17 Comments
User's avatar
eileen's avatar

I bet this explanation can knock out 90+% of the diseases in the diagnostic codes used by insurance carriers. Imagine people, if they knew, dropping their full coverage to just major medical, much of which are paid by auto insurance carriers. The pot would boil over. Major medical makes sense. Full coverage is fear based and a huge factor in driving up the costs of medical care.

Peer to peer payment for a doctor's time and materials would be a lot less expensive and get rid of all these middle men (or women) each taking their cut of the insurance dollar. The doctor may get as little as $.15 out of the dollar. In a $100,000 bill, $15,000 is a lot of money. But what if out of that $15,000, $7500 went to overhead, including billing specialists, and the necessary personnel that the doctor needs to carry out the procedure. So in a peer to peer system, you may pay the doctor $10,000, and out of that comes the cost of doing business. So the doctor may very well get more money. But even if it is the same, the overhead is a lot less and people won't be paying several hundred dollars a month to a big nameless entity, the bottom layer being nothing more than a collection agency, hmm, like the IRS. And the doctor would be free to treat appropriately including telling you to go home and take 4g of Vitamin C and come back if that doesn't work, instead of automatically prescribing a poison because that is the only way the said doctor can be paid.

We all blame the doctors for the breakage of the health care system, but how many of them are frustrated because the standard of care dictates that they do first X, then Y, and finally Z, when the doctor knows full well from his clinical notes that none of those will work. Who sets the standard of care? Oh yeah, that nameless entity that masquerades as health care experts, that we pay hundreds of dollars a month to only to be denied a procedure that the treating doctor thinks is the best.

INGRID C DURDEN's avatar

Excellent comment on an excellent article. Someone already mentioned, I think in The Expose, that these youth might just be intoxicated - from drinking or drugs. I have no idea what vaping does, but it sounds very plausible. I remember getting sick of just cigarette smoke when I was young.

My health insurance is now under 100$ a month and if it were not that low, I would quite the whole shebang.

Laura Hayes's avatar

An excellent and needed article to counter the propaganda, thank you!

Mac Worley's avatar

Grateful subscriber here -

In two or more places you state (in so many words) that the bacterium is present in the vast majority of people. In the closing (for 6 year olds) you state, "There’s a type of germ called a bacterium that lives in almost everyone’s nose and throat. It’s been there your whole life."

Yet in your paragraph reviewing Koch's first postulate you state: "The bacterium lives in the nasopharynx of a substantial percentage of the healthy population — up to 25% of young adults.⁹"

Based on my humble research effort, it can actually go as high as 34% in young adults, but in the very young and in older adults, it's closer to 10%. In any case, far from being present in a majority, much less practically everyone.

Please don't misread my motive, I align with 98% of what you write, but hyperbole doesn't serve our cause.

What am I missing?

Again, thanks for this and all of your posts.

INGRID C DURDEN's avatar

I wondered about the percentages, but probably quotes differ. One thing for sure though, our bodies are filled with microbes and germs, most of them totally harmless.

Keith Cutter's avatar

This three minute clip of an interview with Professor Olle Johansson touches on blood brain barrier damage from RF radiation exposures, and possible contribution to neurodegenerative condidtions--perhaps of interest in "meningitis" causation. https://youtu.be/R7-rRY7b8zE?si=QLMSu8WOV_FO2_fW

GundelP's avatar

The best comment! While I was reading the playing with the mercury part... mercury is dangerous but not that dangerous, we broke many thermometers when I was a child, we played with mercury, and as it couldn't be swept together it has to be vacuum cleaned. OK, probably not the same amount but never did any harm to any of us. However they are avoiding the problem with radiation because the control agenda needs people to depend on their mobile phones, WIFI, towers, newer and newer G-s and they literally can cause anything like mass cell death. Who ever read after microzymas (somatids) knew that these little energy filled particles in our bodies are polymorphic and responsible to form bacteria or fungi as a kind of cleaning process but of course if the dead tissue is too much, the process can kill you. My first thought was that the cause of meningitis in most cases very likely the harm caused by some kind of radiation.

Ann Tomoko Rosen's avatar

Thank you for this. It reminds me of our negative general impression of vultures. Always associated with death despite having nothing to do with it.

INGRID C DURDEN's avatar

Just like several terrain doctors say, the microbes are the clean-up crew, like the vultures. (Reading a book by Dr. Thomas Cowan right now)

Ann Tomoko Rosen's avatar

Dr Cowan has some great insights!

Gecko1's avatar

Adding the suffix "-itis" to any medical condition immediately creates a disease requiring attention and treatment by the white coat brigade. Bronchial tubes inflamed? Raspy cough? You've got bronchitis. This could be either bacterial or viral in nature, and often both. It might be viral bronchitis A. Or possibly B. Who knows. Take these antibiotics anyway. The only cure for a viral infection of any sort is time and rest. I myself got nasty sinus cold yesterday probably while out thrift shopping. But hey, it's not everyday you snap up a lovely Art Deco Comet pattern heavy pressed glass bowl made by Libochovice Glassworks in the 1950s in Czechoslovakia for five bucks!

Ray Horvath, "The Source" :)'s avatar

So, the trash collectors are blamed for the trash.

Chances are that foreign and/or synthetic protein sneaking into the body and accepted for part of it until the body rejects it causes meningitis and most "modern" illnesses:

https://rayhorvaththesource.substack.com/p/the-symbiotic-human-body

Willem's avatar

Why do antibiotics work against bacterial meningitis? Bacterial Meningitis is a deadly disease when left untreated. Or are there any cases known where untreated bacterial meningitis did not cause death? -I can’t find such cases. Are such cases known?

Thomas A Braun RPh's avatar

I’m not sure I followed the logic of what we discussed about meningitis. All I know is a friend went to a football game on a Monday night acquired meningitis and was dead in 24 hours.. why he was singled out I don’t have a clue and it may be that his immune system was very compromised.

Horsea T.'s avatar

Some people are born weak (or maybe made weak early in life from vaccines or other poisons). That is a fact of life. So, they will fall seriously ill sooner or later.

GundelP's avatar

Most likely radiation. He was in the wrong place at a wrong time. If it happened when 5G was up and running, just imagine it as an invisible laser-beam, cutting trough things which in its way. But all of the rest (wireless tech) is dangerous. Worth to read books like The Invisible Rainbow, even if I am not fully agree on everything Firstenberg wrote, it was a very well researched book. Another one I would kindly suggest is Becker's Cross Currents. It was written 20-30 years ago and even back then they knew that the tech we use are absolutely dangerous. Since then we have more and more. I would dare to say that today' illnesses and bad conditions (insomnia, unexplainable pains, ear-ringing and many more) are due to the radiation (e-smog). I am sorry for your friend, since 2020 I got many reports from pet (cat) owners, that healthy cats died in 1-2 days due to aggressive inflammations, different kinds (different organs were affected) or due to stroke or heart attack (blood clots?). Never happened before 2020, healthy young cats didn't die in just 1-2 days to unexplainable illnesses coming from "nowhere". Radiation is the most likely answer and as it is invisible we have no way to see that who is in the wrong place at the wrong time.

Liz's avatar

The only thing unprecedented, how quickly they deploy that word now, was the media hysteria which was too similar to the covid bs, complete with blatant vaccine drive. It was being offered all over including a "hero" pharmacist nearby in Worcester, England ( about 150 miles from Canterbury 🙄) who was dishing it out for £330 a throw ( That number again!) They used pcr again, for speed, which with a wide range of symptoms ( hangovers ??) and high proportion of harmless carriers led to overdiagnosis, the numbers were downgraded from 34 to 20, was that reported worldwide? It aas just quietly dropped here, peaked they said. H.mmm. It was good to see so many sceptical comments on social media reports, a lot of us didn't buy it.