linda
New Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by linda on Jun 23, 2006 21:29:39 GMT -5
ws.cc.stonybrook.edu/biochem/BIOCHEM/facultypages/citovsky/He's the guy who found the plant genes in a Morgie. I have to admit, this is the first I've heard of him, although I'm glad to hear that someone other than Dr. Wymore has taken an interest. Does anyone have any info about his work with Morgellons? I've just begun looking. Thanks, Linda
|
|
|
Post by belikewater on Jun 23, 2006 21:40:02 GMT -5
I just knew this thing was trying to change me into a cotton plant. Way to go!
|
|
|
Post by ebgbgms on Jun 24, 2006 11:06:08 GMT -5
Hello all, I truly believe this and have been confused for a long time as to how I could have removed a mimicked leaf from a house plant I use to have from my son's ear. It still lives now, perfect green no air really. It was about the size of a pencil eraser cut in half, really smaller. It had grow in his ear and looked just like my plant, but there is no way it could have come directly off the plant as there were and are not leaves that small. So somehow I believe it works with DNA too. Which explanes the mimic it does with all and everything U can imagine. How it has lived this long, a year at least is strange. Thank U for the info Always, ebgb
|
|
|
Post by imblownaway on Jun 24, 2006 12:05:17 GMT -5
ebgbgms,
thats fascinating. you still have the leaf? and it didnt deterioate like or normal leaf would? i remember reading a story about a girl in russia who after getting cactus needles in here started growing a cactus out of her body. didnt know what to think of it at the time. hey have you thought about calling repleys beleive it or not? they investigate things that are out of the norm. thanx for sharing that story i wish more people could share, the more bizzare parts of this story. i for one wonder if any of the skin on my face for example is really my own. i just dont understand why our stories arent being blasted all of the 6 oclock news. maybe once theyve established that this horror is real they will start listening to us.
|
|
linda
New Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by linda on Jun 24, 2006 12:41:38 GMT -5
A mold-like fungus best describes what I have seen. The fibers look like what I see on moldy cheese (aside from the red ones). Of course, I'm no scientist, but I'd like to see where Dr. Citovsky goes from here.
Linda
|
|
|
Post by skytroll on Jun 24, 2006 13:54:46 GMT -5
I do also, Linda.
skytroll
|
|
|
Post by specuelatin on Jun 24, 2006 15:20:17 GMT -5
Well, Dr. Citovsky, That atleast explains the mulch smell. Maybe the cigarette fibers and the wormy vine in that one ladies purse, who knows maybe even the ear plant. Glenda, such interesting laboratories many of you have! Thanks for starting the thread up Linda. spec
|
|
|
Post by Carrie♥ on Jun 24, 2006 15:43:11 GMT -5
Hey Spec...what's up with that? Are you all special now? Kinda like Ant and Patti and JJ and the others?
|
|
leighann
Full Member
Morgellon's - The point where Nature and Man collide...
Posts: 158
|
Post by leighann on Jun 24, 2006 21:33:19 GMT -5
Spec, my sister and mother noticed the "smell". I believe that this is a mutated plant or GM plant product that allowed this to infect humans therefore, the plant genes. I still buy into the florid fly, moth and streptsiptarian altering that is the cause of this. Both Crystal and Beth, (deceased) worked out in the yard alot the same fall they became sick......
|
|
|
Post by specuelatin on Jun 25, 2006 4:54:45 GMT -5
Hi Carrie, nope! I'm an independent contractor.. not staff, just a master thread "cutter and paster" just like before. This way the master thread stuff can get created and organized without being an additional headache for the Lymebusters main crew on deck to endure. Still, I think that little intro thing they came up with was very sweet and so very cool! spec ooops I mean: specuelatin ~ MasterThread Facillitator - Independent Contractorand back now to discussions of Dr. Vitaly Citovsky
|
|
|
Post by ebgbgms on Jun 26, 2006 0:23:47 GMT -5
Hi, Nope, it looks just like it would if you picked it today (leaf) it is weird. It has just been in a box. A perfect miniature tiny tiny leaf of that house plant I had. I had kinda stopped thinking about it until now. Always, ebgb
|
|
|
Post by Ms. Kitty ( kraz as a kat) on Jun 26, 2006 0:28:42 GMT -5
i have alot of things this thing has replicated. love you all krazy as a kat
|
|
|
Post by skytroll on Jun 26, 2006 13:56:10 GMT -5
Many been cloned over and over. Have to store all species on earth, somewhere, and the created ones, novel organism that are being added to the artificial tree of life.
Hang in there, we will find what is truly nature and what has been given us to care for, and we will find the clones, the mutated chimeras also. Most of the self-centered scientists name these things after themselves anyway.
We need more willing scientists to look at what is really going on to nature itself, like this Dr. Citovsky.
Skytroll
|
|
|
Post by aherah on Jun 27, 2006 1:36:55 GMT -5
You probably know that I've been attempting conversations with our most prominent naysayers. Margellons is a diehard skeptic, or so he would like us to believe. He allegedly contacted Dr. Citovsky and wrote this upon reading Citovsky's response:
Update from Vitaly Citovsky, (the scientist on the CNN report). He says he did not find a plant gene, but a gene that belongs to a bacterium that normally infects plants. Something similar to Agrobacterium tumefaciens which should please certain theorists, since it's "quorum sensing".
Still, he's not in a position to release any details, which means his initial findings cannot really be used to draw any conclusion - especially as we've no idea as to the scope or rigor of his study.
(Picture a fuzzy-headed scientist guy pushing his long fingers together) "Very, very interesting."
Take Care, Aherah!
|
|
|
Post by aherah on Jun 27, 2006 2:10:45 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by accudoc on Jun 27, 2006 8:57:39 GMT -5
From the Preface: “…the journey is not over. As the commentary by Paul Hooykaas indicates, it looks as though T-DNA will insert into any cell, be it plant, fungal or even mammalian. Is there a possibility of using Agro¬bacterium in gene therapy? Will Agrobacterium prove to be as useful a tool in fungal genetics as it has been in plant genetics? Its potential is mind-boggling.” www.shopapspress.org/fcoandonsath.html
|
|
|
Post by accudoc on Jun 27, 2006 9:01:49 GMT -5
Application of A. tumefaciens in Genetic Engineering: A RECKLESS DECISION: The Agro-bacterium tumefaciens Ti plasmid as a host vector system for introducing foreign DNA in plant cells.; SHRINKING THE Ti PLASMID: Mini-Ti: A new vector strategy for plant genetic engineering.; THE FIRST TUMORLESS
|
|
|
Post by linagin on Jun 27, 2006 9:10:35 GMT -5
Just happend to think I am looking in to buying a place at "the old Cape Cod" and reflecting on how all the trees down there have the lichen growing on them. I learned in botany hoe interesting lichen is not quite this not quite that taxonomy is "ify". and any ways I was also relating it to how the lichen like growths "dark brown/black that start to form and turn in to scab -like itchy erruptions erruptions usualy cause I missed a spot with the vinegar or slacked off on my vinegar ( you know like going to bed w/o treating myself cause I am so dang tired) and then I am reading this here about plant DNA (which must seem absurd to some I am sure) and just wondering...... Hmmm? what is it! (If the derm would just look he will see it )magnified only) but he doesnt look. If I stop the vinragr treatments this (morgies) will attach me like a tree trunk at Cape Cod.
|
|
|
Post by accudoc on Jun 27, 2006 9:25:12 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by linagin on Jun 27, 2006 9:35:09 GMT -5
doesnt that just freak ay one out. From now on when you watch a sci-fi outerspace flick, keep the mind that it coud very well be real. we are becoming "green men and woman" of celtic lore.
|
|