All Episodes
Feb. 15, 2020 - Clif High
43:06
critical thinking - 2/15/2020 - #covid19 = Sun disease?
| Copy link to current segment

Time Text
Hello there.
Okay, so um today's February 15th, 2020.
We're gonna discuss the um whether or not uh uh COVID-19 fits the descriptors for sun disease.
And I'm gonna give you some information that I went through yesterday.
So I need to set this stuff up because I've this is the second time I'm going through this, so I'm gonna try and sort of step through it quickly.
I don't want to miss anything, and um uh I just stepped through basically hoping I can remember everything from yesterday.
So um let's see.
Uh back in the day in the 90s, I wrote some software for educational companies, uh, some of which was licensed by a Japanese firm.
Uh specifically a uh Karitsu that had um production facilities near Yokohama.
Karitsa was like a conglomerate.
And I was just working with one subsection that was involved in educational stuff.
Uh they also uh were the Japanese reps for my Vortex software, which allowed people to read extremely fast from computer screens.
It was ex it was very well received uh in their specific industrial niche of uh safety emergency warning signs because Japanese uh was particularly uh well suited to high impact uh short words being able to get right to you.
Anyway though, so I had this relationship with this Japanese conglomerate.
During that period of time, uh I developed the um uh the web bots, okay, the altar reports, the asymmetric linguistic trend analysis.
And uh uh I came up with that and went in that really weird screwy direction.
Uh and I was still doing business with the Japanese and a bunch of other uh firms uh globally and and as uh just as a sort of a chotsky, I would hand out my reports as I I did 'em to these executives.
Japanese guys, they took to them.
And uh they had them all bound up and uh another generation of these fellows, um people I didn't work with, but who were within the power chain at the time I was working with the company, came along, they're now into more senior management, they contacted me and wanted to do a conference call.
I said, sure, what the hell.
And they recorded it, and they were willing to provide me some aspects of it after editing.
Uh but we discussed a lot of their internal business, so I said, uh let's not bother, I'll just redo it from the notes that I developed for that discussion.
And um, because it's I think it's very reasonably valuable, uh, as did they.
Um it's complicated uh complicated stuff here though, because I gotta uh we discussed a lot of their private business, none of which I'm going to share.
I'm gonna be very careful, hopefully I won't have to edit this.
Hopefully I can keep it under an hour.
There was a lot of stuff there.
It was several hours.
Uh and they had um uh live real-time uh overdubbing uh Japanese uh to what I was saying, and it was driving me nuts uh trying to not hear it as I was speaking and and that affected what I was saying, and it just took forever.
Okay, so the um the reason that they Contacted me was they were questioning the extraordinary number of linguistic hits from their viewpoint of the uh what I had characterized as the sun disease in my old ALTA reports uh with COVID-19.
And I'll share those, okay.
I'll share some of these linguistic uh similarities and we'll and you can see what led them to this understanding.
Um the timing is off, but timing is a bitch, okay.
And so the timing in their minds was always separate from the actual forecast because the predictive aspect of it was not necessarily the timing per se, even though they were um uh attempting to use that for you know a commercial gain, uh they were always more uh planning far ahead because they know shit's gonna happen anyway.
So uh anyway, so they uh uh so we had this long talk, um, and uh what set them off was the early reports of the sun disease and the continual over years over a decade.
Uh let me see, uh, if we want to just characterize it from uh as beginning in 2003 when we had the uh effective split, and I'll explain that in a second.
Then we're looking at 13 years of uh the sun disease appearing in the reports, you know, unbidden in the data.
And the uh one of the corollaries in my work that I always followed was the longer it appeared, the further out it was going to have an effect on us, right?
There may also have been another subcorollary is that the further out it would be before it appeared, because we're now getting into it, even though it started hitting the forecast in the data sets in 2003, actually earlier than that, and I'll explain that in a second.
Okay, so um there's there's these two weird things about the sun disease relative to humans, okay.
It was always that the sun disease was emblematic, and the word sun was an emblem relative to the disease, an icon, uh a symbol, okay, not simply a word.
And so here we find that uh at this point, and so that was described from 2003 onward, the relationship of the word sun and disease with the uh forecast for the upcoming manifestation of it.
And so the description was that we would have um well, I won't go into the details of that, take us too long.
Uh at some point I'll get out the old reports and go through them in the what was published because I've got all the the raw data in a lot of the sun disease stuff, just because of the nature that it that it um in the way in which it appeared.
But in any event, so uh the Chinese flag is the uh references the sun.
Okay, it is an emblem of the sun.
Uh Wuhan, the central province in which this was uh the Wuhan City, in which this was um uh emergent manifest, um has a really peculiar thing, which is that just a couple of years back,
there was a um a Chinese pop song that was called Sun Quan the Emperor that was about Wuhan, it was about the formation of Wuhan, uh the Hubai province area, the beginning of the um 2000 or yeah, a thousand years ago, the beginning of the what led to the current uh shape of China and all of this kind of stuff, right?
It was a weird historical song, and it's became thereafter, and it described in Chinese literature as emblematic of Wuhan.
So uh so they they connected the language there.
Now that was always something about the predictive linguistics.
We were predicting the appearance of language, not necessarily an event that we now would imagine around that language, right?
Because we would have no way of knowing how people would be interpreting words 20 years in the future if we were suggesting that uh an event would happen 20 years in the future around this language.
All we would be projecting is that this language was going to appear, and we could maybe sort of puzzle out what it was about, right?
All right, so um, and and it's key that we understand that it's linguistics that were being forecast, not a description of the event.
So this is not prophecy where somebody's got a vision of an event coming out and they and and they see that event and then they apply the words to that event description and present you with that.
We didn't have that.
We had a bunch of words that were being forecast as being uh of importance at a particular point in the time, and that these words were related, sort of like a giant word cloud.
And it would then be up to us several years in advance of that sometimes to try and puzzle out how these this word cloud would actually shape up given what was manifesting in our current reality and how it might be expected to unfold.
Alright, so that's uh primer on the the linguistics.
Alright, so we had tons and tons and tons of stuff about sun disease, and it was from the very first report that I did from the very first data gathering session that I did in 1997 that sun disease popped up.
At that point, it was it showed up because I was attempting to use this technology to forecast stock market prices, and I had chosen a and I was working off of the stock ticker symbols, and I had chosen Stanford University Network Computing as my first target.
Their symbol was UN.
So it actually went out and looked for sun and brought back all kinds of information, not about Sun the Computer Company, but rather about the sun, the big scary ball in the sky, and the effect it was going to have on the planet as we went forward.
The disease of the sun.
Now, later, so that was 97, that was the very first report.
Took me um number of years to write the software, figure out what the hell I was doing with that, and I was working on that part of it for at least another 10 years, well into about 2010 because stuff kept changing, and it was difficult to keep track of the alterations within the language.
It was a continual burden.
We had the censorship and things kept getting um more um more interesting.
In any event, though, so it was a work in progress for well over a decade.
But from the very beginning, we had sun disease.
It was initially only my assumption, uh, interpreting the data because of the other data that was associated with the sun, then it was talking about climate.
It was through this period from 1997 to 2003 that we had all of the initial language that then formed rivers in the sky, atmospheric rivers, lakes in the sky, the catastrophic lake dumps in the sky, you know,
giant amounts of rain coming down in a short period of time, like whole years uh worth of rain in a two days, that sort of a deal, and uh and the wonkiness of the weather began being predicted in 1997, and through that period in 2003, all of these things seemed to only relate to,
and they were all always uh continually associated in the data sets with sun disease, which had become a rather um entrenched generalized meme uh with generalized uh mimetric, uh, you know, a continual thread through all of the various different data sets.
And and it was there all the way through 2003.
It wasn't until 2003 that I was able to make some uh breakthroughs in my processing and was able to do, begin to to start to do more reports than had been previously able, because I was doing reports that were like hundreds of pages at a time simply because it took so long to gather the data.
I was looking for such long-term stuff because there was no point in trying to chase events into the near-term future.
Although that actually had been my goal with the uh stock market stuff, right?
So, anyway, so um, all right, so jumped to 2003, we get what I called the split.
It was in 2003 that we started getting sun disease applied to a condition that would affect humans.
And it and it and and also continued on.
We had the same set continue on with sun disease all about climate and wonkiness and all of that sort of thing.
And so, here, let me um I gotta go the other way.
All right, so uh so it was up in in 2003 that we had the split, but from 1997 until 2001, sun disease was a prominent feature in all of these ULTA reports, these asymmetric uh linguistic trend analysis reports that I was producing.
All right, and during the period of time from 2003 to 2016, there were actually two threads of the sun disease.
And one of them was all about humans.
Now the threat of um uh sun disease relative to humans that showed up during that period of time uh was actually from 2003 through 2016 more emotionally intense by the measurements of my um my little engine that quantified emotions and put down intensity,
duration, uh spreadability, all different kinds of things, but by the intensity factor, there was much more intense language appearing in this period of time about sun disease affecting humans than about the continual slow grind kind of stuff on our weather.
Alright, so um dropping the aspect of sun disease uh as weather, we find that from 2003 onward, there were certain key conditions that had never been met in any outbreak.
So from 2003 and through to 2016, when I stopped doing the Ulta reports because of the data pollution caused by David Wilcock and Cory Gooden, those guys, from so from 2003 to 2016, 13 years in those ULTA reports,
sun disease as it applied to humans, had continual data sets that had key manifestations, uniquely described manifestations that appeared in no pandemic through that period of time.
So it wasn't SARS, it wasn't any of the previous coronaviruses, you know, nothing showed that matched the the language of the sun disease as had been described during that period of time.
Well, we now have that those things appearing now in the last couple of days.
And uh the key aspects of this that we can zero in on just to get into it, uh, was uh around the idea of people collapsing on the um uh on the street uh and reeling and suddenly collapsing.
Okay, no symptoms, just suddenly collapsing.
Uh, another aspect about it um was people that were reeling and appeared to be zombie-like, not like you know, zombies on TV, but uh out of it in the sense that they were uh mesmerized or non-functioning.
Um you know, your mental uh facilities just aren't working there, and those these two elements uh were predominant in the sun disease descriptions in close conjunction with street lights, light poles.
And so here we now have situations where there's actually images emerging and discussions online of people collapsing, grasping around light poles, and and not just one person, and but repeated instances of this to the point where the language is spreading throughout the internet.
So that's what attracted the uh attention of the Japanese was the unique descriptions that were coming out that matched uh the descriptors in the old Alta reports uh about the sun disease, which would appear periodically as I wrote about it, but you know, it was at that time I started getting bored with it because I've been writing about the thing for 13 years, but I've been aware about it for longer than that because I'd been tracking the sun thing since 1997.
So it's a linguistic span was actually quite huge within my the body of my work, and and I basically took it for granted and didn't even think about it until well rather recently.
And uh we have um we have some other uh linguistic clues that that link sun disease with our current uh experience with this COVID thing, okay?
And these linguistic clues include our old meds being uh used and TCM, traditional Chinese medicine, and in the reports uh there was a key feature was that we would that the way that humans were going to respond to this in so in the our our word clouds about the sun disease,
uh the there were words about the human response to the sun disease, and one of the responses that was going to that kept showing up was the idea we would be returning to way old traditional approaches uh because of the nature of what we were facing.
I'll get into that in a second.
Okay, so these other linguistic clues included sudden respiratory problems and asymptomatic respiratory buildups.
So you were walking along and all of a sudden your lungs would fill up and you'd collapse over.
We're now seeing that in these secondary infections of this disease.
So the people that are collapsing on the street, some of them are found to have been asymmetric or are rumored on the internet to have been asymmetric or asymptomatic carriers of the disease, just walking around contagious and infecting people that they didn't even know they had the disease themselves until it builds up and then they collapse on the street.
Other people are are uh had it, were cured, went back out on the street and doing the regular stuff, got it again, and within a very short period keeled over.
Okay, uh also now we're seeing this guts gut storming that was repeatedly um referenced in the old Ulta data as again the street lights and the collapse together, and then fever as a metric.
That was a unique um uh set of language in the uh ALTA reports about using fevers, not you know, actually using fevers.
And here we now see people with the little wands to see if you've got a fever and that's a metric or whether or not you go to decontamination or whatever, or quarantine.
There was other language in there about um the variable period for uh symptoms, about the wide range of effects within humans, and so it would look at one point like we were battling multiple diseases, at other points it would look like we were merely dealing with regular stuff and we were overreacting,
and then it would bloom again, and and the overreaction would seem to be you know far less than really was required, and how it was gonna be very difficult to deal with.
Um all of the time that I was dealing with the sun disease stuff, the only time the only thing I ever saw ever show up is as um uh an effective response, uh all centered back to old traditional medicine.
So we can consider that as we go forward.
Uh okay, so um the second time is more deadly apparently if you get it again, so it may not confer immunity through antibiotics or through antibodies the way that we think traditional ones do.
Oh, another thing that we're gonna see here is that the okay, so uh let's get into some of the cultural things.
If this is the sun disease that's emerging now, the sun disease descriptors had us having uh cultural alterations.
Uh so it's gonna alter global culture uh both in patterns in commerce and politics, but also in patterns in culture.
So you can forget about shaking hands anymore in Western society.
That's gonna go away, you'll bow, you'll do some other something, who knows?
Uh, you know, who knows.
Um, but you won't be shaking hands in close contact, you know, people are now gonna start extending their personal uh space and say, wait a second, you know, you're too too close, fucker.
Don't you dare be spitting next to me, that kind of thing, right?
Uh we're gonna see new travel, uh restrictions first.
That's gonna the travel industry is gonna collapse, we'll get into that in a second, but also we're gonna see new stuff related to travel, which would be like antivirus clothing that's uh for people that have to travel globally.
Uh stuff with silver in it to protect you, that sort of thing.
Uh supply chains are going to be localized over time, and but we'll see a lot more raw material shipping and and more localized production and stockpiling of raw materials throughout the planet.
Uh it's going to alter our planetary diet.
We can get into that in another point, and change agriculture, but it not directly, only as a result of appearing at this time as we head into the ice age uh for uh the from the 2030s on.
The okay, so the way that the that I was talking about this the other day with these people that have to plan for it in Japan is that we were talking about short term impact.
And for them, short term was the next five years, and and maybe really the way they're thinking about it, the next nine years.
Um but they're pretty certain that as a uh culture will be dealing with this for several decades.
I agree.
Um they were pretty certain that the most significant impacts would come within the next five years.
I'm not so certain if we apply a uh different kind of understanding to the word significance, because the cultural changes will take a uh some of them will take a lot longer to show up, but will be much more meaningful than the um early on commercial changes because the commercial changes will then later on have to play catch-up to the cultural changes.
So, in other words, uh, you know, some of the businesses may make uh different supply chain uh decisions now, but the culture changes and they have to play catch-up because some of the goods that they were gonna use as substitutes or stockpile or whatever are just no longer wanted by that particular culture they're in, and everything becomes much more locally based.
All right, just because we we will find it easy to transport um uh in a broad sense over a long period of time in a in uh our sci-fi world, we will find that it is easier to transport raw materials in bulk to automated finishing plants at various different sites than it is to do finishing in one point, box it all up and all of that kind of stuff, and then ship it and all of that sort of deal, right?
Because dealing with uh decontamination of raw materials is a lot easier than it is in dealing with decontamination of boxed finished goods that go on and on and on, boxes within boxes within boxes within boxes inside shipping containers.
So um, so it's gonna alter how we do things uh planet wide.
Um over 40 or 50 years.
During that period of time, we're also gonna be in an ice age, so it'll be it's a toss-up as to what's going to affect our agriculture and so on more.
But one of the key things about this was that the planetary diet would was going to change in relation to the sun disease.
But this was the combined effects of the human sun disease and the sun disease itself showing up.
Bear in mind, I stopped the altar reports when the data sets got too polluted to deal with and had to rapidly shift.
Um, in in doing so, we sort of like lost the thread for sun disease from 2016 onward.
Uh so we don't know where it would suggest or what it would suggest at this point.
All right, so um, okay, so let's deal with uh things like travel.
So it's gonna become um all right.
So we can place it put it this way.
Uh it will be interesting to see how rapidly here in the United States and in Western Europe we arrive at the decision not to participate in group events.
It will be interesting to see who arrives at that decision first, us guys or government.
Uh so if it's us guys, we may see a situation where uh which may be emerging now, especially as I was talking with my Japanese friends, uh, and seeing stuff happen local here where all of us guys get a little panicky, all right, that are that are aware and we start reacting and doing things in a panicky preppy kind of a situation, sort of like panic ahead of, you know, let's panic ahead of the government, right?
Get there first.
Um and we don't go places, and then the government catches on because they're reactive, the way that instead of proactive, uh, because they can never really be proactive.
And so it may be that such things, in terms of travel restrictions, are actually happening now in a self-imposed fashion.
And it's gonna get a lot worse because of the horror stories that are coming out around the travel industry, right?
Uh we heard one yesterday because a friend of Kathy's is on a four-month luxury trip with her husband, their old people, and it's around the world.
It was remarkably, I think, entitled Toilets of the World Tour.
Um, but it was a luxury cruise.
They paid a shitload of money for this.
But when you're gonna die soon, you know, in terms of the grand scheme of things, uh you might as well burn up some money.
And and they were gonna go and see the world in a luxurious fashion.
And they had all of these um ports all over Southeast Asia, Philippines, China, Thailand, Indonesia, all over there.
Well, all those got canceled, and they're now being rerouted to some islands in the Indian Ocean.
And it's anybody's guess as to whether there's enough stuff there on the islands of the Indian Ocean to feed that ship.
But none of the people want to get off of it in Asia, and you can see the problems, right?
So the people are freaking out.
Vikings trying to do what it can do to keep people safe.
So now that's another thing.
Okay, so one of the things about the sun disease, uh continual refrain that kept on going, even back in here, before 2003, that's this is not to scale people.
You know, I was just slashing lines and putting it up and stuff.
But back here in 1997 to 2003, when I thought it was just referring to the sun, uh, they kept showing all these things for um used to be called Article 4, okay.
And there were four articles, or there were a bunch of articles that you had to go through and in this test, and one of them uh from from the point of Article 4 onward, in this test for merchant marine and other things, they all related to public health and safety.
Okay.
So there's Article 1 about keeping the, you know, saving the ship, article 2 about uh basically uh, you know, saving all of the people you're working on, article three about uh, you know, alerting people around you to danger, and then article four was always about public health and safety in in the merchant marine tests and things.
So um uh uh that's what we're gonna go to again, is that that'll that'll become the watchword around the planet.
That was one of the things that was seen in the data sets all along, it made no sense when I thought it was just talking about the sun.
You know, I thought that was somehow connected to UFOs and shit.
Anyway, though, okay, so some of the things here.
Um the Chinese are showing us that some of the other stuff written about in the Ulta reports is actually manifesting in the current language, like the collapse of the established healthcare system, instantly becoming overwhelmed with the blooms, okay, because this is gonna this disease was described in the data sets much more like a fungus than um than a bacteria, where it had specific kinds of of uh stages of progress through the host community.
And these these occurred at blooms as it bloomed out in various populations.
And then the populations would collapse the way that um uh mycelium eats out all of the stuff uh directly underneath it that it needs, and so it it keeps moving out, leaving a uh a depleted center uh area for you know of the stuff it needed.
And so that was the description we get in this.
Uh all right, so another thing was that within the old descriptions of the sun disease was not only the suddenness that it appeared, but who it happened to hit and how it was um uh sort of flowing along in the middle parts of the population where a lot of reasonably healthy people.
And now we know that uh now it's been uh suggested, it's not for sure, but it's been suggested that the uh ace two system is involved, okay?
And that because that would be where that's where SARS entered the body.
This is a similar disease to that, and presents the same kinds of problems in making vaccines.
So don't believe anybody that says they've got a vaccine in three hours and you're gonna be fine.
Uh the ACE2 system uh is throughout your entire body, it's involved with uh lots of stuff.
The point that SARS was a real problem, though, was what was described in the data as gut storming.
Um it we didn't understand at the time that it that it was within the data sets, and and I don't think I adequately described it other than storming, uh it was never thought to be actual uh, you know, dysentery or anything, but a sudden depletion of something and you felt wonky and you'd collapse.
It was all part of the collapse and grabbing hold of the street thing.
Um anyway, though, so uh it's assumed that uh some of the data around the ACE2 stuff in SARS is applicable here.
If that is the case, one of the things you you can do, especially for small children, even down into some level of real small children, toddlers, is to provide adequate probiotics on a on a daily basis.
You don't have to overwhelm them, they don't have to have it with every meal.
Older people might well do better with a probiotic at every meal, because the probiotic is going to help moderate all of the and and plump up all of your ACE 2 layer in the gut biome, and uh will assist you in a number of other ways, plus it'll also be antiviral.
Because if you've got a good healthy gut bacteria, that also kills all kinds of viruses that may make it in there.
So just mentioning this as we go along.
Another thing is that uh chaga uh is okay for children.
At some point, though, you're gonna have to look at their body mass and say, well, you're a real small kid, we're gonna make this extremely weak and give you just a little bit by tablespoons over the next few days just to see how you do with it.
And only do that when you've got the disease in your local area as a response.
Um, you know, they have to be the chaga and the other medicinal mushrooms have to be considered as um uh true drugs.
Now, the Japanese guys I was talking were talking was talking to yesterday, um, had uh they've got different um probiotics and uh other antiviral approaches within their normal food chain, uh, with a lot of which is the fermented soy and fermented soap to the point where it's black and gooey and stuff, right?
And uh I throw up just even thinking about it.
They they eat it and they don't nothing happens to them, so you know, so they're survive with it, but uh you know, every one of them tell me that their kids basically throw up first couple of times they eat some of these things.
But on the other hand, it makes for a very resilient gut, right?
You got some serious, you got some serious gut bacteria in there if it goes in black and slimy to start with.
So, anyway, um, you know, I don't mean to minimize it, it's just that you're we're funny humans.
But they're they're also gonna start doing weak mushroom tea.
Okay, so uh we're almost done.
Hooray, hooray.
Um so we had all kinds of other language that that ties this to the sun disease.
I won't get into the those things.
You if you've got the old reports, you can go and look at them if you care.
I don't think it matters.
If indeed uh we're looking as the at the sun disease equals the COVID uh 19 here, then the projection is that we'll be dealing with it in beyond the 2030s, 2040s, even, and uh that it is just gonna become part of the sci-fi world, and we're gonna have to alter ourselves to uh react to it, and there'll be continual intermittent um uh springs of it coming out.
Now, the the awful part is, but bear in mind it only predicts language, not events, is that language was predicted that would show over a billion people would perish of this, okay?
We don't have any time frames, that language has never been fulfilled, of course, obviously, um uh but a lot of the sporting languages now emerging because it was all tied up into the sun disease sets.
Uh, but you know, that might be a billion people looking back after you know 40 or 50 years of it for all I know.
Uh again, not a good thing, right?
Plus, we don't know.
I mean, that all that is is the projection of language.
So it may be that uh mainstream media uh will publish uh the figures at that level, predicting and you know, at an extreme, it could be at that level.
Uh and will so that's how we get it into our data sets.
It's just an extreme, it's just language, it's just a projection that never ever ever emerges, and it never ever ever gets anywhere near that bad, but it's still horrific nonetheless, even at its smaller level of impact on the social order or or on um humanity and its uh impact on the social order.
We're already seeing the impact on the social order with the breakdown of the supply chains.
China is now 90% shut down, uh, which is good for the pollution, it's all dropped down to nothing because nobody's driving, nobody's making anything, no one's going to work.
Um Let's see.
Okay, so one of the things I want to recommend is that if you've got travel planned, you really seriously think about this, because there's reports of people that I know that have talked to me that say they flew out of LAX in the last few days on planes filled with Chinese that were leaving.
They were getting out of China that had come to the U.S. Some of them had come to the US to LAX and didn't want to, but that was the only flight they could get because the other flights that they were were potentially available to them are booked up.
Also with other Chinese from wherever they were flying.
Some of them are flying out of the Philippines, some of them were flying out of Malaysia.
So it's um so apparently there's a uh if you've got the money, some of the Chinese have gotten out, and this likely is a another yet another source of infection spread.
Uh, in any event, though, so consider that this may indeed be without symptoms for 24 days.
That's you know, almost a whole month.
So uh you're walking along, or you go to an event, and so you might get exposed to someone who themselves will see show no sign of being ill for maybe a week after that event totally ends.
Uh, we're at this initial point now, and like I say, it'll be interesting to see.
Will it be the people panicking uh that will not do the travel, and then the the government will react here in the US, or will the government just all of a sudden go crazy because of a bloom here in the US and clamped down on travel everywhere, trapping people.
And that's really the issue is whether you're gonna get trapped in in situ, wherever you happen to be by uh a quarantine close.
Uh you know, it the other thing is I mean, if they just shut stuff down and you don't go, big deal.
You know, I mean, you're you're it's not like you've lost much.
Okay, so um there's a couple of things again, uh, cautions, stay the hell away from MMS, also known as chlorine dioxide.
Uh it's it's I think it's uh chlorine um sulfite that they use to um trigger that, but also now we've got people recommending uh quartz and glutathione um alterations, right?
Taking quirtasin and and blutathione.
And I don't know about that, guys, unless they can show you a pathway that that actually affects the disease, the virus itself.
Those are both gonna cause stress to your body.
I think you're gonna personally I want to minimize any stress I can at this point uh because I will come in contact with the virus, especially now that if we think about it an appropriate way, now that we know it's on my continent, and in fact I know it's in my state.
We've got some up uh people being observed in San Juan County.
If any one of them show us having the disease, then we can presume the whole San Juan County has been somewhat polluted because the one guy getting there had contact with 19 people in in San Juan County, and who knows how many people in the process of transiting from CTAC.
So uh it'll be here real soon.
I mean, like in my local area, and thus I need to minimize the stress my body's under.
And some of these items, like, yeah, you can take quartzine, and uh if you take enough, you'll get ulcerative uh colitis.
Um it's not good for your gut, not long term.
It has specific uses, uh, it's uh a hot substance, an acidic substance relative to the action of the um uh gut biome, not to be consumed for long periods of time.
Uh a lot of herbalists are assholes and and idiots because they don't recommend this cycling of the herbs.
No matter what they are, uh you can't take them day in and day out.
You need to stop them just to reshock your body the next time you take them into having that more positive effect.
And none of them should ever be taken, probably longer than 18 months total.
Uh, I routinely, even on the chug of mushroom, the uh at the end of 16 months, went for two weeks without taking it.
Big boost when I did uh return to it again.
I'm coughing here because there's dust all over.
I was cleaning out yesterday.
Uh okay, so uh impact on the US, impact on travel globally.
Uh that'll be one of the next things that'll show up.
Everybody sort of hunkering down.
Um, one of the good parts of this, by the way, is it'll be uh hugely impacting on some rather evil businesses because their supply chains are gonna get wonky and they won't be able to produce stuff.
So there's always a little bit of good somewhere.
Um but we're seeing that by the way, we're seeing the supply chain impacts now, and uh people might minimize that.
That's because of the amount that's in the chain as it's getting closer to them, and it'll when they buy out that last one, it'll run out, and they'll discover how rapidly at that point the supply chains degrade.
Also, another thing is that one of the things about the sun disease uh in the Ulta reports was that we would reach a period of time where there would be a bloom in a very weird at the time, didn't make any sense to me.
Uh population uh subdemographic, and that would be jet setting um celebrities.
Uh are gonna be disproportionately hit by this.
Uh many of them weakened to the point where you know there'll be shells of their former selves.
Uh they may survive, I don't know.
But we'll see images of them, you know, trying to fight it off.
Uh, and this is gonna be because they go through airports all the time.
They're you know, the very lifestyle is uh making them go through what's going to become infection central, which are travel hubs.
Okay, uh I guess that's it.
There was tons more stuff we talked about yesterday, but I'm tired of going over it all again, and uh still have my own cleaning up and stuff to do here.
Uh you can take uh you know screenshots and that kind of stuff if any of this is important uh next time.
I'm undoubtedly gonna have other stuff to go through.
There's a lot of good people out there.
You can check out Peak Prosperity um uh guy on YouTube, Chris Martinson.
Uh he's uh he's got really good solid information.
Be careful of people recommending uh that you take chemicals unless they can tell you this chemical works on this pathway against this virus.
If they can't say that, you know, they're basically uh uh uh are butt heads, and um uh would you take advice from a butthead?
Anyway, I'll see you guys later.
Export Selection