> ALL the diseases that we blame viruses on are actually parasites. Proof: Take anti-parasitic medicines, and the "viruses" vanish.
That's not proof. It's evidence, and there are many types of viruses. AIDS is another example.
> Viral infections are NOT transmissible.
That is utter bullshit. If you are in a household, and someone is sick, it's extremely likely everyone is already long infected.
> that shows that healthy people do NOT get sick from sick people
It depends. It's likely that the immune system varies in efficiency over time and situation. If you stay fit and healthy, you'll probably be most resistant to diseases than someone who eats cheetos and does nothing all day. But it's a tendency. And these experiments usually do not account for actual health of a person. To them "not sick" = "healthy."
> Don't take any medicines at all. Stop taking ibuprofen and acetaminophen (tylenol) and aspirin. It is proven that these drugs make you sicker for longer, and more prone to get sick in the future.
There is good advice buried in there. No, medicine can help a lot, but it should be used to cure something, not as prevention. If you take some medication long-term, it can cause various issues, and also does not properly addresses problems in habits that need to be resolved. If anything, the amount of long-term medication a person takes only increases over time, until you take 20 pills per day when you are 60+. The side-effects will be overwhelming, and a psychological addiction emerges. And you cannot be sure if the problems that person has is inherent to him or from the medication itself.
I had a fever some time ago, and there was something to lower body temperature, and it worked quite quickly and well. But the problem is that a higher temperature is necessary for the body to fight the disease, so it rose up again afterwards. Was it a good idea? Unclear, but when your temperature rises to lethal levels, it's better to take that than to die.
> Eat healthy foods that you cook at home from natural ingredients.
> A REALLY EASY protein to grow yourself is chickens.
> EXERCISE is vital.
> FEED YOUR SPIRIT too.
These are all beneficial in many ways, not just to avoid disease.
> Doing all the above, you MAY still get sick, but this is not a bad thing.
Yes, it's a tendency. Doing the above you'll reduce the chances to get sick and die.
> (Don't take allergy medicine -- you will get used to it.)
Maybe it's better to adapt to it rather than suppress any potential adaptation via medicine. But there are some things you cannot (or should not) adapt to, like being allergic to bees and wasps - because it could literally kill you.
One time I got stung by aggressive wasps close here, as they had a huge nests with probably thousands of wasps. Over the course of days I dealt with them, tried things, got stung quite a few times, but at the last day I poured 10 buckets of water into their hole (all soaked up underground) and 2 buckets of dirt. The wasp problem in the entire area got solved.
I did a little genocide and it felt great.
That's not proof. It's evidence, and there are many types of viruses. AIDS is another example.
> Viral infections are NOT transmissible.
That is utter bullshit. If you are in a household, and someone is sick, it's extremely likely everyone is already long infected.
> that shows that healthy people do NOT get sick from sick people
It depends. It's likely that the immune system varies in efficiency over time and situation. If you stay fit and healthy, you'll probably be most resistant to diseases than someone who eats cheetos and does nothing all day. But it's a tendency. And these experiments usually do not account for actual health of a person. To them "not sick" = "healthy."
> Don't take any medicines at all. Stop taking ibuprofen and acetaminophen (tylenol) and aspirin. It is proven that these drugs make you sicker for longer, and more prone to get sick in the future.
There is good advice buried in there. No, medicine can help a lot, but it should be used to cure something, not as prevention. If you take some medication long-term, it can cause various issues, and also does not properly addresses problems in habits that need to be resolved. If anything, the amount of long-term medication a person takes only increases over time, until you take 20 pills per day when you are 60+. The side-effects will be overwhelming, and a psychological addiction emerges. And you cannot be sure if the problems that person has is inherent to him or from the medication itself.
I had a fever some time ago, and there was something to lower body temperature, and it worked quite quickly and well. But the problem is that a higher temperature is necessary for the body to fight the disease, so it rose up again afterwards. Was it a good idea? Unclear, but when your temperature rises to lethal levels, it's better to take that than to die.
> Eat healthy foods that you cook at home from natural ingredients.
> A REALLY EASY protein to grow yourself is chickens.
> EXERCISE is vital.
> FEED YOUR SPIRIT too.
These are all beneficial in many ways, not just to avoid disease.
> Doing all the above, you MAY still get sick, but this is not a bad thing.
Yes, it's a tendency. Doing the above you'll reduce the chances to get sick and die.
> (Don't take allergy medicine -- you will get used to it.)
Maybe it's better to adapt to it rather than suppress any potential adaptation via medicine. But there are some things you cannot (or should not) adapt to, like being allergic to bees and wasps - because it could literally kill you.
One time I got stung by aggressive wasps close here, as they had a huge nests with probably thousands of wasps. Over the course of days I dealt with them, tried things, got stung quite a few times, but at the last day I poured 10 buckets of water into their hole (all soaked up underground) and 2 buckets of dirt. The wasp problem in the entire area got solved.
I did a little genocide and it felt great.
They do.
>Go ahead and try to find an actual image of them.
[Here.](https://www.utmb.edu/virusimages/the-virus-images)
>Stop taking ibuprofen and acetaminophen (tylenol)
Do this regardless. We know *that* they work but literally don’t know *how* they work. There’s no reason to put something like that in you.
>and aspirin
This is readily proven to save lives in heart attack situations.
>"Organic" is a lie.
It’s potentially a lie for anything you don’t grow yourself.
>EXERCISE is vital. If you do nothing else, spend hours walking outdoors everyday. Manual labor is best but lift weights also.
People with large amounts of raw muscle aren't going to have any problems with cancer. FYI.
>So are allergies. (Don't take allergy medicine -- you will get used to it.)
The best thing to fight allergies is to find a local apiary and buy honey from bees in your area. Honey made from the pollen of local flora is a natural antihistamine for you *where you live.*
>TELL PEOPLE TO TURN OFF THE TV
If they’re still watching, they’ll never listen. Save yourself and your family. More world for you once everyone else dies off.