Why Your Histamine Reactions May Trace To Glyphosate

Histimine Intolerance and Glyphosate

Histamine intolerance and glyphosate’s role in MCAS — most doctors have never connected these dots — but the research is catching up fast.

Dr. Stephanie Seneff, senior research scientist at MIT and one of the world’s leading experts on glyphosate’s biological effects, sits down to explore the emerging connection between glyphosate exposure, histamine intolerance, and Mast Cell Activation Syndrome — a condition that is being diagnosed at dramatically increasing rates and leaves many patients searching for answers for years.

The connection runs deeper than most people realize. Glyphosate disrupts the gut microbiome, impairs detoxification pathways, and interferes with the body’s ability to break down histamine — creating the conditions for chronic inflammatory responses that show up as food sensitivities, allergic reactions, skin issues, neurological symptoms, and more.

If you or someone you love has been dealing with unexplained reactions, chronic inflammation, or a diagnosis of MCAS or histamine intolerance — this conversation is essential listening.

https://rumble.com/v75m652-histamine-intolerance-and-glyphosates-role-in-mcas.html

Is Glyphosate Fueling Celiac, Insomnia and Mood Disorders?

Jeffrey Smith On Glyphosate

If you’ve been struggling with celiac symptoms, insomnia, anxiety, or depression — and haven’t found satisfying answers — this presentation from Jeffrey Smith may be the missing piece.

At a recent conference, Jeffrey walked through the research connecting glyphosate exposure to some of the most common and frustrating health complaints of our time. The mechanism is specific and important: glyphosate disrupts the body’s ability to synthesize key amino acids — the building blocks of serotonin, melatonin, and dopamine. When those pathways are impaired, the downstream effects show up as digestive disorders, sleep disruption, mood instability, and more.

The data on wheat is particularly striking. Glyphosate is routinely sprayed on wheat and legumes as a pre-harvest desiccant — meaning it is applied directly to the crop shortly before it is harvested and eaten. The correlation between glyphosate use on wheat and the rise in celiac disease is one of the most compelling patterns in the research. Plus, a survey of people who reduced their glyphosate exposure reported improvements in both sleep and mood.

Click to view the video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xrtttSaSV1I

Quote of the Day

“Don’t ever become a pessimist… a pessimist is correct oftener than an optimist, but an optimist has more fun, and neither can stop the march of events.” – Robert A. Heinlein, Writer (1907 – 1988)

Dr Sabine Hazan on Bifdobacteria

Dr Sabine Hazan on Bifdobacteria

Dr. Sabine Hazan: “our most significant discovery”

Dr. Hazan is a Gastroenterologist with a special interest in microbiome research.

Watch as she traces the loss of Bifidobacteria all the way from covid mRNA technology to the rate of Autism in California…. and ends with a bombshell twin study.

Administration of Bifidobacteria brought back the speech of previously non verbal twins, with a re-florilisation of the essential microbe which is now missing (at adequate levels) in 75% of newborns.

She is pioneering a completely new paradigm of medicine.

Click to view the video: https://x.com/Humanspective/status/2062262258118619178?s=20

Cold Water Rinse

Cold Water Rinse

The 7-second cold wrist rinse was tested on 3,000 soldiers after combat simulations.

Cortisol dropped 52% within 90 seconds. Heart rate fell an average of 22 beats per minute. The Navy classified the protocol in 2009 and kept it secret until 2023.

The mechanism is radial artery cooling. Your inner wrists have the thinnest skin and the largest surface-to-volume ratio for blood vessels. 7 seconds of cold water cools the blood passing to your brain, which signals your hypothalamus to downregulate stress instantly

You’ve splashed cold water on your face. You’ve taken cold showers. Both work, but they’re inconvenient.

The SEAL protocol takes 7 seconds, requires no undressing, and can be done at any sink. Soldiers used it before night missions to fall asleep fast.

The military classified this because a free 7-second stress fix would reduce demand for combat stress medication ($400M annually).

The 2023 declassification came after a FOIA lawsuit filed by a veteran.

The fix: run cold tap water over your inner wrists for 7 seconds. Both wrists. Do it when you feel a stress spike.

Within 90 seconds, your heart rate will drop. No shower, no ice.

Just 7 seconds.

Barbara McClintock

Barbara McClintock

(Tom: A fabulous example of Personal Integrity, being careful to observe what you observe, regardless of whether or not someone else can or chooses to see it. It also supports the idea that you are not 100% the victim of your genes, that what you eat and do lifestyle wise (the subject of epigenetics) has a big impact on which genes are expressed or activated and which are not.)

In 1919, a seventeen-year-old girl from Connecticut was supposed to stay home.

Her mother had made up her mind. A college degree would make her daughter unmarriageable. It would ruin her prospects. The door to Cornell University would stay closed.

Then her father came home from France, where he had served with the Army Medical Corps.

He listened to his daughter. He looked at her. He overruled the decision.

Barbara McClintock enrolled in Cornell’s College of Agriculture — and in her first genetics class, sitting in a lecture hall where the discipline was still so new that the entire university offered only one undergraduate course in it, something locked into place that would never unlock.

She had found her life’s work.

She was brilliant, original, and almost impossible to categorize. She played banjo in a jazz band. She ran for student government. She looked at problems differently from everyone around her, and the problems she looked at were the fundamental ones: how heredity worked, what chromosomes actually did, how the instructions for building a living thing were written and read.

She stayed at Cornell for her master’s degree, then her PhD. She spent years studying corn — the maize plant’s chromosomes were large enough under a microscope to actually see, which made them perfect for the work she was doing. She mapped them. She tracked them. She understood the architecture of a living genome at a level almost no one else had reached.

And then, in her cornfields at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in New York, she saw something that should not have been possible.

The kernels on a single ear of corn were wrong. Speckled where they should have been solid. Striped where they should have been plain. Colors appearing in places the rules of genetics said they couldn’t appear. She looked closer — through her microscope, into the chromosomes themselves — and understood what she was seeing.

The genes were moving.

Not fixed in place like beads on a string, as every textbook said. Some genetic elements could detach from one location on a chromosome and reinsert themselves somewhere else. They could switch other genes on. They could switch them off. They could rewrite the instructions a cell was reading, mid-process, in real time.

She called them transposable elements. The world would eventually call them jumping genes.

In 1951, she presented her findings to a room full of the world’s leading geneticists.

The room went quiet — and not in admiration.

The idea was too radical. The mechanism too strange. The data too complex to follow without accepting a premise that overturned decades of established understanding. Most of the scientists in that room had spent their careers on the assumption that genes were stable, fixed, and permanent. Barbara McClintock was telling them that some genes moved like passengers jumping between trains.

They did not believe her.

She stopped giving lectures on transposition. She stopped publishing her findings on it. But she never stopped working. Every season she returned to her cornfield at Cold Spring Harbor — planting, observing, recording, following the evidence wherever it led, with the particular peace of someone who knows what she has seen and does not need anyone else to confirm it.

“I never felt the need to defend my views,” she said later. “I could just work, with the greatest of pleasure.”

For more than two decades, she worked largely alone.

Then, in the late 1960s and through the 1970s, molecular biology developed the tools to look at DNA directly. And what those tools found, in organism after organism — in bacteria, in fruit flies, in yeast, in humans — was exactly what Barbara McClintock had described in her cornfield in the 1940s and 50s. Jumping genes were not only real. They were everywhere. They were central to how evolution worked, how cancers developed, how organisms adapted. They were fundamental.

The world had caught up.

On the morning of October 10, 1983, someone at Cold Spring Harbor ran outside to find Barbara McClintock and tell her she had won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. She was eighty-one years old. She was picking black walnuts from a tree on campus.

She said: “That’s nice.”

Then she finished picking the walnuts.

At the Nobel ceremony in Stockholm that December, she became — and remains — the only woman ever to win the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine as a sole recipient, sharing the honor with no one.

She had been almost kept home by a mother who thought education would ruin her future. She had been ignored by a field that wasn’t ready for what she had found. She had spent decades working quietly, alone, certain of what she had seen, waiting without bitterness for the rest of science to arrive.

She died on September 2, 1992, at the age of ninety, at Cold Spring Harbor — the place she had made her life, her corn still growing in the fields outside.

The jumping genes she discovered are now understood to make up approximately half of the human genome. They play roles in evolution, in cancer, in immunity, in the way every living thing on earth adapts to its environment.

A seventeen-year-old who was almost kept home found one of the central truths of all biology.

She just had to wait for everyone else to see it.

Mats Järlström

Mats Järlström

In 2017, a highly determined Swedish electrical engineer named Mats Järlström successfully fought an absolutely massive legal and mathematical battle against the entire state of Oregon, fundamentally changing modern traffic laws.

Järlström’s wife had previously received a highly expensive automated red-light camera ticket for driving through a specific intersection. Instead of simply paying the annoying fine, he actively mathematically analyzed the intersection and discovered that the timing of the yellow light was fundamentally, scientifically flawed and entirely too short for drivers making right-hand turns.

When he publicly presented his highly detailed mathematical research to the state engineering board, they actively fined him five hundred dollars for practicing engineering without a local license and tried to silence him.

Refusing to back down, he filed a massive federal civil rights lawsuit arguing that basic mathematical physics cannot be legally censored.

A federal judge completely agreed with him, striking down the state's fine and forcing the traffic light formulas to be officially updated nationwide.

His brilliant victory proved that sheer mathematical stubbornness can completely defeat a corrupt system.

Christoph Meili and the Ledgers

Christoph Meili and the Ledgers

(Tom: This is what integrity look like. Extreme integrity.

It also illustrates how international bankers are on par with big pharma and second only to psychiatrists on the list of evil doers.)

A night security guard caught the richest bank in Switzerland shredding the proof that murdered Holocaust families were owed their money. He was nobody. Union Bank of Switzerland was one of the most powerful banks on Earth. He took the files anyway. And it cost him everything.

His name is Christoph Meili. January 8, 1997. Zurich. He was 28. A night guard for an outside firm, walking empty halls at UBS. Steady paycheck. Nothing special.

On his rounds he passed the shredding room and saw two huge bins of documents waiting to be destroyed. He looked closer. The papers were old. German names. Account records. Property lists from the 1930s and 40s.

Then it hit him. These were Holocaust records.

In 1997 the whole world was asking one question. What happened to the fortunes Jewish families hid in Swiss banks before the Nazis murdered them? Survivors’ children had come looking for decades. The banks said the same thing every time. Sorry. No records. Can’t help you.

And Christoph was standing over those exact records. Going into a shredder.

Here’s what made it a crime. Switzerland had banned the destruction of these documents just weeks earlier. The bank was feeding them to the shredder anyway.

Christoph had watched Schindler’s List. The story of one ordinary man who acted when everyone else looked away. He thought about that movie standing in that room.

Then he made his choice.

He grabbed the ledgers. Stuffed them under his coat. And walked the evidence out of one of the most powerful banks in the world.

He handed them to a Jewish organization in Zurich. They took them to the police. Then to the press. January 14, 1997. The story detonated across the planet. A Swiss bank caught shredding Holocaust victims’ records.

UBS fired him that same day.

Then his own country came after him. Not the bank. Him. In Switzerland, handing bank papers to outsiders breaks banking secrecy. It’s a crime. Prosecutors opened a case. They wanted to arrest the guard who saved the proof.

Let that sink in. The man who ordered the shredding kept his job. The man who stopped it was facing prison.

Then came the death threats. Phone calls. Letters. People who wanted him dead. His wife was terrified. His kids weren’t safe. His own country had turned on him.

So Christoph did something no Swiss citizen had ever done. He fled Switzerland. And begged America for asylum.

The US Senate took up his case. A senator stood up and called him a hero — and pointed out that the official who ordered the shredding still had his job while the guard who stopped it was being hunted. In 1997 Congress passed a special law to take him in. He is believed to be the only Swiss national ever granted political asylum in America.

A Swiss man. Fleeing Switzerland. To be safe.

His evidence changed everything. It proved the banks had been lying. It turned the Swiss banking giants into global villains overnight.

August 1998. They broke. The Swiss banks agreed to pay $1.25 billion to Holocaust survivors and their families. The largest settlement of its kind. Money that should have reached those families fifty years earlier — finally moving. Because one night guard refused to feed the proof into a shredder.

Christoph was owed $750,000 of that settlement. A reward for what he did.

He barely saw it. The money crawled. One lawyer handling Holocaust funds was later disbarred for stealing from survivors. The people who once called him a hero stopped calling. He started over in California. Went to college in his 30s. Became a US citizen. And quietly slid into minimum-wage work, an ocean from home. His marriage didn’t survive it.

In 2009 he went home to Switzerland. Broke. Every cent of the reward gone. And his country still couldn’t decide what he was. Hero? Or traitor?

Now look at where everyone ended up.

The families got their billion. Good. But the bank that shredded the evidence? UBS is still standing. Bigger than ever — today it’s the giant that swallowed Credit Suisse, one of the most powerful banks on the planet. The official who ordered the shredding kept his job. And the night guard who risked everything to stop them came home with nothing.

So ask yourself one thing. You’re alone in that room at 2 AM. Steady job. Two kids asleep at home. A shredder full of stolen history in front of you. Do you walk away? Or do you pick up the files?

Christoph picked up the files. He lost his job, his country, his savings, and his marriage for it. Years later a documentary crew asked if he regretted it.

He said four words.

“I would do it again.”

Christoph Meili. The night guard who beat the richest banks in the world — and the world let him go broke.