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14 y
Re: Kill pathogens or terrain modify?
To add to Newport this is a good quote from Jeff Sutherland...
I've made the case for years that the Borna virus is widespread in at least 30% of the population and the Germans agree with me. It affects whole families at once and is an occupational hazard for therapists and ministers. You can pick up the virus by being in the room with someone who has it just like picking up a cold.
Lyme disease has hundreds of viral frequencies and a number of them are Borna virus strains. This is one of the reasons some clinicians accuse their Lyme patients of having nothing wrong with them. It's all "in their head!" Borna virus always make you a little anxious, often paranoid, and sometimes causes depression, bipolar disease, and other mental illness. Getting rid of it always makes people feel better. I have found Borna virus in 100% of the people I have tested with Bipolar disease and eliminating the frequency signature will usually stop a Bipolar expisode in a couple of hours. People with a clinical diagnosis of Bipolar disease typically have a concurrent parasite infection of the choroid plexus of the brain.
The Borna virus was first discovered in horses in Germany and the Germans have done many of the best studies on this major public health problem. They have tested for the virus in depressed patients and found it, treated the virus and determined it was eliminated in lab tests, and showed the depression was significantly reduced in most of the patients. They can reintroduce the depression by reinfecting with the virus so it satisfies Koch's postulates which is the gold standard for medical causality.
There are hundreds of studies on the Borna virus posted on www.pubmed.org, yet the average U.S. psychiatrist has never read any of them. They won't test for it and they won't treat it. There are many such "cognitive gaps" in modern medicine. It took a hundred years from publication of a monogram at Johns Hopkins suggesting that ulcers were caused by H. Pylori before psychiatrists stopped sending people to therapy for them. And only an article in the National Enquirer caused enough uproar to wake up the scientific community. Where is the National Enquirer when we need them? The Washington Post has helped a little bit.
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