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Post by Sidney on Mar 25, 2010 20:59:31 GMT -5
As I recall, Dr. Greg Smith was diagnosed with Blastomycosis a couple of years ago.
I have no idea regarding the treatment protocol, but I think it was discovered when he was hospitalized. I understand his health has been greatly restored and that he's one of the speakers at the upcoming Conference in Austin.
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Post by kammy on Mar 26, 2010 10:38:18 GMT -5
As I recall, Dr. Greg Smith was diagnosed with Blastomycosis a couple of years ago. I have no idea regarding the treatment protocol, but I think it was discovered when he was hospitalized. I understand his health has been greatly restored and that he's one of the speakers at the upcoming Conference in Austin. Hi Sidney, so nice of you to stop by and say 'hello' to us, we get lonely over here talking to ourselves... Yes, Sidney, this all seems overwhelming, that we could possibly have so many pathogens, and how in the world did we pick all of this up, we're just going around living normal lives?... as Dylan said, 'these times - they are a changing'... I believe that if we can get a handle on one or two of these 'hidden' pathogens, and get the right medicines, we'll feel better too, just like Dr. Smith.
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Post by jeany on Mar 26, 2010 11:01:49 GMT -5
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Post by ruth on Mar 26, 2010 13:30:48 GMT -5
wow, what an indepth blog, good job of gathering all that data. "I personally hold the opinion that people who contract Morgellons Disease have a disturbance in their amounts of copper and iron." me, too
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Post by jeany on Mar 26, 2010 13:50:26 GMT -5
wow, what an indepth blog, good job of gathering all that data. "I personally hold the opinion that people who contract Morgellons Disease have a disturbance in their amounts of copper and iron." me, too TY, Ruth. Yes, too many 'paths' are leading to iron and copper. Iron in particular. It's definitely part of the 'infectious system'. Jeany
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Post by kammy on Mar 26, 2010 15:57:29 GMT -5
Koala feeding facts www.giftlog.com/pictures/koala_fact.htm"Koala is the only mammal, other than the Greater Glider and Ringtail Possum, which can survive on a diet of eucalyptus leaves. Koala seldom drinks water obtaining it from the eucalyptus leaves, which are 50% consisting of water. Although, they can drink water if due to drought the leaves water content is reduced. Koalas consume eucalyptus leaves and bark from 12 different eucalyptus tree species. They also consume mistletoe and box leaves. Koala in Victoria would have different diet from koala in Queensland as different species of eucalyptus grow in different parts of Australia. Sometimes koalas eat leaves from other trees such as wattle tree, tea tree, paperbark tree. Each koala eats approximately 200 to 500 grams of leaves per day. Eucalyptus foliage is very fibrous and low in nutrition, and to most animals are extremely poisonous. Koalas are not drugged out on gum leaves. Koala's digestive system is especially adapted to detoxify the poisonous chemicals in the leaves. Koalas have a very long (up to 200cm / 6.5 feet) caecum - a fiber digesting organ. It's a part of the intestine, which allows more time for bacteria to break down the otherwise indigestible eucalypti fiber. Even so, the koala is still only able to absorb 25% of fiber eaten. The young koala drinks only mother's milk for the first six to seven months. At about 30 weeks, it begins to feed upon a substance called "pap" which the mother produces in addition to milk. Pap is a specialized form of droppings, which forms an important part of the young koala's diet, allowing it to make the transition from milk to eucalyptus leaves. Pap is soft and runny. It allows the mother to pass on micro-organisms from her digestive system. The young koala continues to take milk from its mother until it is about a year old, but as it can no longer fit in the pouch, the mother's teat elongates to protrude from the pouch opening. European settlers identified the koala as a source of fur to trade, and millions of koalas were shot for their pelts. By 1924 koalas were extinct in South Australia, severely depleted in New South Wales and estimates for Victoria go as low as 500 animals. Public forced governments in all states to declare the koala a 'Protected Species' by the late 1930's."
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Post by jeany on Mar 26, 2010 16:48:25 GMT -5
;D ;D ;D
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Post by jeany on Mar 26, 2010 17:01:24 GMT -5
As I recall, Dr. Greg Smith was diagnosed with Blastomycosis a couple of years ago. I have no idea regarding the treatment protocol, but I think it was discovered when he was hospitalized. I understand his health has been greatly restored and that he's one of the speakers at the upcoming Conference in Austin. Thanks Sid, we're feeling kinda lost here.... Your avatar cracks me up! Maybe our furious pets should gang up? Kinda like 'Bonny&Clyde'?.... What is it? a 45er magnum?..oh boy..and a AK45!..that should get 'em! ;D Jeany
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Post by Sidney on Mar 26, 2010 23:27:45 GMT -5
My brother sent a "Funny" last night.
The first picture is the doggie I'm using as my Avatar, and the second picture is your cat.
The Caption reads:
"Just let me know if ANYONE pisses you off today!
I've got you covered and I've got some Bad A$$ Friends."
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Post by lilsissy on Mar 27, 2010 9:18:40 GMT -5
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Post by jeany on Mar 27, 2010 10:22:34 GMT -5
My brother sent a "Funny" last night. The first picture is the doggie I'm using as my Avatar, and the second picture is your cat. The Caption reads: "Just let me know if ANYONE pisses you off today! I've got you covered and I've got some Bad A$$ Friends." YEAH!!!!!! ;D ;D ;D ;D
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Post by kammy on Mar 30, 2010 5:16:41 GMT -5
We've got to keep an eye on what's happening in nature. America could soon be swarmed with mosquitoes and locusts like the stories in the Bible - you are the indicator of what is to come to the rest of the world. You don't have as many frogs left - if any, they are dying from eating the Morgellons gnats. What job does the frog do to help man, does the frog eat the grasshopper to keep their populations in balance? By the frog now becoming missing in nature, this is going to create an imbalance with the pests. "Grasshopper invasion feared this summer Some Western, Plains states could see worst outbreak in 30 years www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36074471/ns/us_news-life/"They're grass eaters," said Tom Wright, a rancher near Newcastle in northeast Wyoming about 20 miles from the South Dakota border. "They'll eat the leaves and leave the stem. And they will eat the stems finally. "When they're really thick, people say they'll eat T-shirts on a line," he said as he recalled a time in the mid-1980s when the grasshoppers were so thick that you couldn't put your hand on the shady side of a fence post without squashing one. They provide some ecological benefits, serving as a food source for other animals. However, some pest species are capable of eating their body weight daily in vegetation and can waste up to six times more by dropping forage to the ground." Can we suspect that the grasshopper is infected with Morgellons also? Those with microscopes - you've need to kill a bug or two and let us know if you see the Morgellons artifacts? (I just have to pipe in here - I was on another site and started looking around in nature to see what is happening that might relate to our disease - making posts such as the above. I was ridiculed for posting "non-research" topics in one thread only. I'm telling you here and now - this is one the most important threads out here! Pay attention to what's happening with the insects/animals around you, they are trying to tell us a story.) Did anyone look to see how and if Morgellons is the first disease that is vector and zoonotic? What does that statement mean, how is it important to us?
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Post by kammy on Mar 30, 2010 6:37:28 GMT -5
March 26, 2010 "Allergies are mysteriously on the rise in U.S. The number of those with allergies is 2 to 5 times higher than 30 years ago www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36060765/ns/health-allergies_and_asthma/"About 54 percent of Americans are sensitive to at least one allergy-inducing substance, according to a national survey conducted from 1988 to 1994 by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). That's about two to five times higher, depending on the allergen, than the rates found by NIH between 1976 and 1980. The result: Americans are sneezing and wheezing and rubbing itchy eyes more than ever. And food allergies in children have also experienced an uptick. From 1997 to 2007, the number of children with food allergies rose 18 percent, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention."
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Post by kammy on Mar 30, 2010 7:45:30 GMT -5
That is what is holding up the C.D.C. investigation , they need a plan to address the public outcome of telling us our food is infected, Just guessing here. Just dig a little bit, researchers. Being cynical here: Morgellons Disease centers around golf, they are even putting the 'magic nematodes' in the sprinkler systems, don't lick your finger to clean your golf ball (as I've seen some do). If you look, we see a certain State that is the inventor, a certain city - where the doctors are that were investigating, the inventor is a golfer with the doctors. The inventor is ex-military, all of them are golfers and buddies, slapping each other on the back and laughing about their 'birdies'. Ok, you can't touch this, it's Hammertime, but Jeany and I can - you CAN look into what's happening around you.
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Post by Sidney on Mar 30, 2010 8:29:34 GMT -5
Kammy, you are SO correct about keeping an eye on NATURE. Perhaps keeping an eye on nature is the most important step of all. Unfortunately, the fact remains there's plenty of evidence to support "nature" is already out of balance, possibly even out of control as we seem to be spiraling downward on some sort of hell-bent suicidal mission causing our own total destruction.
Once the scales are so tipped is it possible a balance can ever be restored or the harm done reversed? Not sure that's possible.
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Post by kammy on Mar 30, 2010 8:50:12 GMT -5
Kammy, you are SO correct about keeping an eye on NATURE. Perhaps keeping an eye on nature is the most important step of all. Unfortunately, the fact remains there's plenty of evidence to support "nature" is already out of balance, possibly even out of control as we seem to be spiraling downward on some sort of hell-bent suicidal mission causing our own total destruction. Once the scales are so tipped is it possible a balance can ever be restored or the harm done reversed? Not sure that's possible. Well... what can I say? We have to believe that man will survive unaltered in pockets of the world to carry on the human race what has been set loose known as Morgellons Disease. I often wondered why our Government, NASA - was spending billions of dollars looking for another planet with water to inhabit, you think they have known for a while now? We are seeing those amongst us that claim to have had this 20 years or more. I was lamenting to Jeany last night that 'they' have probably cut our lifespans down by 20 or 30 years. My parents lived to be in their 80's... I probably won't live to see 65, as a result of this disease. We can probably suspect, and I hope it isn't true, that the newborns are already chemically affected. It might be that with the next generations the mutation has occurred and the human body - being as amazing at it is, can adapt - the human species forever altered hereafter for all generations to come - functioning - just not living as long. I am a fairly religious person, I believe the story, our story was written before we were even born. Morgellons is a sign of the end times, but what is even more frightening is that the Bible says the plagues will get worse. Dear God, we have to try and stop them so that they, in their madness, do not create worse disease than is already present and contaminate the entire planet. I believe we can adjust and live with what they have done to us, but we have to have medical help to get us back to a somewhat state of normalcy - that is what is missing. Why is this thread important? By opening these other doors, to these other sciences - we have more scientists to present our evidence to - to look... to bring attention to our disease by soliciting these other fields to help us. More scientists are studying animals/insects/others than are studying man and will be more sympathetic to our cause.
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Post by kammy on Apr 1, 2010 15:23:52 GMT -5
This is from Cam's "Bat Thread", we appreciate starting new threads on the same subjects but this just spreads the info out making it hard to find - in case we need it later. I believe that the bats and frogs eat some of the same 'food' and have that in common? Wonder what 'food' that could be? quote author=jeany Jen, I can't recall seeing this one definitely in us either, but I believe the 'morg fungus' is a mutated, morphed form out of several bio engineered pesticidal fungi AND this one, found in permafrost soil. Here is an excerpt from my blog: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GeomycesGeomyces is a genus of filamentous fungus in the family Myxotrichaceae. The Geomyces are keratinophilic fungi, able to degrade hairs and nails. They have been investigated for possible use in the biodecomposition of waste poultry feathers. Known to be psychrotolerant and associated with Arctic permafrost soils Studies suggest that one biochemical mechanism of low-temperature tolerance is achieved by altering the composition and total content of fatty-acids in their membrane, a phenomenon called Homeoviscous adaptation. Homeoviscous adaptation: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homeoviscous_adaptation... * could this be the reason of our low body temperature? Geomycetes feed off organic residues ubiquitously present on historical glass, such as dust or dead fungal and bacterial material…** environmental contamination? A number of asterric acid derivatives, some with antibacterial or antifungal activity, have been isolated from an unidentified Geomyces isolate found in a soil sample from King George Island, Antarctica: ethyl asterrate, n-butyl asterrate, and geomycins A-C…* I think, Skytroll was talking about ethyl..ether? *I found this sentence from that article interesting: Has the species always been here, but mutated into a new destructive form? Jeany
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Post by jeany on Apr 1, 2010 17:48:54 GMT -5
Bats eat all sort of insects such as mosquitoes, leafhoppers, beetles, rootworm larva, moths, grasshoppers, scorpions, centipedes, ants, flies, and crickets as well as other bugs.
and..fish, mice, frogs, or other vertebrates.
Frogs also eat mosquitoes...
Jeany
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Post by kammy on Apr 7, 2010 17:50:46 GMT -5
Jeany and I were discussing the bees tonight. This is conjecture, of course, we don't have any proof other than suspicions about the bee. We can easily see the link between the fungus gnats and flies to the bats and frogs. I'm thinking that since fungus gnats are pollinators also, that maybe they are infecting the flowers with the Morg particles and then the bee comes along afterward and the mites of the bees are becoming infected? Afterall, the biopesticides are designed to not harm the bees, but of course, they probably didn't consider the bee's mites?
If someone were investigating the death of the bees, I'd say to inspect the mites for the Morgellons artifacts. We believe that the chemicals of the biopesticides are affecting all of the smaller, scale insects.
We're in "ORGANIC" farmland here - there's a farmer's field behind us he's already planted and sprayed - everywhere you look in the grocery stores the produce is going "BIO" - you know what "bio" really means? - yes, biopesticide land - we were outside for 5 minutes and each had a fungus gnat dive into our coffee cups, they are very plentiful outside already. Maybe I can inspect a flower's stamen to see if I recognize any of our artifacts and report back?
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Post by kammy on Apr 7, 2010 20:19:54 GMT -5
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