Epidemic: 30 trillion cases, and that’s a low estimate

Now that the vaccine-promoting PR agency called the World Health Organization has declared a coronavirus global emergency, we move into a serious phase of the “case numbers” game. Hold your hats. There are all sorts of categories and terms that pop up. You’re not supposed to understand them. You’re supposed to let them wash over …[continue reading]

Thank you, China, you’re wonderful

It’s a beautiful day in the neighborhood (To read about Jon’s mega-collection, The Matrix Revealed, click here.) As I predicted in an article several days ago, we were on the cusp of a big THANK YOU, CHINA moment. It’s here. From tweets accompanying the live World Health Organization emergency meeting on “the epidemic”: “I was very impressed …[continue reading]

Garlic compound fights source of food-borne illness better than antibiotics

Researchers at Washington State University have found that a compound in garlic is 100 times more effective than two popular antibiotics at fighting the Campylobacter bacterium, one of the most common causes of intestinal illness. Their work was published recently in the Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy. The discovery opens the door to new treatments for …[continue reading]

China “epidemic”: the strange role of the middle class

Sometimes, during years of research, unusual dots pop up, and you see connections you never suspected were there. Here is a bottom line connection. When the poor and disenfranchised people mount a protest against some draconian action of the State or corporation, the super-rich controllers don’t register outright panic. They believe they can manage the …[continue reading]

“The Chinese virus is spreading”—deception and false news

Most people are accepting the news that the Chinese coronavirus is spreading across China and the world. They don’t understand ground-level facts. First of all, in every so-called epidemic, diagnoses of patients are eventually made by simple observation. The patient has typical flu symptoms? Fever, cough, fatigue, weakness, respiratory problems? He lives or works in …[continue reading]