A LOOK AT MALARIA- WEBINAR FROM JULY 12TH, 2023

Undefined
0
No votes yet



https://www.bitchute.com/video/SvHsnKFkJH4O/

 

In this webinar, Dr. Cowan takes a look at malaria as well as reads a passage from "The Forest Passage" by Ernst Junger.
Here are the links to the malaria articles discussed in the webinar:

https://parasitesandvectors.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1756-3305-3-5#:~:text=Laveran%20was%20the%20first%20person,this%20case%20the%20avian%20Plasmodium

https://malariajournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12936-022-04110-z

A link to The Forest Passage book: https://www.amazon.com/Forest-Passage-Ernst-J%C3%BCnger/dp/0914386492

Here is the link to sign up to watch the End of Covid- available for streaming for free for the next 21 days: https://theendofcovid.com/ref/379/

Comments

What is malaria?
 
As with AIDS, it is an improper combination of different diseases and symptoms whose causes are known to us. Anyone who has recurrent fevers and is or has been in Africa or the tropics has a very high chance of being diagnosed with malaria. All of the indirect detection methods have no meaningfulness and protozoa of all kinds that are said to be the causative agent of malaria can be detected in almost every human being.
 
Many protozoa are immortal through their circular DNA, like many bacteria and tardigrades, and are found everywhere. Like bacteria and fungi, they help the body break down tissue, cells and their components if the protozoa recognized as endogenous cannot do this on their own.
 
Repetitive bouts of fever are caused by sluggish heals when brain metabolism does not allow full healing. This is how incomplete healing crises arise, which do not lead to healing but get stuck in the program. A particularly severe form of the healing crisis is the rhythmic dismantling of a liver that has grown large as a result of a biological starvation conflict. A particularly large number of protozoa are also involved here, which led to the assumption that pathogens, Plasmodium protozoa, caused this condition. The example with the fire brigade applies here again: They are not the cause of the fire. And Plasmodium is everywhere.
 
Except for liver degeneration, which requires more intensive treatment, the "intermittent fever" can be suppressed immediately within a very short time, either through poisoning of any kind or through optimization of the brain metabolism
or prevent its occurrence. This is proof that the cause of these symptoms cannot be found in a single cell, but has systemic causes. Another piece of evidence is that in almost all people whose symptoms are reported as malaria, the alleged pathogens have never been detected in increased form.
 
Like all tests of this type, the indirect anti-body tests that are mainly used are not calibrated and cannot be calibrated. The "thick" and "thin" blood drop test, which is issued as "direct detection of pathogens", dates back to the 19th century and has the quality of the previous detection methods for UFOs or UVOs (Unknown Viral Objects).
 
The belief in malaria is evidence of the state of Western medicine: paralyzed and misled in a theologically based good-evil system in which evil outweighs good, disoriented by Virchowian cellular pathology, it is unable (except in a few cases of acute medicine) to diagnose and treat objectively. The reformation of the Western medical system
is a great challenge and opportunity for the West. Our research and public relations work serves this goal.
 
 Telegram translate
https://t.me/NEXTLEVEL_OnlineForum/8967/19496
 
---
An example of how this works with malaria.
>Tell people it's a dangerous disease.
>Claim: "Believe me, everyone has them even if they're not sick, they just don't have symptoms"
>Force them to take prophylaxis against it
>Prophylaxis causes side effects that are similar to the disease you are trying to protect against
>Claim: "Oh, the disease is just too strong for our drugs".
 
Malaria is also a disease with a large number of "asymptomatic" cases.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2555342/
 
And also a very non-specific spectrum of symptoms:
Signs and symptoms of malaria can include:
 
Fever
chills
General malaise
Headache
nausea and vomiting
Diarrhea
abdominal pain
muscle or joint pain
fatigue
Rapid breathing
Rapid heartbeat
Cough
And literally:
>not having any symptoms at all.
 
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/malaria/symptoms-causes/syc-20351184
> Same symptoms as almost any disease or poisoning.
> But she is mostly asymptomatic.
> But if you have any of these symptoms, believe us, it's malaria.
> But only if you live in sub-Saharan Africa, otherwise it's just a cold/flu/whatever
Linked are the "prophylactic drugs" for the """prevention"" of malaria...
And the side effects that are equivalent to a "tropical disease".
Imagine you take medicine that causes weakness, fever, dizziness and LIGHT SENSITIVITY when you travel to a tropical country.
And then when things get bad, someone comes and says: "Oh, this is malaria, which is stronger than prophylaxis".
 
I hope it makes sooner or later for each click. An example of how this works with malaria.
>Tell people it's a dangerous disease.
>Claim: "Believe me, everyone has them even if they're not sick, they just don't have symptoms"
>Force them to take prophylaxis against it
>Prophylaxis causes side effects that are similar to the disease you are trying to protect against
>Claim: "Oh, the disease is just too strong for our drugs".
 
Malaria is also a disease with a large number of "asymptomatic" cases.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2555342/
 
And also a very non-specific spectrum of symptoms:
Signs and symptoms of malaria can include:
 
Fever
chills
General malaise
Headache
nausea and vomiting
Diarrhea
abdominal pain
muscle or joint pain
fatigue
Rapid breathing
Rapid heartbeat
Cough
And literally:
>not having any symptoms at all.
 
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/malaria/symptoms-causes/syc-20351184
> Same symptoms as almost any disease or poisoning.
> But she is mostly asymptomatic.
> But if you have any of these symptoms, believe us, it's malaria.
> But only if you live in sub-Saharan Africa, otherwise it's just a cold/flu/whatever
Linked are the "prophylactic drugs" for the """prevention"" of malaria...
And the side effects that are equivalent to a "tropical disease".
Imagine you take medicine that causes weakness, fever, dizziness and LIGHT SENSITIVITY when you travel to a tropical country.
And then when things get bad, someone comes and says: "Oh, this is malaria, which is stronger than prophylaxis".
 
I hope it makes sooner or later for each click.

<p>CP</p>

Dr Cowan mentioned the approval of the first Malaria vaccine. 

According to this article it does not even prevent malaria .

Which reminds me of the claims with the covid jab. 

 

The new strategy seems to be , it does not prevent anything but it  will be less severe and less likely to die of it, there is no way to prove such a claim but they have conditioned people to believe it and especially the doctors.

How a vaccine prequalifies? 

Another article mentioned they have been working on a vaccine for over 30 years.

Probably approved recently as they can get away with anything.

https://www.malariavaccine.org/malaria-and-vaccines/rtss

RTS,S/AS01 (RTS,S) is the world's first malaria vaccine and the first approved vaccine to combat a human parasitic disease. 

This pediatric vaccine acts against Plasmodium falciparum, the deadliest malaria parasite globally, and the most prevalent in Africa. 

The vaccine reduces the number of times a child gets malaria, including severe, life-threatening malaria, and it reduces child deaths.

 

RTS,S is, to date, the only malaria vaccine to be recommended and prequalifiedby the World Health Organization (WHO). The WHO recommends that the vaccine be used as an additional tool for the prevention of P. falciparum malaria in children living in areas of moderate to high malaria transmission. PATH has been involved in the development and introduction of the RTS,S vaccine since 2001.

<p>CP</p>