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In the midst of this Ebola hysteria, I thought you should know more about Louis Pasteur and his creation of the medical monopoly monolith with his inaccurate germ theory. Pasteur thought there was one microbe for every disease. The pharmaceutical industry and the press took up this simplistic perspective and it became dogma. Unfortunately, the theory is bogus, yet it is the foundation on which Big Pharma has made billions or trillions throughout the Twentieth Century and until now.
But not everyone agreed. Scientists more sophisticated than Pasteur asserted that an unhealthy inner terrain was what attracted pathogenic microbes. One of those scientists was Claude Bernard. Another was Antoine Bechamp, who openly criticized Pasteur.
Both Bernard and Bechamp advocated focusing on the inner terrain and investigating microbial pleomorphism (changing shapes and characteristics) that microbes use to adapt with inner terrains.
Reportedly, Bernard openly swallowed a glass of water containing cholera to prove a healthy inner terrain would resist infection. He succeeded.
The inner terrain includes our immune system, organ tissues, and blood cells. Those who disagreed with Pasteur’s unproven dogma asserted that the inner terrain was more vital for remaining disease free than searching for new drugs to prescribe for killing microbes.
Here’s an obvious analogy: Flies don’t create garbage. But garbage attracts flies that breed maggots to create even more flies. Removing garbage is more effective and safer than spraying toxic chemicals around the house. Adding toxins to humans is not as effective as cleaning out the inner terrain. It usually results in other diseased states.