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Post by toni on May 21, 2013 15:04:19 GMT -5
I know several of us have seen the microscopic "8-legged" specimen, that looks like a spider or an octopus.
Homeworld recently posted a great picture of a specimen that looks, appears, or could seem like a trichome which is what I've seen amongst my own specimens (immediately) within 3 minutes, after picking them out of my skin - so that part has shown me, (they're comin out of me), that I know.
This morning, I saw a new twist, and maybe others have seen this.
Out of an almost dried out sore, I managed to get out this (like stick) thing object out.
I say stick, because of how the exterior looks, sort of like the side of a tree (the bark), and it's straight and hard. But, I do think or assume, it's more of a build-up of keratin around a hair.
Now here's the weird thing. This "stick looking specimen/or keratinized hair"....has a trichome growing out of it's side.
I don't know where "that info" can lead, but I wanted to share that, because (there really might be something to that). Like....this "growthy stuff" loves keratin?
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Post by toni on May 21, 2013 15:06:04 GMT -5
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Post by Baraka Obam on May 21, 2013 15:18:29 GMT -5
There really is not much explaining exactly what they are, there are a lot of pictures of different types but not a whole lot of explanation.
It is strange to see them come out in the urine, then I could have eaten them but if that is the case why did they not break down and how in the world would tyhey get into the urinary track.
I do have a slide with this thing on it but I did not produce it because I was concerend the first word would be bug and now we are quite sure, anyway I am, that it is connected to plant life.
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Post by toni on May 21, 2013 18:04:27 GMT -5
FYI
Trichomes are simply (hairs on a plant) and "some" protists.
Some are singular (one branch) and look like a spike sticking out. Some are grandular (bulbous at the ends). And some trichomes/hairs (on a plant) are multibranched, called Stellate, like "star shaped" (like the 8 legged specimens) we're seeing.
Plant hairs, or trichomes, are sort of like "their sweaters" because they help the plant retain water and nutrients" in these mats of the trichomes that are tightly packed together that the plant grows. Trichomes also protect the plants leaf surface from bugs. What they're doing in us, I can only speculate like anyone else.
As for Trichomes "on protists", I'm not well versed on that specific subject.
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Post by jeany on May 21, 2013 18:22:41 GMT -5
Hello Toni, how have you been? You know I don't post here much anymore for obvious reasons but after seeing the trichome pictures presented here (great photos btw. homeworld) I remembered once reading about a type plant, a weed actually, which is used in genetic engineering. It's called Arabidopsis thaliana and among tobacco plants the most genetically modified plants. The leaves are covered with unicellular hairs called trichomes. 'In research tobacco and Arabidopsis thaliana are the most genetically modified plants, due to well developed transformation methods, easy propagation and well studied genomes. They serve as model organisms for other plant species.' With the use of Agrobacterium tumeficiens certain keratin genes have been inserted. As in this example called Cactus Project: 'The Cactus Project entailed the use of the Agrobacterium tumefaciens gene transfer introducing keratin genes into cells of cacti. The transformed cells were used to regenerate engineered transgenic cacti. The aim of the experiment was having the keratins expressed in cactus cells morphologically similar to hair and for the cacti to produce it externally. There have been discussions on the aspects that the external expression and morphology of hairs could be extended trichomes with the keratins expressed internally.' This could be an explanation as to why these trichomes seemingly 'attach' to keratin and also according to your observation a logical conclusion. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arabidopsis_thalianac-lab.co.uk/default.aspx?id=9&projectid=2IMO this is a direct link to GMO, Agrobacterium and MD. Jeany
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Post by jeany on May 21, 2013 18:42:01 GMT -5
More info: Putative Arabidopsis homologues of metazoan coiled-coil cytoskeletal proteins.This approach reveals putative intermediate filament protein homologues of filensin, lamin and keratin; putative actin-binding homologues of ERM (ezrin/radixin/moesin), periplakin, utrophin, tropomyosin and paramyosin, and putative MAP homologues of restin/CLIP-170 (cytoplasmic linker protein-170). We suggest that the AtFPP (Arabiopsis thaliana filament-like plant protein) and AtMAP70 (Arabidopsis microtubule-associated protein 70) families of coiled-coil proteins may, in fact, be related to lamins and function as intermediate filament proteins. www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21284606
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Post by Baraka Obam on May 21, 2013 22:45:17 GMT -5
Jeany first off I know who you were referring to in the open forum and would like to lend you a saying I have said over and over again until even brain fog could not stop me from remembering it,
“To err is human; to forgive, divine.” Alexander Pope, I forgive you!! We are friends again, SNUGGLE HUGGS!!!!!!!!. This is not the first time I have been divine but you know that, say howdy to Kammy for me!!
I will tell you what, I am gonna do, my newly caught Armadillo has no name, In honor of our reconciliation I am a gonna call it KK, what do you say to that. Me and yous guys ol buddies.
Jeany in layman terms what exactly are you trying to express?
Are you saying our disease is related to scientist mutating crops, that a common plant entity points us in that direction?
I did see the cactus with human hair instead of thorns, this took a grand amount of work to perform and I would like to see it reproduce and still grow hair.
One item, we are not producing these plant fibers like mad, if we are producing them at all, I have seen but a very few after years of using a pretty good microscope, it seems there would be a mass of them if we were turning into plants although the spiral items I and other members have found were very strange and root like.
I still wonder what they are got any ideas, who can find the spirals, who. Toni seems very good at identity
The real deal, a member not only found this in herself but also found it in her grand babies doodle.
That was eye opening eh.
Just my 2 cents
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Post by lostintime on May 22, 2013 1:44:15 GMT -5
Thanks for the info Toni, Trichomes are interesting and yes they look very much like the samples I have seen myself. The star shaped is most noticeable or that stand out. This would lead one to think fungal but wasn’t there another reason for this shape item. Something else you found some time ago?
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Post by toni on May 22, 2013 10:26:06 GMT -5
Hi Jeany Doing well, thank you, and I hope you and yours have been okay. Yep...(Arabidopsis thaliana) that is what I'm hungup with also in the mix of the Agro and Bt. I don't know why the "agro" has or seems to be out of the picture "right now" - especially when 'morgies" that were tested, tested positive.
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Post by toni on May 22, 2013 10:29:29 GMT -5
Thanks for the info Toni, Trichomes are interesting and yes they look very much like the samples I have seen myself. The star shaped is most noticeable or that stand out. This would lead one to think fungal but wasn’t there another reason for this shape item. Something else you found some time ago? Lostintime, that's good to know you've seen those also. Thanks for sharing that. And you asked if there was something else I found some time ago? (is it the demodex mites)? If so, yes....(((( they're abundant))) because we've got more food (keratin) production going on in our pores, so the demodex mites couldn't ask for a better environment to flourish. There's enough food in every single pore of our skin to feed 10 armies of mites that are interested.
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Post by morghunter on May 23, 2013 11:49:23 GMT -5
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Post by toni on May 23, 2013 12:07:05 GMT -5
Oh yes... I see that . Interesting, lots of us are finding them amongst the specimens. That part is important as it's a (symbol) of some species that grows those stellate trichomes, because all of them don't. It's a consistent (specimen) that keeps displaying itself, so there really could be something to it (probably is) or it wouldn't be there. Thank you much Morgshunter.
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Post by lostintime on May 28, 2013 14:01:15 GMT -5
No sorry Toni, not demodex. I remember a different organism being presented. Might have been Dictyostelium. I can't remember but it was something like that.
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Post by Baraka Obam on May 28, 2013 14:59:53 GMT -5
I saw a pile of these trichome in the Armadillo poo, then these grow on plants and it was under his cage on a clean board I washed, then I washed the armidillo with the hose and set the cage on board and washed the armadillo twice real good with hose, after it went poo and I picked cage up and there was a sting like of these trichome in the poo. There was also many of the items in the video in the poo, plus there are growths on the hair shafts, not exact to ours but way to all of ours, but neither is the hair exact to ours, plus the armidillo was young. I do have pictures but this site does not accept them, too large it says If this one posts know that there are many of these and other items, that are similar to ours. Attachments:
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Post by Baraka Obam on May 28, 2013 15:03:07 GMT -5
It did, well maybe a few more, Attachments:
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Post by Baraka Obam on May 28, 2013 15:06:54 GMT -5
Another Attachments:
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Post by jeany on Jun 22, 2013 13:57:10 GMT -5
Jeany first off I know who you were referring to in the open forum and would like to lend you a saying I have said over and over again until even brain fog could not stop me from remembering it, “To err is human; to forgive, divine.” Alexander Pope, I forgive you!! We are friends again, SNUGGLE HUGGS!!!!!!!!. This is not the first time I have been divine but you know that, say howdy to Kammy for me!! I will tell you what, I am gonna do, my newly caught Armadillo has no name, In honor of our reconciliation I am a gonna call it KK, what do you say to that. Me and yous guys ol buddies. Hey BO, u know what else u could do? Why don't shove that damn armadillo up your ass and pretend it's us, how 'bout that you mofo-ing POS!
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Post by Baraka Obam on Jun 22, 2013 19:40:17 GMT -5
Jeany, that with the Armadillo is not very nice and I do not think KK would like it either, if you want to get back together with me again just ask, you don't have to ruin this thread. I will meet you on skype you can say all the things that are bothering you. That would be nice!!
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Post by absurdlyhaywired on Jun 22, 2013 20:49:01 GMT -5
dictyostelium - - -photo from internet- - -
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Post by absurdlyhaywired on Jun 22, 2013 20:54:33 GMT -5
photo of navel fluid
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