Exploring the therapeutic uses of bromelain

Pineapple

Story at-a-glance

  • Bromelain, an enzyme found in pineapples, has diverse therapeutic applications including anti-inflammatory, antiviral and anticancer benefits. It also supports digestive and skin health
  • Bromelain effectively manages inflammation in conditions like arthritis and sports injuries by modulating inflammatory mediators and inhibiting the NF-κB signaling pathway
  • Research shows bromelain has antibacterial properties, inhibiting intestinal bacteria growth and aiding wound healing. It also has antiviral capabilities, particularly against SARS-CoV-2
  • Bromelain exhibits anticancer effects by inducing apoptosis and inhibiting metastasis in various cancer types, including breast, colon, oral and prostate cancers
  • Bromelain supports your cardiovascular health by inhibiting blood platelet aggregation and thrombus formation. It also aids digestive health by promoting beneficial gut bacteria like Akkermansia muciniphila

Pineapple is a beloved fruit enjoyed all over the world, known for its sweet, refreshing flavor. Originating from South America, it was first introduced to Europe and Asia by way of Spanish and Portuguese explorers during the 16th and 17th centuries. In Europe, this tropical fruit gained a reputation for being a luxurious dessert.1

But there’s more to pineapple other than just being a delicacy — research shows that bromelain, an enzyme found in pineapple, has several therapeutic applications. As noted in an article2 published in The Truth About Cancer, bromelain has documented anti-inflammatory, antiviral and anticancer benefits, and even supports digestive health and skin health.

What Is Bromelain?

The healing properties of pineapple have long been acknowledged by ancient cultures. As noted in a July 2024 Nutrients paper:3

“Indigenous peoples in Central and South America, particularly in regions like the Amazon rainforest and the Caribbean, used various parts of the pineapple plant for medicinal purposes, including treating digestive issues, reducing inflammation, and healing wounds.”

Bromelain was first discovered by Venezuelan scientist Vicente Marcano in 1891, and he was able to extract and study it in 1894.4 Other researchers built on his findings and identified two main types — stem bromelain (EC 3.4.22.32) and fruit bromelain (EC 3.4.22.33).5 In 1957, it was discovered that pineapple stem contained more bromelain than the fruit, allowing industries to monetize what was once a waste byproduct of pineapple processing.6

Research shows that bromelain has an adequate bioavailability rate of 40% when consumed. That’s because bromelain efficiently binds with two blood proteases, alpha1-antichymotrypsin, and alpha 2-macroglobulin. Furthermore, the human body is able handle up to 12 grams of bromelain a day without noticeable side effects.7

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has designated bromelain as a GRAS (generally recognized as safe) substance. It’s also available as a dietary supplement, aside from getting it from fresh pineapple.8

The Anti-Inflammatory Mechanisms Behind Bromelain

One of the most prominent applications of bromelain is managing inflammation in varied areas, such as arthritis, recovery from sports injuries and postoperative care. How, specifically? The researchers of the Nutrients study explain the mechanisms in their review:9

“Bromelain exerts potent anti-inflammatory effects by modulating various inflammatory mediators, including cytokines, chemokines, and prostaglandins. It inhibits the production of proinflammatory cytokines such as interleukin-1 beta (IL-1β), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), and interleukin-6 (IL-6).

Additionally, bromelain suppresses the nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-κB) signaling pathway, a key regulator of inflammation and immune responses; by inhibiting NF-κB activation, bromelain reduces the expression of inflammatory genes and attenuates the inflammatory cascade.”

Given this information, other researchers have tested the anti-inflammatory efficacy of bromelain. In a meta-analysis10 published in 2022, for example, researchers cited a study involving athletic male road cyclists who supplemented with 1 gram of bromelain per day during a six-day race. They noted that bromelain “reduced subjective feelings of fatigue and there was a trend for better maintenance of the testosterone concentration during the race, suggestive of improved recovery.”

In another study,11 researchers proposed that bromelain has antiarthritic abilities by mediating various inflammatory biomarkers. The results are further improved when combined with other natural bioactive compounds, such as turmeric, to help reduce degenerative joint pain problems. Bromelain also helped relieve other related conditions such as colonic and sinus inflammation.

Bromelain Helps Eradicate Harmful Bacteria

Bromelain has antibacterial properties.12 Specifically, it’s been shown to be effective in inhibiting the growth of intestinal bacteria, such as vibrio cholera. Moreover, it stops the enterotoxin production of E. coli and even helps prevent diarrhea caused by this bacterial strain.13

Those who are suffering from bacterial skin conditions will benefit from bromelain, too. In the same review, researchers noted it’s an effective healing agent for those suffering from pityriasis lichenoides chronica, a skin disease marked by tiny, scaling, raised spots on the skin.14

Used topically, bromelain will also help heal simple skin wounds. Its antibacterial properties help promote a sterile environment that speeds up healing, thereby reducing the risk of further wound complications.15

Bromelain Is Also an Effective Antiviral Agent

In a study published in Clinical and Translational Medicine,16 researchers discovered that bromelain is able to inhibit the spread of SARS-CoV-2. For their tests, they administered bromelain to test cells, noting that it inhibited the expression of the ACE2 receptor and TMPRSS2 protein.

Another noteworthy antiviral capability of bromelain is its ability to “cleave” the spike protein of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. The researchers noted this effect when they administered bromelain directly to test virus samples.17

For those unfamiliar, spike protein refers to the “spiked” glycoprotein that penetrates host cells, resulting in infection.18 With the spike protein out of the picture, “viruses like the novel SARS-CoV-2 would not be able to interact with the cells of potential hosts like animals and humans to cause infection,” according to Yale University researcher Benedette Cuffari.19

“Since bromelain inhibits SARS-CoV-2 infection, and its profound fibrinolytic activity suggests that bromelain or bromelain-rich pineapple could be used as an antiviral against SARS-CoV-2 and future outbreaks of other coronaviruses,” the researchers concluded.20

Combine Bromelain with Quercetin for Greater Antiviral Outcomes

Bromelain is already impressive on its own when it comes to beating viruses. But when combined with quercetin, a potent flavonoid found in various fruits and vegetables, the results are even better, according to published research.

Like bromelain, quercetin has also been extensively studied for its antiviral effects. One study21 showed that it inhibits the spread of the flu virus. In another study,22 it was shown to be more effective against Epstein-Barr virus compared to isoliquiritigenin, a bioactive compound found in licorice.23 Other studies have shown that quercetin is also promising against rhinoviruses,24 which cause the common cold, hepatitis B virus25 and Zika virus.26

Because of the established history of quercetin against viruses, it’s natural for other researchers to test its efficacy against a virus that has captured the consciousness of the entire world — SARS-CoV-2. And again, quercetin has shown that it’s able to go head-to-head with this virus.

During the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, a review27 noted that quercetin, alongside the already potent bromelain, plus vitamin C and zinc, “showed promising results in improving clinical outcomes among COVID-19 patients.”

Another study noted that quercetin’s ability to inhibit proinflammatory cytokines is one of its ways it’s able to fight against SARS-CoV-2.28 Cytokines are small glycoproteins produces in your body and, when released, control varied processes such as endocrine activity and cell proliferation.29 And in the context of COVID-19, cytokines become elevated to the point of causing acute respiratory distress syndrome.30

As for bromelain, it activates your healthy immune system response. It also helps control the production of inflammatory mediators when immune cells are already at work within the context of cytokine overproduction.31 Vitamin C and zinc also supports immune function, and these two work with bromelain and quercetin as a novel treatment against COVID-19.32

Both bromelain and vitamin C also help in the delivery of quercetin into the cells. Since quercetin is generally not soluble in water, it can be poorly absorbed. But, when combined with bromelain or vitamin C, its bioavailability increases, allowing you to maximize its antiviral effect. This creates a synergistic effect because you’re getting the nutritional benefits of bromelain and vitamin C at the same time.33

The Cancer-Fighting Capabilities of Bromelain

Another topic of interest regarding bromelain is its efficacy against cancer. As noted by The Truth About Cancer, “it is believed to inhibit the growth and spread of cancer cells through various mechanisms, including the induction of apoptosis (programmed cell death) and the inhibition of metastasis.”34

These mechanisms are observed in different studies, according to the Nutrients meta-analysis.35 In particular, the researchers noted that bromelain has a positive effect against breast and colon cancers:

“In vitro assays have demonstrated that bromelain can induce apoptosis in cancer cells, including breast cancer cells (specifically GI-101A cells). This phenomenon suggests that bromelain may contribute to the inhibition of cancer cell growth and potentially enhance the effectiveness of conventional cancer treatments.

The cytotoxic effects of both unfractionated and fractionated bromelain on colorectal cancer cells have been investigated, alone or in combination with chemotherapeutic agents; the findings indicate that bromelain treatment results in reduced cell survival in colorectal cancer cells in a dose-dependent manner, highlighting its potential as a complementary therapy in colorectal cancer treatment.”

It’s not just breast and colon cancer that bromelain fights against. In another meta-analysis,36 it’s been found to be effective against human oral squamous carcinoma cells. Here, researchers noted that it decreased the cancer cell viability from 95.16% to 69.93% after being treated with bromelain for 24 hours in a dose- and time-dependent manner. In another cited study, bromelain reduced cell viability of prostate cancer cells by 25% using a dose-dependent manner.

Bromelain Supports Healthy Heart Function

Research37 has pointed out that bromelain’s anticancer capabilities also have a positive effect in managing cardiovascular health, specifically inhibiting blood platelet aggregation. Bromelain has fibrinolytic activity and inhibits thrombus formation.

Other effects of bromelain on the cardiovascular system include decreasing red blood cell clumping and blood viscosity. The anti-inflammatory capabilities of bromelain also come into play here, as it’s been known to be an effective treatment for acute thrombophlebitis,38 a condition wherein a blood clot develops in the legs.39

Bromelain also helps inhibit angina attacks, which help ease hypertension. Through in vivo experiments, it increased “the efficiency of the heart, improves arterial flow, decreases arterial dissections and increases angiogenesis.” It even helps improve blood vessel permeability, thereby increasing the distribution of oxygen and nutrients throughout the body.40

One More Win for Bromelain — Gut Health

Another reason to add pineapple to your diet is bromelain’s ability to support your gut and digestive health. In 2022 animal test41 published in Metabolites, mice fed bromelain had lower populations of proteobacteria, a collection of pathogenic bacterial (such as Salmonella, Helicobacter and Escherichia) strains responsible for a variety of intestinal diseases.42

More importantly, bromelain increased the population of beneficial Akkermansia muciniphila, a keystone probiotic that is essential for optimal health.43

As noted in my interview with Georgi Dinkov, Akkermansia supports optimal health because it produces short-chain fats, which are essential nutrients for the endothelial cells in your gut that produce mucin, a thick, protective gel that lines your gastrointestinal tract. This mucin shield protects your gut lining and acts like a repair kit, covering the holes in a leaky gut.

For additional information on just how crucial Akkermansia is for cellular energy and overall health, I encourage you to pick up a copy of my newest book, “Your Guide to Cellular Health: Unlocking the Science of Longevity and Joy.” The eBook is now available, while the print edition will be available on December 10, 2024.

Sources and References

  • 1 National Library Board Singapore, “Pineapple”
  • 2, 12, 34 The Truth About Cancer, July 19, 2024
  • 3 Nutrients. 2024 Jul; 16(13): 2060, Introduction
  • 4, 6 Cureus. 2022 Aug; 14(8): e27876, Review
  • 5, 8 Nutrients. 2024 Jul; 16(13): 2060, Figure 1
  • 7 Cureus. 2022 Aug; 14(8): e27876, Bioavailability of Bromelain
  • 9 Nutrients. 2024 Jul; 16(13): 2060, Inflammation, Edema and Swelling
  • 10 Nutrients. 2022 Dec; 14(23): 5069, Bromelain and Other Proteases
  • 11 Foods 2021, 10(10), 224, Arthritis
  • 13 Life (Basel). 2021 Apr; 11(4): 317, Antimicrobial Effect
  • 14 DermNet, “Pityriasis lichenoides”
  • 15 Nutrients. 2024 Jul; 16(13): 2060, Infectious Disorders
  • 16, 17, 18, 20 Clinical and Translational Medicine, Feb 2021, Volume 11, Issue 2, Letter to Editor
  • 19 News-Medical.net, “What Are Spike Proteins?”
  • 21 Biomolecules. 2021 Jan; 11(1): 10, Conclusions
  • 22 Viruses 2024, 16(1), 124, Natural Extracts Targeting EBV Lytic Infection and Oncogenesis
  • 23 Scientific Reports volume 11, Article number: 23528 (2021), Introduction
  • 24 The Egyptian Journal of Bronchology volume 16, Article number: 58 (2022), Methods
  • 25 Saudi Pharmaceutical Journal Volume 28, Issue 5, May 2020, Pages 550-559, Abstract
  • 26 Int J Mol Sci. 2023 Apr; 24(8): 7504, Abstract
  • 27 Research International Journal of Endocrinology and Diabetes, 2020; 1(1), Abstract
  • 28, 31, 32 Research International Journal of Endocrinology and Diabetes, 2020; 1(1), Discussion
  • 29 News-Medical.net, “What Is a Cytokine Storm?”
  • 30 Virology Journal volume 19, Article number: 92 (2022), Abstract
  • 33 Interactive Medicine (Fourth Edition), “The Allergic Patient”
  • 35 Nutrients. 2024 Jul; 16(13): 2060, Cancer
  • 36 Front Oncol. 2022; 12: 1068778, Cytotoxicity
  • 37, 38, 39, 40 Foods 2021, 10(10), 2249, Effects of Bromelain on Cardiovascular Disease
  • 41, 43 Metabolites. 2022 Nov; 12(11): 1027, Abstract
  • 42 Pathogens, Special Issue Edition

https://nexusnewsfeed.com/article/food-cooking/exploring-the-therapeutic-uses-of-bromelain/

250 Studies Confirm Spike Protein Pathogenicity, Raising Concerns About COVID-19 mRNA Jabs

An exhaustive compilation of over 250 peer-reviewed scientific studies led by Dr. Martin Wucher highlights a growing body of evidence showing that the spike protein—the key component of COVID-19 mRNA injections—is highly pathogenic.

Originally part of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, the spike protein functions as a “key” to bind and infect human cells, a summary of the document explains.

mRNA shots work by forcing cells to produce spike proteins, which are said to trigger an immune response that generates antibodies.

However, these studies reveal that the spike protein itself can cause significant harm, independent of the virus.

The research, compiled into two sections, details the damaging effects of the spike protein when studied outside the context of the full virus.

Finish reading: https://jonfleetwood.substack.com/p/250-studies-confirm-spike-protein

You can read the full research document here: https://zenodo.org/records/14269255

And here is my attempt at a resolution to the problem: https://www.healthelicious.com.au/NutriBlast-Anti-Spike.html

Eating While Traveling Tips

Had a friend who lives in the UK write and ask me, “My internals do not do well with American food. The quality, and the amount of salt and sugar it contains. Plus other stuff I can sense but don’t know the name of. How do you manage when you are over there?”

I replied:

I hear you loud and clear! A few others have reported the same to me. And when I was there I had eggs and link sausages for breakfast, a salad and protein for lunch and dinner with a dessert only every two weeks. Usually gluten free. Yet I still managed to get some psoriasis and added 10 kilos while there!

Suggestions.

0. For a couple of weeks before you travel to a new location boost your intake of a a wide spectrum probiotic as your intestinal flora will be challenged by new foods.

1. Completely eliminate from your diet seed oils (canola, sunflower etc.), wheat, sugar and processed foods.

2. Although more difficult while traveling, try to get as much as possible of your nutrient intake from food in as close as possible to its natural state focusing on vegetables and fruit (preferably organic), meat, fish, poultry, nuts and seeds as well as fermented foods.

3. And whenever you experience non-optimum conditions in your body, consult a local naturopath/nutritionist/functional medicine specialist to determine if they have experience with your symptoms. I always say “Not every practitioner can be expected to solve every health issue. The field is too complex for that. Look for somebody who has a track record of being able to solve your symptoms.”

Hope that helps!

Chinese mushroom found to have powerful anti-aging benefits

by Jonathan Benson, staff writer 

(NaturalNews) The cordyceps mushroom is back in the spotlight again, except this time for its anti-aging properties. Researchers from Nu Skin Enterprises, Inc., and LifeGen Technologies have found that Cordyceps sinensis (Cs-4), a traditional Chinese mushroom, is a powerful anti-aging food with the ability to improve energy metabolism, decrease fatigue, bolster endurance levels and lengthen lifespan.

Back in March, NaturalNews covered breakthrough research on the power of cordyceps to treat cancer ( http://www.naturalnews.com/028409_cordyceps_cancer.html ), but the new research ( http://www.naturalnews.com/research.html)  has found even more beneficial uses for this emerging superfood. By encouraging human genes to express in ways that promote longevity (http://www.naturalnews.com/longevity.html), cordyceps has incredible potential in helping to reverse the negative effects of aging. (http://www.naturalnews.com/aging.html)

“We’re making great breakthroughs in gene expression science (http://www.naturalnews.com/gene_expression.html) that have application in the fields of health and longevity,” explained Joe Chang, Ph.D., chief scientific officer and executive vice president of development at Nu Skin. “These studies … help validate the critical role gene expression modulation plays in the aging process. We believe that the future of anti-aging is in developing consumer solutions that support youthful gene expression.” ( http://www.naturalnews.com/anti-aging.html)

In tests, cordyceps successfully altered the expression of certain gene clusters that typically begin to slow down their production of cellular mitochondria around the age of 30. The mushroom’s compounds sparked them back to youthful production levels. (https://www.naturalnews.com/cordyceps.html)

Other results included a demonstrated lengthening of the maximal and average lifespans of the populations on whom the mushroom was tested, as well as significant increase in antioxidant activity that reduced oxidative damage from free radicals.

Presented at the recent Oxygen Club of California 2010 World Congress, the two studies received the renowned DSL Nutraceutical Research Award.

Sources for this story include:

http://multivu.prnewswire.com/mnr/nuskin/46586/

This Is War And WE Are The Cure

Man On Park Bench In Rain

(Tom: Jon’s take on the old saying, “The squeaking wheel gets the grease.”)

Jon Rappoport writes:

Every single subject I’ve been hammering on and exposing for years is now on the table, is now up for grabs…with the new Trump administration.

Meaning: With Trump’s promises on the record, and on the basis of his nominees for key cabinet posts, THERE IS A CHANCE that policies which undermine America…

…Open borders, transgender medical torture, the phony victim culture, medical fraud and murder, unpunished crime in our streets, corrupt DAs, Diversity-Equity-Inclusion, brainwashing and grooming young children in schools, etc…

EVERY ONE OF THESE DISASTERS could be attacked and rejected and defeated…

…IF we hold Trump and his team in a chamber of high heat and force them to do what they SAY they’re going to do.

https://nexusnewsfeed.com/article/jon-rappoport/understand-this-here-is-what-i-m-doing-on-these-pages-now-and-why-let-me-settle-this-once-and-for-all/

The Pfizer Papers – Pfizer’s Crimes Against Humanity

Please read John Leake’s insightful post about Pfizer’s checkered past and how The Pfizer Papers offers further evidence of the company’s decades-long anti-human, profits-first approach to drug development and sales.

When I was born, my maternal great grandmother gave me a generous gift of Pfizer stock. She had been impressed by Pfizer’s key role in discovering how to mass produce penicillin during World War II (in which her son was killed in action). Eighteen years later her gift paid for my university education. And then, in 1998, Pfizer received FDA approval to sell Viagra.

Pfizer initially developed the drug to treat high blood pressure and angina pectoris. However, as Pfizer’s researchers discovered in clinical trials, the drug was better at inducing erections than managing angina. And so, the company repurposed the drug for erectile dysfunction and launched a massive, global PR and marketing campaign—including seeking moral approval from Pope John Paul II and contracting the war hero and 1996 presidential candidate Bob Dole to be the brand’s poster gentleman—that succeeded in making Viagra a blockbuster.

So, I learned why pharmaceutical companies seek to develop blockbuster drugs with fanatical zeal. Formulating a safe and effective new medicine to address a large, unmet need is very difficult and expensive. Performing clinical trials and obtaining FDA-approval is an arduous process that normally takes several years. Thus, if an opportunity for a new blockbuster presents itself, a big drug company like Pfizer will go to extreme lengths to seize it.

Three years after the release of Viagra, I learned that Pfizer was not the respectable company my great grandmother had believed it to be. I arrived at this realization through my interest in British spy novels. In 2001 I lived in Vienna, around the corner from the Burgkino (Burg Cinema) which still played the 1949 film noir classic The Third Man on its big screen every weekend. I spent many a dreary winter Sunday afternoon watching the film. Based on the novella and screenplay by Graham Greene, The Third Man is a crime story about Harry Lime—an American running a medical charity in Vienna, who makes a killing selling penicillin on the bombed out, impoverished city’s black market. To increase his profits, he cuts the drug with other substances, thereby destroying its efficacy and causing the patients (including children) to die horribly from their infections.

In the film’s most iconic scene, the good guy (played by Joseph Cotton) meets his old friend Harry Lime (played by Orson Welles) on the Giant Ferris wheel in the Vienna Prater amusement park and tries to appeal to his conscience. At the wheel’s apex, the charismatic Harry opens the door, points down to people walking on the ground below, and says:

“Look down there. Would you really feel any pity if one of those dots stopped moving forever? If I offered you twenty thousand pounds for every dot that stopped, would you really, old man, tell me to keep my money, or would you calculate how many dots you could afford to spare? Free of income tax, old man. Free of income tax. … Nobody thinks in terms of human beings. Governments don’t, why should we? They talk about the people and the proletariat; I talk about the suckers and the mugs. It’s the same thing. They have their five-year plans, and so have I.”

I sensed that Graham Greene might have based the story on something he’d witnessed or heard about. Doing some research, I learned that Harry Lime was probably based on the British spy Harold “Kim” Philby, with whom Greene worked in British intelligence during World War II. Greene, it seems, discovered that Philby was a Soviet double agent long before he was exposed as such in 1963. Instead of ratting out his friend, he kept it to himself and left the intelligence service in 1944. Several pieces of evidence suggest that when he wrote The Third Man a few years later, he based it on his conflicted friendship with Philby.

John le Carré was also fascinated by Graham Greene and Kim Philby, and his thriller Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy—one of my all-time favoriteswas inspired by the Philby story. His novel The Constant Gardener was published in 2001, and I read it with great interest. The story wasn’t set in Cold War Europe, but in Kenya, where a British diplomat’s wife is brutally raped and murdered. Upon closer examination, the diplomat realizes that she was about to reveal a horrifying crime committed by a pharmaceutical company, which murdered her in order to prevent the exposure.

The novel’s plot was reminiscent of a controversial drug trial performed by Pfizer in Kano, Nigeria in 1996 during a meningococcal outbreak. For the trial of its new antibiotic, trovafloxacin, Pfizer gave 100 children this new drug. The control group of 100 other children received the standard anti-meningitis treatment at the time—a drug called ceftriaxone. However, for the control group, Pfizer administered a substantially lower dose of ceftriaxone than the drug’s FDA-approved standard.

When the reduced dosing in the control group was discovered, it raised the suspicion that Pfizer did this in order to skew the trial in favor of its new drug. Five of the children who received trovafloxacin died, while six who received the reduced dose of ceftriaxone died. Other children apparently suffered grave injuries from the administration of the experimental antibiotic without their informed consent. The investigation and litigation that ensued was the stuff of a thriller, involving private investigators, bribery, blackmail attempts, and disappearing records. Thirteen years later, in 2009, Pfizer settled out of court with the plaintiffs.

In his author’s note, le Carré claimed that nobody and no corporation in the novel was based on an actual person or corporation in the real world.

“But I can tell you this. As my journey through the pharmaceutical jungle progressed, I came to realize that, by comparison with the reality, my story was as tame as a holiday postcard.”

In 2009, the same year that Pfizer settled with the trovafloxacin plaintiffs, the New York Times reported that a U.S. federal judge assessed Pfizer with the “largest health care fraud settlement and the largest criminal fine of any kind ever” for its illegal marketing of Bextra and three other drugs. The U.S. Department of Justice was unequivocal in characterizing Pfizer’s officers as guilty of grave criminal conduct at the expense of the American public.

As I have long known all of the above, I wasn’t surprised by the gross criminal conduct revealed in The Pfizer Papers: Pfizer’s Crimes Against Humanity, edited by Naomi Wolf with Amy Kelly and a Foreword by Stephen K. Bannon. The 366-page hardcover book—beautifully published by War Room Books, an imprint of Skyhorse Publishing, is a meticulous analysis of Pfizer documents the FDA was forced to release as a result of Aaron Siri’s lawsuit.

The book strikes me as one of the most impressive works of investigative scholarship in history. As Dr. Peter McCullough described it in his Praise (printed on the book’s first page):

“This is a comprehensive, organized, and compelling presentation of vaccine safety data that has accumulated after mass and indiscriminate administration of the Pfizer mRNA COVID-19 vaccines. Sadly, a large group of vaccine recipients have become injured, disabled, and many have died after the ill-advised injections. The data with histopathological evaluation at necropsy and autopsy with expert analysis is presented so you can evaluate it for yourself. Never before has there been a class of products with this wide range and extended duration of injury to the recipient.”

On Saturday, November 16, I attended the official launch of this magisterial work of what I believe falls squarely within the true crime genre of literature. It was a great honor for me to attend the gathering with the book’s editors and authors. It seemed to me that I was witnessing history being made.

I strongly recommend the book to everyone in the world who is interested in truth and justice. The book should be required reading by everyone in the legislative and executive branches of the U.S. government, especially President-elect Trump’s staff.

Please purchase your copy today by clicking on the image below. Producing the book was a Herculean effort. Never before have a book’s authors and publisher been so deserving of compensation for their work. I agree with Dr. Peter Breggin’s sentiment that they, as well as editor Naomi Wolf and project director Amy Kelly, “should get the Nobel Prize for medicine and the praises of a grateful humanity.”

https://petermcculloughmd.substack.com/p/the-pfizer-papers

The Pfizer Papers

The Pfizer Papers

I know more about the inner workings of the drug companies than most “experts” who are looking in from the outside because I’ve been empowered as a medical expert in lawsuits against the pharmaceutical industry to examine their inner secret records concerning various drugs. I thought I knew most of what could be known about how morally and scientifically degraded their operations really are, and I’ve tried to describe it in my books and scientific articles. That was until I read The Pfizer Papers: Pfizer’s Crimes Against Humanity, edited by Dr. Naomi Wolf with Amy Kelly.

The subtitle title is far too modest. It’s not just about Pfizer’s Crimes Against Humanity; it also sheds light on the massive collusion that hid the truth within the papers, including, as a start, the Department of Defense (DoD) and the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), who were in charge of Operation Warp Speed and all things related to the mRNA COVID jabs, as well as the FDA and CDC, which were monitoring and compulsively lying about their high toxicity and deadliness.

https://gingerbreggin.substack.com/p/new-evidence-is-overwhelming-naomi