Most of our physicians and scientists today, particularly the ones who get the most press, are being paid in some way by Big Pharma. Notice how they all agree so perfectly to tell us there is little we can do to avoid the virus except wash our hands, wear a mask, and wait until the vaccine comes out. But there are hundreds of doctors and scientists who are thinking outside of that box. This article is loaded with some of their research.
To open our minds to a new way of thinking, I would like to start with the intuitive genius, Rudolph Steiner. He said: “Viruses are dead RNA and DNA material expelled from poisoned cells.” Conventional medicine calls dead RNA and DNA, also known as Exosomes, as viruses that somehow travel and cause disease. Conventional medicine does not explore the idea that the cells may be poisoned to begin with. So the question arises, what could be poisoning so many people all over the planet at the same time?
I will admit, its hard to hear our intuition if we are being constantly bombarded by the contrary every day. But when I clear myself enough to hear my deepest truth, I get the coronavirus is caused by the poisoning of humanity by the corona discharge of excess electricity from which 5g is the top culprit. I know this may seem like a wild idea, perhaps as wild as being told the earth is round when we were told all our years the earth is flat. The subconscious mind clings to the comfort of past information. I certainly don’t expect you to believe me right off, for beliefs also tend to block our intuition. I invite you to remain skeptical, yet open to this huge amount of suppressed scientific information that I have only touched on.
By studying the scientifically documented past with an open mind, we can see the trend we are being subjected to and make the appropriate action for true immunity. Thus, I am sharing most of Sally Fallon Morell’s article summarizing Arthur Firstenberg’s exhaustive research of the effects of electricity on all life on earth compiled in his amazing 564 page world changing book: The Invisible Rainbow. If you read this book, you may join a growing number of us who are dropping the mask (whenever allowed) and dropping our fear of others, and learning how to protect our bodies and brains from excess electricity. Before continuing, please check out these reviews from some prestigious medical doctors.
Editorial Reviews
“Few individuals today are able to grasp the entirety of a scientific subject and present it in a highly engaging manner, in plain English, without losing any of the details. In The Invisible Rainbow, Firstenberg has done just that with one of the most pressing but neglected problems of our technological age. This book, which as a medical doctor I found hard to put down, explores the relationship between electricity and life from beginning to end: from the early eighteenth century to today, and from the point of view of the physician, the physicist, and the average person in the street. Firstenberg makes a compelling case that the major diseases of civilization―heart disease, diabetes, and cancer―are in large part related to the pollution of our world by electricity.”―Bradley Johnson, MD, Amen Clinic, San Francisco
“The Invisible Rainbow is wonderful. Firstenberg has done his research thoroughly. His book is easily readable and provocative while being entertaining. A remarkable contribution.”―David O. Carpenter, MD, director, Institute for Health and the Environment, School of Public Health, State University of New York at Albany
“I found it to be a mystery unfolding and could not put it down. It shines a new light on diseases that come from electrical development, and addresses current environmental crises that only a few yet realize are the consequence of electrosmog. This book is very, very important.”―Sandy Ross, PhD, president, Health and Habitat, Inc.
“I was stunned by this book. It is an extremely valuable document about an increasingly widespread environmental health risk to which we are all exposed. I am overwhelmed with admiration for what Firstenberg has accomplished.”―William E. Morton, MD, DrPH, professor emeritus, Oregon Health Sciences University
Is the Coronavirus Contagious?
This is the sixty-four-thousand-dollar question. The premise that coronavirus is highly contagious and can cause disease provides the justification for putting entire nations on lockdown, destroying the global economy and throwing millions out of work. But is it contagious? Does it even cause disease?
Here are just a few quotes of many from The Invisible Rainbow of a number of medical doctors about the spread of influenza.
“Influenza,” said Dr. Benjamin Lee of the Pennsylvania State Board of Health, “spreads like a flood inundating whole sections in an hour… It’s scarcely conceivable that a disease which spreads with such astonishing rapidity, goes through the process of re-development in each person infected, and is only communicated from people or by infected articles.”
Mercatus relates, that when it [influenza] prevailed in Spain in 1557, the greatest part of the people were seized in one day.
Dr. Glass says, in 1729, two thousand were attacked in one night.
Shadrach Ricketson, MD (1808)
A Brief History of Influenza
This epidemic affects the whole region in the space of the week; Nay, a whole continent as large as North America, together with all the West Indies, in the course of a few weeks, where the inhabitants over such vast extent of country, could not, within so short a lapse of a time, have had the least communication or intercourse whatever. This fact alone is sufficient to put all idea of its being propagated by contagion from one individual to another out of the question.
Alexander Jones, MD(1827)
Philadelphia Journal of the Medical and Physical Sciences.
Unlike cholera, it outstrips in its course the speed of human intercourse.
Theophius Thompson, MD (1852)
Catarrhal Fever in Great Britain from 1510 to 1837
Contagion alone is in adequate to explain the sudden outbreak of disease in Wylie distance countries at the same time, and the curious way in which it has been known to attack the cruise of ships at sea, where communication with the infected places or persons was out of the question.
Sir Morell McKenzie, MD 1893
Fortnightly Review
In 1789 man’s fastest convenience was the galloping horse. Despite this fact, the influenza outbreak of 1789 spread with great rapidity: many times faster in many times further than a horse gallop
James Bartley III MD and
A. McGehee Harvey, MD. (1976)
Two centuries of American medicine 1776 -1976.
Direct communication cannot account for simultaneous outbreaks of influenza in widely separated places.
Rodrick E. McGrew (1985)
Encyclopedia of Medical History
After decades of research, Firstenberg concludes: The embarrassing secret among virologists is that from 1933 until the present day, there have been no experimental studies proving that influenza––either the virus or disease––is ever transmitted from person to person by normal contact. All efforts to experimentally transmit it from person to person, even in the middle of the most deadly disease epidemic the world have ever know, have failed.
As early as 1799, researchers puzzled over the cause of influenza, which appeared suddenly, often in diverse places at the same time, and could not be explained by any theory of contagion. In 1836, Heinrich Schweich, author of a book on influenza, noted that all physiological processes produce electricity and offered the theory that an electrical disturbance of the atmosphere may prevent the body from discharging it. He repeated the then-common belief that the accumulation of electricity in the body causes the symptoms of influenza and that outbreaks were due to atmospheric “influences”—hence the name influenza.
Now that we know about the electrical nature of the sun, we can make some interesting observations. The years 1645-1715 was a period that astronomers call the Maunder minimum, when the sun was very quiet; astronomers observed no sunspots during the time span and the northern lights were nonexistent. Influenza outbreaks have been known to happen for thousands of years, but during the 170 year Maunder solar minimum, no influenza was recorded. Then in 1715, sunspots reappeared, as did the northern lights. Sunspot activity then increased, reaching a high in 1727, and in 1728, influenza appeared in waves on every continent. Sunspot activities became more violent until they peaked in1738 when physicians reported flu in both man and animals, including dogs, horses and birds, especially sparrows. By some estimates, two million people perished during the ten-year pandemic.
Arthur Firstenberg chronicles the history of electricity in the U.S. and throughout the world, and the outbreaks of illness that accompanied each step towards greater electrification. The first stage involved the installation of telegraph lines—by 1875, these formed a spider web over the whole earth totaling seven hundred thousand miles, with enough copper wire to encircle the globe almost thirty times.
With it came a new disease called neurasthenia, meaning weak nerves. The most common symptoms of neurasthenia over the years are heart palpations, dizziness, insomonia, weakened eyesight, headaches, exhaustion, depression, memory loss, and many descend into insanity. Outside of the U.S., scientists recognized electricity as one of its causes. Like those suffering today from “chronic fatigue,” patients felt weak and exhausted, unable to concentrate. They had headaches, dizziness, tinnitus, floaters in the eyes, racing pulse, pains in the heart region and palpitations; they were depressed and had anxiety attacks. Dr. George Miller Beard noted that the disease spread along the routes of railroads and telegraph lines; it often resembled the common cold or influenza.
1889 marks the beginning of the modern electrical era and also of a deadly flu pandemic, which followed the advent of electricity throughout the globe. Says Firstenberg, “Influenza struck explosively and unpredictably, over and over in waves until early 1894. It was as if something fundamental had changed in the atmosphere. . .”
Physicians puzzled over influenza’s capricious spread. For example, William Beveridge, author of a 1975 textbook on influenza, noted “The English warship Arachne was cruising off the coast of Cuba ‘without any contact with land. No less than 114 men out of a crew of 149 fell ill with influenza and only later was it learnt that there had been outbreaks in Cuba at the same time.”
During the first world war, governments on both sides of the conflict installed antennas which eventually blanketed the earth with strong radio signals–and during the later part of 1918, disaster struck. The Spanish flu afflicted a third of the world’s population and killed around fifty million people, more than the Black Death of the fourteenth century. Those living on military bases, where the antennas were routinely installed, were the most vulnerable. A common symptom was bleeding—from the nostrils, the gums, ears, skin, stomach, intestines, uterus, kidneys and brain. Many died of hemorrhage in the lungs, the victims literally drowning in their own blood. Tests revealed a decreased ability for the blood to coagulate.
Health officials in those days were very interested in the question of whether the Spanish flu was contagious. Doctors from the U.S. Public Health Service tried to infect one hundred healthy volunteers between the ages of eighteen and twenty- five by collecting mucous secretions from the noses, throats and upper respiratory tracts of those who were sick. They transferred these secretions to the noses, mouths and lungs of the volunteers, but not one of them got sick; blood of sick donors was injected into the blood of the volunteers, but they remained stubbornly healthy; finally they instructed those afflicted to breathe and cough over the volunteers, but none became sick. Researchers even tried to infect healthy horses with the mucous secretions of horses with the flu, but the results were the same. The Spanish flu was not contagious.
The year 1957 marked the installation of radar worldwide. The “Asian” influenza pandemic began in February 1957 and lasted for a year. A decade later the U.S. launched twenty-eight satellites into the Van Allen belts as part of the Initial Defense Communication Satellite Program (IDCSP), ushering in the “Hong Kong” flu pandemic, which began in July 1968.
As Firstenberg observes, “In each case—in 1889, 1918, 1957 and 1968—the electrical envelope of the earth. . . was suddenly and profoundly disturbed,” and along with it the electrical circuits in the human body.
[This makes total sense to me because the electrical fields of our bodies are hundreds of times weaker than the artificial electrical fields around us today, and it is a well known scientific fact that two or more electrical fields in the same proximity are changed by each other’s influence, and weaker fields are changed the most by stronger fields.]
Western medicine pays scant attention to the electrical nature of living things—plants, animals and humans—but mountains of evidence indicate that faint currents govern everything that happens in the body to keep us alive and healthy. From the coagulation of the blood, to energy production in the mitochondria, even to small amounts of copper in the bones, which create currents for the maintenance of bone structure—all can be influenced by the presence of electricity in the atmosphere, especially “dirty” electricity, characterized by many overlapping frequencies and jagged changes in frequency and voltage. Today we know that each cell in the body has its own electrical grid, maintained by the highly structured water inside the cell membrane. Cancer occurs when this structure breaks down, and cancer has increased with each new development in the electrification of the earth.
Chinese medicine has long recognized the electrical nature of the human body and has developed a system to defuse the “accumulation of electricity” that leads to disease. It’s called acupuncture. Many things that we do instinctively also help release any unhealthy buildup of current—the mother who strokes her infant’s head or who scratches her children’s backs to put them to sleep, the caresses of lovers, walking barefoot, massage, even handshakes and hugs—all now discouraged by the frowny faces of health authorities as we face the specter of bed police bursting in at midnight to make sure that Dad is sleeping on the sofa.
Am I making this up? The Washington Post recently published an article in which a mother was explaining to her teenage son why she couldn’t hug him during quarantine; and a WHO official suggests that public health officials should enter people’s homes and “in a dignified way” remove those who test positive, to prevent infecting the rest of the family.
Fast forward to the Internet and cell phone era. According to Firstenberg, the onset of cell phone service in 1996 resulted in greater levels of mortality in major cities like Los Angeles, New York, San Diego and Boston. Over the years wireless signals at multiple frequencies have filled the atmosphere to a greater and greater extent, along with mysterious outbreaks like SARS and MERS. Today we face the installation of fifth generation wireless (5G), broadcast in the gigahertz range, often at 60 gigahertz, a frequency that is highly absorbed by oxygen, causing the O2 molecule to split apart, making it useless for respiration
Check out the two maps below. Compare the pattern of 5G installation in the top map to the pattern of corona virus cases in the lower map. While correlation does not prove causation, the strong overlap between 5G rollout locations and corona virus cases should give one pause, especially given the history of pandemics following step changes in planetary electrification.
On September 26, 2019, 5G wireless was turned on in Wuhan, China and also launched in parts of New York City (areas of uptown, midtown and downtown Manhattan, along with parts of Brooklyn, the Bronx and Queens), the difference being that the 5G grid in Wuhan was much denser, with about ten thousand antennas—more antennas than exist in the whole U.S.A., all concentrated in one city. Illness has followed 5G installation in South Korea, Italy and Iran. In South America, Ecuador is a hot spot for the respiratory illness, and it is in Ecuador that 5G first appeared. The 5G system is also installed on modern cruise ships and in many health care facilities. People who suffer from electrical sensitivity cannot go near many hospitals and nursing homes.
But surely this is just a coincidence. Isn’t it a virus that is causing the current outbreak? Doesn’t this nasty little creature called coronavirus infect us and make us sick? Please watch this talk by Dr. Andrew Kaufman in which he explains the role of exosomes in the cells.
Exosomes are particles released from the cell; they carry dead RNA, toxins and cellular debris in response to various insults (toxins, stress including fear, cancer, ionizing radiation, infection, injury, and many diseases. A number of virologists agree with his conclusions that viruses are exosomes; they are the same size, the same shape, both carry RNA and both attach to the same receptors. These exosomes/viruses are the result and not the cause of illness, with primary roles of coagulation, intercellular signaling and excretion of waste materials. If 5G, by overloading the body’s electrical circuitry and by high-jacking oxygen, causes injury to the lung cells, then an increased production of exosomes (wrongly called viruses) is sure to be the result—and thank goodness! [The body needs to rid itself of dead material to make way for cellular regeneration.]
It’s interesting to note that each wave of influenza has its own constellation of symptoms—during the Spanish flu epidemic the main problem was bleeding, the inability of the blood to coagulate; the main victims were healthy people in the prime of life, between the ages of twenty-five and forty. Today’s victims are older, usually with pre-existing conditions. The main symptom of today’s outbreak seems to be hypoxia, akin to high altitude sickness.
Dr. Cameron Kyle-Sidell, who worked on the front lines in New York City said, “We’ve never seen anything like it!” The afflicted are literally gasping for air. In fact, the [electrical] ventilators that the hospitals have scrambled to obtain do more harm than good and may be accounting for the high mortality rate. These patients don’t need help breathing—they need more oxygen when they take a breath. This is not the sign of a contagious disease but of a disruption of our mechanisms for producing energy and getting oxygen to the red blood cells.
So is corona virus a contagious bad guy? Remember that researchers could not show that the dreadful Spanish flu was contagious. The fact that viruses are actually helpful exosomes, and that many who test positive are symptom-free, makes their role as a perpetrator highly unlikely. To settle this question once and for all, we need to do the same contagion studies that proved non-contagion in 1918. I’d be happy to be the first volunteer.
Author: Sally Fallon Morell
Be on the lookout for my next article about How to Protect Yourself from Covid 19