ticks that couldn’t find a host in the fall, and they’re looking hard. They would rather not get you. They’d rather get a deer, because they’re looking for mates, as well. They’re probably not going to find a mate on you.

Dr. Timothy Sellati:

Hopefully not.

Dr. Shelley Adamo:

Hopefully not. That suggests you have many ticks, which would not be good. So that is a good point to remind people, that with these warming winters, you will see ticks as soon as it’s warm enough for them to move, and it doesn’t require very much.

Dr. Timothy Sellati:

So the other question I have is related to the fact that this is an essential oil product, and again, from my own personal experience, I contacted my tick control company, and unfortunately, they informed me that they do not do spraying for ticks during the wintertime.

So do you think that this essential oil product, if it’s ultimately commercialized and made available to the public, is it something that a homeowner would be able to apply themselves?

Dr. Shelley Adamo:

I would say yes, but I think probably would be better to let a professional, because they have the high-powered nozzles, which will help these products get into the leaf litter. It’s just because of where they are, and they have the specialized equipment, and that combined with, I hope, the formulation we’re developing, which helps drag it down below the leaf litter, between the two, would probably give you good coverage. No, I think winter is overlooked. Let’s say an overlooked season for control. I think it’s got a lot of potential. These animals are not moving around very much, which means you have a good chance, once you’ve saturated an area, that they’ll stay there and let this low-toxicity product slowly kill them.

The other thing about it is that there aren’t very many other organisms around, so it can really reduce off-target effects, and the last point is it’s a vulnerable time for ticks. They actually don’t like winter very much. As I said, they’re in this behaviorally quiescent state, but they’re not comfortable in the winter, and it’s a stress for them. So if you start piling stressor upon stressor, you can really increase the lethality. And so unlike maybe some of our native insects, they’re more susceptible, and I think more fragile, at this point of time, point of the season. And I think it’s been overlooked as a method of control.

Dr. Timothy Sellati:

Okay, I’ve got one other question that unfortunately, is going to demonstrate my ignorance of chemistry. But the other intriguing idea for me is with an essential oil, it’s an oil; it’s maybe not as dissolvable in water. So do you think that once applied, the essential oil from balsam fir needles would remain longer in or under the leaf litter, even if you get a rain in the winter? That it wouldn’t necessarily wash it away as readily as in the summertime?

Dr. Shelley Adamo:

So what we found is that just plain old balsam fir needles themselves do not really control ticks in the real-world situation very well. The reason I was seeing it, it’s my self-observation, is because this was right under a balsam fir tree, and all the leaf litter was balsam fir. But typically, you have a mix, and they will move around. They will search. Ticks will move around for their favorite overwintering site, so they will not actually overwinter under balsam fir needles, if that’s all there is. They’ll move around until they can find their nice maple, oak, comfortable, cozy leaf litter.

So what we’re doing with our formulation is trying to solve exactly that problem. We’re going to encapsulate. Basically, we’re working on encapsulating the balsam fir into little basically food-grade capsules that will get into the leaf litter and slowly dissolve, and so they will stay there. That’s what we need to test, is making sure that with massive rain and snow melt, it won’t all get lost in the runoff, and that is something that we need to test.

I have some hope, just because of the type of capsules might stick to some of the leaf litter and so may not be washed away with the rain, because our winters are becoming, well, at least here in Nova Scotia, wet, because we’re going through these cycles.

Dr. Timothy Sellati:

Same here.

Dr. Shelley Adamo:

And these cycles, it’s not just rain, but snow melt. And so it’s something that we have to consider, and we are on it, but it’s one of the reasons it’s a difficult problem, and we are working on it.

Dr. Timothy Sellati:

Right, right. Well, no, what you’ve just related is absolutely brilliant. It’s the tick-control equivalent of a time-release capsule that we might take, as humans, to treat some condition.

Dr. Shelley Adamo:

Yeah, yes.

Dr. Timothy Sellati:

Well, that’s wonderful. I really appreciate your taking the time to tell us more about your fascinating research.

Dr. Shelley Adamo:

Happy to do it.  Just wish us luck for our success. We’re trying to come up with something as non-toxic and cheap as possible, so that everyone will have, I hope, reduced experience with ticks and Lyme.

Dr. Timothy Sellati:

Yes, you will be able to count me as a customer.

Dr. Shelley Adamo:

Thank you very much.

Dr. Timothy Sellati:

All right, have a good day.

Dr. Shelley Adamo:

You, too.

***

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The above material is provided for information purposes only. The material (a) is not nor should be considered, or used as a substitute for, medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, nor (b) does it necessarily represent endorsement by or an official position of Global Lyme Alliance, Inc. or any of its directors, officers, advisors or volunteers. Advice on the testing, treatment or care of an individual patient should be obtained through consultation with a physician who has examined that patient or is familiar with that patient’s medical history.










Lyme and POTS

https://www.globallymealliance.org/blog/lyme-disease-and-pots

Have you heard of POTS?

Between my freshman and sophomore years of college, I was bitten by a tick while working at a summer camp in the woods of Maine. As I’ve described in many of my blog posts, it took eight years for me to be accurately diagnosed, and during that time I suffered from a range of physical and neurological symptoms. During the fall semester of my sophomore year, I had flu-like symptoms as well as symptoms of what the college nurses thought were panic attacks.

Looking back now, I wonder if my heart palpitations, lightheadedness, and dizziness were in fact signs POTS, or Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome. At the time, POTS was little if at all understood, but now researchers and physicians are seeing POTS not just in Lyme disease patients but also in conditions like long COVID and ME/CFS.

Explains Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (POTS)

POTS occurs when moving from lying to standing causes an increase in heart rate by at least 30 beats per minute for adults and 40 beats per minute for children. In addition to this abnormal increase in heart rate, the Heart Rhythm Society defines POTS as a clinical syndrome characterized by symptoms of lightheadedness, blurring of vision, palpitations, intolerance to exercise, and fatigue, as well as the absence of orthostatic hypotension[i] (meaning the blood pressure does not drop when the heart rate rises). I experienced all of these symptoms that fall in college. Had POTS been more well-known, its symptoms could have pointed puzzled medical practitioners in the direction of tick-borne disease. That was 1997; a recent study shows that the incidence of POTS has increased four-fold since 2000.[ii]

Another Lyme-related condition, Lyme carditis

Heart-related symptoms such as racing heartbeat can also be a sign of another condition known as Lyme carditis, when the Lyme bacteria goes to the heart. This can cause atrioventricular block, often referred to as “heart block,” which is an electrical disconnect between the upper and lower chambers of the heart, causing them to beat at different rhythms. Lyme carditis can also manifest as costochondritis (inflammation of the cartilage that connects the ribs to the breastbone), tachycardia (racing heart rate) and bradycardia (slow heart rate). It can also cause myopericarditis (inflammation of the heart muscle and lining), which patients may feel as chest pain or shortness of breath.

Though Lyme carditis is rare, according to a 2008 study, 4% to 10% of all patients with Lyme borreliosis. Whenever the clinical suspicion of Lyme carditis arises, an ECG is mandatory to detect or exclude an atrioventricular conduction block.

If you have already been diagnosed with Lyme disease, it’s important that your doctor check specifically for Lyme carditis, and also evaluate you for POTS. If you are experiencing symptoms of either Lyme carditis or POTS, see a Lyme Literate Medical Doctor (LLMD) to find out if tick-borne disease may be the cause. I only wish I had seen a LLMD sooner; I might have avoided years of suffering.

Click here to read more blogs.

[i] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7255540/

[ii]  Epidemiology of postural tachycardia syndrome. [Apr;2020 ];AbdelRazek M, Low P, Rocca W, Singer W. https://n.neurology.org/content/92/15_Supplement/S18.005 Neurology. 2019 92:0.

The above material is provided for information purposes only. The material (a) is not nor should be considered, or used as a substitute for, medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, nor (b) does it necessarily represent endorsement by or an official position of Global Lyme Alliance, Inc. or any of its directors, officers, advisors or volunteers. Advice on the testing, treatment or care of an individual patient should be obtained through consultation with a physician who has examined that patient or is familiar with that patient’s medical history.

Jennifer Crystal

Opinions expressed by contributors are their own. Jennifer Crystal is a writer and educator in Boston. Her work has appeared in local and national publications including Harvard Health Publishing and The Boston Globe. As a GLA columnist for over six years, her work on GLA.org has received mention in publications such as The New Yorker, weatherchannel.com, CQ Researcher, and ProHealth.com. Jennifer is a patient advocate who has dealt with chronic illness, including Lyme and other tick-borne infections. Her memoir about her medical journey is forthcoming. Contact her via email below.

Email: lymewarriorjennifercrystal@gmail.com

Erythritol Linked to Blood Clotting, Stroke, Heart Attack, & Death

https://www.theblaze.com/news/erythritol-linked-heart-attack-stroke?

Sugar substitute linked to heart attacks, stroke, death; ‘stay away,’ lead researcher advises

Erythritol, a popular zero-calorie sugar substitute, has been linked to blood clotting, stroke, heart attack, and death, according to a study published online in Nature Medicine journal Monday.

“The degree of risk was not modest,” lead study author Dr. Stanley Hazen, director of the center for cardiovascular diagnostics and prevention at the Cleveland ClinicLerner Research Institute told CNN.

“For people who are at risk for clotting, heart attack and stroke — like people with existing cardiac disease or people with diabetes — I think that there’s sufficient data here to say stay away from erythritol until more studies are done,” Hazen also said.

“This certainly sounds an alarm,” Dr. Andrew Freeman, director of cardiovascular prevention and wellness at Denver’s National Jewish Health hospital told the outlet. Freeman was not involved in the research.

(See link for article)

_________________

**Comment**

Some Lyme/MSIDS doctors use erythritol and stevia for biofilm busters in part of an overall treatment.  Make sure you discuss this study with your doctor if you are using it.

SUMMARY:

  • The study involved those already at risk for cardiovascular problems making applicability to the general population unknown
  • It was found to be on par with the strongest of cardiac risk factors like diabetes
  • Those already at risk had double the likelihood of having a heart attack or stroke if they had the HIGHEST level of erythritol in their blood
  • The sugar substitute is found naturally in foods like grapes and mushrooms, is poorly metabolized and mostly excreted in urine which is why it is called “zero-calorie.”
  • The amount in food is low and therefore safe.  When incorporated in processed foods; however, it’s often added at levels 1,000 fold higher.
  • It is used in branded sweeteners like Truvia, products for Keto diets, and reduced sugar products for those with diabetes.  Go here for a list.