Does African Need a Pandemic?

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Peatness

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@Peatness the response here from "Kevin" is chilling.


View: https://youtu.be/DfBvfS8R1GY?t=5034


The gent asking the question was good enough to at least imply he'd given him the benefit of the doubt (with a genius veiled warning). "Kevin" pretty much reveals his bent for population control.

Once confronted with the truth (their lies exposed) these men waffle and make meaningless noise. Thanks for digging out the full interview. These people have to be stopped.
 
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Peatness

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When the missionaries came to Africa they had the Bible and we had the land. They said 'Let us pray.' We closed our eyes. When we opened them we had the Bible and they had the land.

Desmond Tutu
 
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Peatness

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UNN’s Oliver Down has undertaken research into grants received by the Tony Blair Institute from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation as well as other initiatives by Tony Blair which include the ‘Tony Blair Africa Governance Initiative’. The results are truly astounding. The first grant was awarded in 2012 and in the ensuing 9 years $21,905,111 has been awarded in grants from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to Tony Blair backed projects at an average of over $2,000,000 per year.


These will be eye-watering sums of money to many especially considering the millions of small businesses destroyed by draconian lockdown policies. The two largest single grants were awarded in 2019, when $3,472,939 was awarded, according to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundations website: “to support the design and operation of a multi-sector implementation unit in the Office of the President in Burkina Faso” as well as $5,000,000 was awarded “to support the installation and governance of a new agriculture coordination hub located in the Office of the Nigerian Vice President, to guide and support the implementation of two pilot programs” this is again taken from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation’s website.
 
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Zsazsa

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Peatness

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Peatness

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FFS Children in African are not guinea pigs


View: https://twitter.com/BernieSpofforth/status/1575747291591213056?cxt=HHwWgICgsYT0lt4rAAAA


Why it is not safe to be eating bugs

African Seasonal Ataxia (ASA) is another interesting recently described clinical
entity which presumably has a thiamine-related foundation. This syndrome has
been recently described in people who live in Western Nigeria and is characterized
by ataxia, tremors, and decreased levels of consciousness. These symptoms occur
during the rainy season of July through October. ASA usually follows a large carbohydrate
meal. At its peak incidence, ASA can account for well over 70% of hospital
and clinic admissions.
Various hypotheses have been advanced to explain ASA; however, strong evidence
supports a mechanism related to thiamine deficiency. There is a clinical triad
of cerebellar ataxia, ocular disturbances, and encephalopathy usually seen in acute
thiamine deficiency. Upon examination of the dietary intake of the low socioeconomic
strata of patients, it was found that almost all had consumed significant
amounts of roasted silkworm larvae Anaphe venata. The availability of these larvae
in the marketplace corresponds to the rainy season. The larvae represent a valuable
protein source for rainforest people.
The practice of entomophagy in low socioeconomic cultures is accepted. Protein
sources are relatively scarce for these people, who subsist largely on carbohydraterich
diets. Subsequently, it has been shown that there is a thiaminase present in the
Anaphe venata larvae. During the rainy season, these larvae fall from specific trees,
and are gathered and sold in markets. Subsequent consumption of larvae containing
a thiaminase by people ordinarily eating carbohydrate-rich diets can explain the
rapid onset of symptoms resembling those of thiamine deficiency. As a corollary
to this recent description are earlier descriptions of similar outbreaks of thiamine
deficiency. There was, for example, the outbreak of the so-called Chastek paralysis,
a disorder of silver foxes on a fox ranch in Minnesota. These foxes were fed raw
fish and within a few weeks developed ataxia, changes in consciousness, seizures,
and death. Pathologically, brain lesions resembled those seen in thiamine deficiency.
Subsequent work showed the presence of a thiaminase in the viscera of the raw fish,
which had precipitated the disorder.
Inherited ataxias are a group of relatively rare neurological disorders genetically
transmitted, which have as a common denominator ataxia and the possibility of
successful thiamine treatment. These diverse, yet related ataxias include Refsum’s
disease and Friedreich’s ataxia. This group of disorders has a defect in the enzyme
pyruvate decarboxylase. Pathologically, these disorders show mitochondrial damage
in selective brain regions. Treatment regimes include thiamine and ketonic diet therapies.

Source

Preface
Thiamine Deficiency and Clinical Disorders By David W McCandless
 
EMF Mitigation - Flush Niacin - Big 5 Minerals

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