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Showing posts with the label germ theory vs terrain theory

Reframing the Challenge to Contagion Theory: an exploration of the many possibilities overlooked and less considered when it comes to why people become ill.

Let us consider some crucial points that question the virological paradigm —not only on scientific grounds but from lived experience and spiritual insight that external germ-focused science often neglects. You may still be on the fence about Germ Theory vs Terrain Theory. If you do not know the gist of each theory's postulation for the causation of illness and disease, here's what they are about in a nutshell: Germ Theory postulates that all illness and disease is caused by germs that lurk in the environment waiting for susceptible persons to host them as they violently pleasure themselves at their hosts expense. Viruses are the main culprit for contagion. Terrain Theory declares all humans are robust individuals capable of living with germs. But the problem occurs when there are deficiencies or suitable terrain for outbreaks of bacterial or fungal expression to occur within a person. Experiments have shown viruses, if they exist, have not been proven to be contagious. Wh...

What Really Caused the 1918 Spanish Flu? The 1918 flu killed millions, but failed experiments suggest it wasn't contagious. Discover why a forgotten study still challenges germ theory today

  What Really Caused the 1918 Spanish Flu? A Forgotten Experiment Challenges Germ Theory For over a century, the 1918 “Spanish Flu” has been held up as one of the deadliest pandemics in modern history—allegedly caused by a virulent strain of the influenza virus that spread rapidly across the globe. But what if the entire narrative is wrong? What if the mass death attributed to this pandemic had little or nothing to do with a contagious virus? In recent years, alternative health researchers and medical historians have revisited the Spanish Flu story with a critical eye. One of the most astonishing revelations comes from a forgotten experiment conducted in 1919 by the U.S. Navy and Public Health Service. The results of this experiment, still largely ignored by mainstream medicine, call into question the very foundation of infectious disease theory as it relates to influenza—and perhaps viruses in general. The Experiment That Changed Nothing—But Should Have In an effort to underst...