Quick Search
Categories
|
A Government Big Enough to Supply Everything You Need is Big Enough to Take Everything You Have... The Course of History Shows That as a Government Grows, Liberty Decreases. ~ Thomas Jefferson |
|
You may find links that lead to
interesting information, or there
may be links to undesirable sites.
If you find any of these undesirables,
PLEASE let us know the URLs so
we can block them from our campaign. |
Creepy Crawlies
- 4-17-2009
- Categorized in: Parasites
Are you the type of person that would squirm
if a little boy came chasing after you with a snail or spider?
A lot of us are. The thought of something crawly or slimy touching your skin or getting in your hair is enough to make you start itching and shivering.
Why is it that humans have a natural fear of slithery, crawly, little creatures?
It isn't because we aren't physically or intellectually more capable of winning a battle with them, but maybe our programming goes deeper than that. It seems that we instinctively run from unknown critters because we really don't know what they are capable of, and we know that there is a possibility that they can bite, sting, infect and even cause death.
I think that possibly one of the most horrifying bug stories I have ever heard, took place during a conversation with a friend about how little kids will shove things in their nose and ears and all kinds of places. She talked about how her mother woke up one morning to a spider wiggling around in her ear. Even with the aid of a doctor, they couldn't tell what sort of spider it was, and out of fear of startling it and provoking it to bite, she laid still for almost eight hours until the spider decided to come out on its own. If it had been me in that situation, I would have run around screaming and finding things to shove in there, feeling disgusted and violated. Having something so foreign inside your body with no way to get it out would be almost anyone's worst nightmare. Just thinking about it gives me the heebie jeebies. But, possibly the most disgusting thing of all, is that we may have way scarier, deadlier, and way more creepy things violating our bodies every day. We just can't see them. They are called parasites, and they do far more than an insect that will just sting you and get on with it. Parasites will live inside of you, living off of you, breeding colonies within you. They do plenty to destroy your body, but interestingly, they cause you to destroy your own body. People with parasitic infestations have shown to have increased and ravenous appetites, sugar and alcohol cravings and even insomnia.
Okay, so how likely is it for a human to have parasites? If other mammals can get them, so can we. Studies show that most all people have parasites. An average of two pounds actually, ranging from protozoan's (one celled amoebas) to helminthes (worms). Chances are if you have any parasites at all, you may be infested with parasites. If you are infested, so will everyone in your home also be.
I know you are probably sitting here thinking that you definitely don't have any parasites, because that is gross, and you think you would definitely know if you did. Well let's look.
Chances are you could have parasites if:
* You eat meat or dairy
* You eat vegetables
* You have pets
* You or someone you come in contact with has poor hygiene
* You have ever come in contact with feces (even from dust)
* You own or have ever worked on a farm or around livestock
* You were ever exposed to contaminated water (ditches, ponds, streams)
* You have visited foreign countries
* You have not had a recent parasite detox plan
* Are constipated or have other bowel problems
What we know about parasites:
Parasites are defined as any organism living off of a host, slowly killing the host by infection or depletion of its nourishment. With that said, it is pretty much understood that under no circumstances is it okay to have parasites in your system.
Most parasites affect the gastro-intestinal system while some are found in the lymph fluid, muscles, blood and many other bodily tissues.
Feed and Breed:
The only driving force behind the instincts of a parasite is to feed and breed. They are ravenous creatures that will deplete all existing and incoming nutrition in its host. Most parasites can lay thousands of eggs during their life in your body.
Creating their environment:
Most all parasites thrive in a very acidic environment, and few can even survive in an alkaline one. They are one of very few creatures that can survive, much less flourish in their own waste. As parasites colonize the body and grow in numbers, their needs also increase. Parasite colonies throughout the body will work synchronously as a whole, so when they want sugars and other acid forming foods to feed on, they send out a frequency that is picked up by our nervous systems telling us to eat sugar. When the order is sent out on the same frequency that our body uses, our brain doesn't know the difference, so it reacts responsively. Have you ever wondered why you have had such a hard time with cravings, while other people seem to have it so easy. They seemingly never have a problem with their weight because they just don't crave bad foods. So, before you get hard on yourself for not having will power like all the perfect bodied people, there might be a reason for your cravings.
Toxic waste:
As I said earlier, parasites are not affected by their own waste. But we certainly are. The parasites themselves bring you all kinds of trouble, but their excrement brings a whole new set of problems. Not only does the parasitic waste accumulate and make your body suitable for other disease because of the acidity, but it often brings its own diseases. Parasite excrement has been found to release into your body: toxins, poisons, other bacteria, and even DNA altering viruses like the SV-40 strain that forms tumors. It is an interesting cycle. Parasites crave acid forming foods, so we eat them. Then they metabolize it and acid is formed. Then with the waste, the tumor forming viruses are released into an acidic environment that is perfect for tumors (and cancer) to grow.
Often times these parasites will come on a perfectly organized destruction course, like pre-made cancer in a box. Take the pork tapeworm for instance. Pork contains a high amount of protein, but it is protein that humans can't digest. So what happens to those proteins? The parasites that also came in the pork come and feed on the proteins to get strong enough to inhabit your body. Those parasites leave SV-40 to make tumors, which could invariably turn to cancer. So, it may be a drastic reach, but you could simplify the equation from: Pork (Indigestible Proteins + Parasites + SV-40 Virus) = (Tumors+ Cancer) To be simplified: Pork = Cancer? Maybe so, but I won't risk my body to test the theory.
How Do People Get Parasites?
There are many places where a person can come in contact with a parasite, or its un-hatched eggs. The most common sources are indoor pets and a poor diet.
Pets naturally attract small parasites and their fur can be a haven for eggs. The animals get the parasites from either dirt, other animals, or from airborne eggs. Parasites brought to you by your loving pets can widely range to any variety. When your animal lives in the house, you are especially susceptible and a regular parasite cleanse is absolutely essential for everyone in the family.
Other sources for parasites are contaminated water, undercooked meats, (pork, shellfish, catfish, insects, all scavenger animals - often even if it is cooked to its proper temperature). Yeasts come from foods and exposure to other people with yeast. Insufficiently washed vegetables, contaminated hands or clothing of a food service handler are ways that parasite eggs can get into your food and become ingested.
Human or animal feces are usually definite places to contract parasites. Children's sandboxes have often been known as a place to get ringworms and hookworms because of the neighborhood cats visiting them to relieve themselves in. Ringworms and hookworms give a good example how parasites don't have to be ingested to enter your body. Many of them enter through your skin.
A lot of us are. The thought of something crawly or slimy touching your skin or getting in your hair is enough to make you start itching and shivering.
Why is it that humans have a natural fear of slithery, crawly, little creatures?
It isn't because we aren't physically or intellectually more capable of winning a battle with them, but maybe our programming goes deeper than that. It seems that we instinctively run from unknown critters because we really don't know what they are capable of, and we know that there is a possibility that they can bite, sting, infect and even cause death.
I think that possibly one of the most horrifying bug stories I have ever heard, took place during a conversation with a friend about how little kids will shove things in their nose and ears and all kinds of places. She talked about how her mother woke up one morning to a spider wiggling around in her ear. Even with the aid of a doctor, they couldn't tell what sort of spider it was, and out of fear of startling it and provoking it to bite, she laid still for almost eight hours until the spider decided to come out on its own. If it had been me in that situation, I would have run around screaming and finding things to shove in there, feeling disgusted and violated. Having something so foreign inside your body with no way to get it out would be almost anyone's worst nightmare. Just thinking about it gives me the heebie jeebies. But, possibly the most disgusting thing of all, is that we may have way scarier, deadlier, and way more creepy things violating our bodies every day. We just can't see them. They are called parasites, and they do far more than an insect that will just sting you and get on with it. Parasites will live inside of you, living off of you, breeding colonies within you. They do plenty to destroy your body, but interestingly, they cause you to destroy your own body. People with parasitic infestations have shown to have increased and ravenous appetites, sugar and alcohol cravings and even insomnia.
Okay, so how likely is it for a human to have parasites? If other mammals can get them, so can we. Studies show that most all people have parasites. An average of two pounds actually, ranging from protozoan's (one celled amoebas) to helminthes (worms). Chances are if you have any parasites at all, you may be infested with parasites. If you are infested, so will everyone in your home also be.
I know you are probably sitting here thinking that you definitely don't have any parasites, because that is gross, and you think you would definitely know if you did. Well let's look.
Chances are you could have parasites if:
* You eat meat or dairy
* You eat vegetables
* You have pets
* You or someone you come in contact with has poor hygiene
* You have ever come in contact with feces (even from dust)
* You own or have ever worked on a farm or around livestock
* You were ever exposed to contaminated water (ditches, ponds, streams)
* You have visited foreign countries
* You have not had a recent parasite detox plan
* Are constipated or have other bowel problems
What we know about parasites:
Parasites are defined as any organism living off of a host, slowly killing the host by infection or depletion of its nourishment. With that said, it is pretty much understood that under no circumstances is it okay to have parasites in your system.
Most parasites affect the gastro-intestinal system while some are found in the lymph fluid, muscles, blood and many other bodily tissues.
Feed and Breed:
The only driving force behind the instincts of a parasite is to feed and breed. They are ravenous creatures that will deplete all existing and incoming nutrition in its host. Most parasites can lay thousands of eggs during their life in your body.
Creating their environment:
Most all parasites thrive in a very acidic environment, and few can even survive in an alkaline one. They are one of very few creatures that can survive, much less flourish in their own waste. As parasites colonize the body and grow in numbers, their needs also increase. Parasite colonies throughout the body will work synchronously as a whole, so when they want sugars and other acid forming foods to feed on, they send out a frequency that is picked up by our nervous systems telling us to eat sugar. When the order is sent out on the same frequency that our body uses, our brain doesn't know the difference, so it reacts responsively. Have you ever wondered why you have had such a hard time with cravings, while other people seem to have it so easy. They seemingly never have a problem with their weight because they just don't crave bad foods. So, before you get hard on yourself for not having will power like all the perfect bodied people, there might be a reason for your cravings.
Toxic waste:
As I said earlier, parasites are not affected by their own waste. But we certainly are. The parasites themselves bring you all kinds of trouble, but their excrement brings a whole new set of problems. Not only does the parasitic waste accumulate and make your body suitable for other disease because of the acidity, but it often brings its own diseases. Parasite excrement has been found to release into your body: toxins, poisons, other bacteria, and even DNA altering viruses like the SV-40 strain that forms tumors. It is an interesting cycle. Parasites crave acid forming foods, so we eat them. Then they metabolize it and acid is formed. Then with the waste, the tumor forming viruses are released into an acidic environment that is perfect for tumors (and cancer) to grow.
Often times these parasites will come on a perfectly organized destruction course, like pre-made cancer in a box. Take the pork tapeworm for instance. Pork contains a high amount of protein, but it is protein that humans can't digest. So what happens to those proteins? The parasites that also came in the pork come and feed on the proteins to get strong enough to inhabit your body. Those parasites leave SV-40 to make tumors, which could invariably turn to cancer. So, it may be a drastic reach, but you could simplify the equation from: Pork (Indigestible Proteins + Parasites + SV-40 Virus) = (Tumors+ Cancer) To be simplified: Pork = Cancer? Maybe so, but I won't risk my body to test the theory.
How Do People Get Parasites?
There are many places where a person can come in contact with a parasite, or its un-hatched eggs. The most common sources are indoor pets and a poor diet.
Pets naturally attract small parasites and their fur can be a haven for eggs. The animals get the parasites from either dirt, other animals, or from airborne eggs. Parasites brought to you by your loving pets can widely range to any variety. When your animal lives in the house, you are especially susceptible and a regular parasite cleanse is absolutely essential for everyone in the family.
Other sources for parasites are contaminated water, undercooked meats, (pork, shellfish, catfish, insects, all scavenger animals - often even if it is cooked to its proper temperature). Yeasts come from foods and exposure to other people with yeast. Insufficiently washed vegetables, contaminated hands or clothing of a food service handler are ways that parasite eggs can get into your food and become ingested.
Human or animal feces are usually definite places to contract parasites. Children's sandboxes have often been known as a place to get ringworms and hookworms because of the neighborhood cats visiting them to relieve themselves in. Ringworms and hookworms give a good example how parasites don't have to be ingested to enter your body. Many of them enter through your skin.
|
The Aim of Public Education is Not to Spread Enligtenment at All; It is Simply to Reduce as Many Individuals as Possible to the Same Safe Level, to Breed a Standard Citizenry, to Put Down Dissent and Originality. ~ HL Mencken |
|
The Cure for Health Care and Indigenous Power is to Remove the AMA and FDA, and Unleash the Power and Creativity of the Free Market. Many People Have Been Brainwashed into Thinking the State Protects Them. The Truth is the Exact Opposite. ~ Morris Fishbein |
|
You may find links that lead to
interesting information, or there
may be links to undesirable sites.
If you find any of these undesirables,
PLEASE let us know the URLs so
we can block them from our campaign. |







