Wild Oregano is the Most Potent Antiviral Agent for Coronaviruses

Wild Oregano

By what business is this world shutting down? Why are all people in such a panic? What is the human race doing in quarantine? What is the basis of all this pandemonium? Certainly, there has been much death and despair associated with Covid-19. Yet, the premise here is that it is far more than is necessary. In other words, with the right approach these deaths could be prevented or at least reduced. Plus, this been made way too complicated.

All that is needed is an effective antiviral agent to treat presenting cases. This will halt the transmission train. Closing borders and shutting down industry is ludicrous. Must we give the pathogen, in this case the so-called SARS-CoV-2, that much power?

The Disappearing Male (the war on testosterone)

Mum And Son At Playtable

From 1973 to 2011, sperm counts in men from America, Europe, Australia and New Zealand have dropped by over 50 percent while the number of boys and young men suffering from genital deformities, sperm abnormalities and testicular cancer has increased.

As the World Health Organization declares ’vaccine hesitancy’ to be a top threat to global health in 2019, it turns a blind eye to declining male fertility and its causes.

Originally broadcast on the CBC’s ’Doc Zone’ in 2008, the film ’The Disappearing Male’ examines the role of endocrine disrupting chemicals such as the bisphenols and phthalates in reduced fertility rates. These compounds are found in everyday plastics from drinking bottles to soft toys for infants.

The effects of the bisphenols were known long before this documentary was aired. In fact, they were discovered in the late 1800s. In his 1952 book, ’The Next Million Years’ eugenicist Charles Galton Darwin wrote about putting chemicals in the food and water supply, using injections and other means to alter and reduce the population of ’useless eaters’ aka the working class folks. It’s not a difficult read and it is one of the first books that helped me to see the big picture, thanks to Alan Watt and his talks regarding eugenics and depopulation.

’The Next Million Years’ by Charles Galton Darwin (1953 edition) http://eindtijdinbeeld.nl/EiB-Bibliotheek/Boeken/The_Next_Million_Years__how_to_kill_off_excess_population___1953_.pdf

Some Videos – Alan Watt On Eugenics & Charles Galton Darwin’s ’The Next Million Years’ (1952) – November 19, 2008 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xdxHSCAEGGg – ( 1stageofawareness ) YouTube channel has many more videos concerning this topic, check out his channel and playlists AND
’Alan Watt Reads Charles Galton Darwin’ – debess YouTube video link https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G-OY-ie2Rmk

A more recent Alan Watt blurb (Feb 17, 2019) discusses the Huxleys, eugenics, etc. and how this is related to what is happening today. This is found here on BitChute https://www.bitchute.com/video/Tz9m4uEdPb0/ as well as on my YouTube channel.

Also check the archives of Alan Watt on his website from the 1990s to present https://www.CuttingThroughTheMatrix.com for many, many more talks re. eugenics, depopulation, etc. Some of these are also found in Alan Watt videos on YT & BitChute.

References – ’Sperm Counts Continue to Fall’ https://www.theatlantic.com/family/archive/2018/10/sperm-counts-continue-to-fall/572794/
’Significant ongoing decline in sperm counts of Western men’ https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/07/170726110954.htm
’WHO: Anti-Vaxxers Are Among The Top Threats To Global Health In 2019’ https://www.sagaciousnewsnetwork.com/who-anti-vaxxers-are-among-the-top-threats-to-global-health-in-2019/
From the World Health Organization website – ’Ten threats to global health in 2019’ https://www.who.int/emergencies/ten-threats-to-global-health-in-2019 AND
’Multiple Definitions of Infertility’ https://www.who.int/reproductivehealth/topics/infertility/multiple-definitions/en/
Medical paper – ’Bisphenol a: an emerging threat to male fertility’ (published 20 Jan 2019) https://rbej.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12958-018-0447-6#Abs1

A Deep Dive Into Essential Oils

Someone recently wrote the following to me:

I didn’t fully understand the power of essential oils and aromatherapy until 7 years ago, when I came down with a bad sinus infection and a friend handed me some oregano essential oil to help treat it.

The oregano essential oil knocked out the infection within a day. Ever since then, I’ve been a believer.

As it turns out, I was a little late to the party on this one… essential oils have been cherished for centuries because of their long list of health benefits. If you ask the masters, most believe that there is an essential oil for every ailment or challenge we humans experience.

The question is, which essential oil is right for you? Right now?

Hundreds of studies have shown that these botanical extracts are a powerful way to improve your health and well-being naturally. But it can be challenging to know where to begin.

If you’re curious about essential oils and aromatherapy and want a great introduction, I’ve got something really cool to share with you today…

My friends Karen and Jenny Williams, the co-educational directors at the Aromahead Institute, are hosting a series of online classes called: Unlock Your Essential Oil Confidence With Approachable Chemistry.

…and they’ve graciously agreed to extend a special invitation to the Sacred Science tribe completely FREE of charge!

This LIVE event is great both for folks who are brand new to essential oils AND those who have been using them for years.

To me, this work is extremely important — as it can really benefit not only your health but the health of those you love.

Here are a few of the essential oil secrets that these experts will be sharing:

Important safety considerations you’ll want to consider when using essential oils or sharing them with others (especially children, pregnant women and the elderly).
The 3 core principles of using essential oils so you can stop the guesswork and confidently make healing blends.
Why you should always consider the oils’ Latin names to make blends that are safe but powerful.
And a bunch more…

Click here to learn more and register now:

https://live.aromahead.com/acp-register?

Whistleblower Video Footage of Forced COVID Vaccines in German Nursing Homes Goes Public – Attorney: “We’re Dealing with Homicide, Maybe Even Murder”

Earlier this week we published the English translation of a video in German that Attorney Reiner Fuellmich published with a whistleblower who works in a nursing home where several residents were injected with the experimental COVID mRNA shots against their will, and where many of them died a short time later.

Statins and Type 2 Diabetes Risk

By: Cat Ebeling, BSN,co-author of the best-sellers: The Fat Burning Kitchen,The Top 101 Foods that Fight Aging & The Diabetes Fix

If you have type 2 diabetes and you take a statin drug, you might start noticing a phrase that’s ridiculously overused…

“The benefits outweigh the risks.” Has your doctor ever said that to you?

There are plenty of risks and they’re all serious health issues. Actually the risks FAR outweigh the benefits. ESPECIALLY if you already have type 2 diabetes.

Statins are the primary drug that doctors prescribe to lower cholesterol. Statins are a fairly recent pharmaceutical creation that work by blocking an enzyme in the liver that is responsible for making cholesterol.

Statins became one of the most-prescribed medications when the guidelines for the high end of total cholesterol guidelines were reduced down to 200 a few years ago.

Now, tens of millions of Americans are taking cholesterol-lowering drugs, thinking this is the best way to prevent heart disease. In fact, about 30 percent of American men and women over age 40 take a statin.

The problem is that statins come with a host of side effects which can be pretty significant. One of the more serious side effects of statins is the significant increased risk of type 2 diabetes. The latest study on this connection shows the link may be even stronger than was previously reported.

Researchers prospectively studied 8,567 men and women whose average age was 64. All were free of diabetes and not taking statins when the study started. In a follow-up study 15 years later, about 12 percent of the group had started taking statins, most using either Zocor or Lipitor (simvastatin or atorvastatin) and the rest either Pravachol or Lescol (pravastatin or fluvastatin). Most took the statins for over a year, and 716 new cases of diabetes occurred in the group.

After controlling for age, sex, smoking, family history of diabetes, and other factors, researchers found that statin use was associated with higher risk for insulin resistance and high blood sugar, and with a 38 percent increased risk for the development of Type 2 diabetes.

Statins and Type 2 Diabetes Risk