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Nice one.

Everything we do affects the microbiome and then the microbiome affects us.

Sabine Hazan has been discussing COVID and vax in the biome for quite a while. But we shouldn’t just blame the vax. Antibiotics, stress, hormones, heavy metals, pollution, glyphosate, xenoestrogens, all have an effect on our microbiome and are probably also a factor in our overall gut and immune health.

But the other factors were all our choice. The vax was not necessarily our choice.

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author

Indeed, everything affects our microbiome, but given the singular proprieties of SARS2 and the Spike, I thought to better focus on that here, given this thing is now a class above measles in infection.

I am aware of Sabine Hazan's work, but her overfocus on one single genus (bifido) led me to just "move on", and the over focus on mRNA, and basically ignoring the virus.

Now we just need to solve the chicken or the egg situation. HERVs > Microbiome, or Microbiome>HERVs. It will make more sense in the protein misfolding article.

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and real pickles, or is it pickels.....don't forget them....real pickels, not the vinegar kind...

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I live Bubbies

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Oct 4, 2023Liked by Moriarty

I’m worried that many people are taking ivermectin which can’t have a good effect on the gut bacteria.

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/346638961_COVID-19_Pandemic_and_Dysbiosis_Can_the_Ivermectin_Hysteria_Lead_to_an_Increase_of_Autoimmune_Neuroinflammatory_Diseases

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author

Cool they are all from my state 😎

And it is worse than that I still need to write about it, but a recent paper studied the effects of drugs used as off target antivirals on development of antibiotic resistance, which it does influence.

The indiscriminated use of Ivm will probably have a impact on evolution of bacteria too.

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Professor - Excellent sleuthing and one might not be able to, nor have, the stomach for this.. "a reduced gut microbiota Gram+/Gram− ratio post-vaccination. This alteration persisted into the 6th month p.v., indicating different responses and/or resistance to altered host physiology between Gram+ and Gram- bacteria. While the mechanisms are yet to be elucidated, a lower Gram+/Gram− ratio has been proposed as a potential indicator of intestinal inflammation."

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author

I am left, Wondering.

Are the LNPs just wrecking the gut lining because how they work. The immune response itself ? The spike just piercing through every membrane and biofilm ?

All of this together for a Nurgle-ish mess ?

Science has little on this yet, but I expect this is playing a significant role on waking up the wrong HERVs and turbo cancer galore.

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Professor - Correct, all of the above. There is nothing chaotic in the consequences of disequilibrium, which oft can be detected by a pungent and Nurgle-ish breath. https://youtu.be/hib4n9RmFrQ?

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I think I'm going to add Manuka honey to my diet. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9367972/?report=reader

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founding

I ferment unpasteurized, raw local honey with slightly crushed (peeled) garlic cloves for 4 weeks. 1/2 jar each, burp daily. Drizzle over cheese, veggies, salads, grilled chicken. Yummy and crazy good for us.

Sourdough bread is a nice as well, takes about 4 weeks as well to get the starter going.

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Every aspect of the gut affects your immunity and immune responses, both from natural infection and vaccination and given the role of the microbiome in digesting and producing many of the metabolites we need for proper health. People who respond better to vaccination (and the infection) have higher numbers of certain microbes than others, and the level of antibodies is also affected by it.

https://hiddencomplexity.substack.com/p/covid-vaccines-change-the-microbiome

'Tis all about damaging the immune system... so's that they can introduce a nice fat lab-cooked up pathogen -- specifically designed to exploit Unlocked The Back Door

And Cill .. 6Bs

Check this out https://arkmedic.substack.com/p/5-ways-to-skin-a-genetically-modified

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So what can be done?

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author

Mitigate inflammation, healthy diet, healthy lifestyle. Mininize each and every single infection. Good mitochondrial health.

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Fermented foods like saurkraut and kim chi, plus prebiotic fiber like inulin would be an obvious starting point. Organic foods (glyphosate is a potent anti-biotic). Many supplements have potential to repair the gut lining. Glutamine, glutathione, glycine, butyric acid, TUDCA, digestive enzymes off the top of my head. Streptococcus salivarius and many other probiotics are available as supplements.

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Oct 24, 2023·edited Oct 24, 2023

I was on immunotherapy for breast cancer, and a month after I finished treatment I got a UTI and took an antibiotic for it. The immunotherapy, which I didn't realize was still running through my system, suddenly wreaked havoc on my adrenals and pituitary. Apparently this happens on patients sometimes, and doctors - OMG such clowns - have no clue how to prevent this side effect.

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author

Color me not surprised doctors once again fuck up with something that should be obvious, I am sad it went through that but at least you are here 🙏🏻.

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Oh by the way, if you have any tips for bringing my pituitary/adrenals back online, that would be great. I'm eating all the fermented foods I can, and taking a lot of pre/probiotics in addition to fish oil and DHA to help my brain.

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author

Choline might be very helpful vis different mechanisms, Ashwagandha is directly used and cited a lot as boosting adrenal function. Both of these may be the most helpful to your adrenals.

Ginseng and licorice might be interesting addition. Be sure to take enough B vitamins but especially Vitamin C and Magnesium, everyone is magnesium deficient basically.

And well, there is exercise, mild exercise always help us recover from many ailments.

Hope this helps you 🙏🏻

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Oct 25, 2023Liked by Moriarty

Thank you! There were a few there I missed.

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I *think* I was infected with Covid in April, nothing serious, just typical flu like symptoms, but I was feeling the effects for almost 2 weeks. About 2 weeks after that I suddenly became lactose intolerant! Any connection? What recommendations do you have for that?

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author

It is a shift in the microbiome, lactose intolerance is closely related to your gut microbiome. I wouldn't say it is common, but it does happen, especially in some long COVID cases, which I suspect you are not a case, you just happen to have that symptom.

If able I would suggest taking a microbiome test, so you know exactly where your gut finds itself. Because blindly supplementing probiotics until you find what might work is a expensive endeavor.

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Do you have a microbiome test to recommend?

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author

Not one in mind but preferably one that is comprehensive. They are usually sold packaged with mitochondrial health.

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You have recommended several supplements, but as far as I know you have not mentioned probiotics. Why? If there are some bacteria missing in the gut, shouldn't it help to add some of the missing bacteria to the gut by probiotics?

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author

1. You must know exactly which microbe you are lacking

2. Probiotics don't stick around, depending where people find themselves health wise it is for life, expensive

3. The pill solution, people will use a pill rather fix their diets and exercise

Up to the reader to decide what is best for them.

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