Cause of Neurosystemic Diseases

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By djsartin

The Linking Pathogen in Neurosystemic Diseases

Several strains of mycoplasma have been "engineered" to become more dangerous. They are now being blamed for AIDS, cancer, CFS, MS, CJD and other neurosystemic diseases.

"There are 200 species of Mycoplasma. Most are innocuous and do no harm; only four or five are pathogenic. Mycoplasma fermentans (incognitus strain) probably comes from the nucleus of the Brucella bacterium. This disease agent is not a bacterium and not a virus; it is a mutated form of the Brucella bacterium, combined with a visna virus, from which the mycoplasma is extracted.

The pathogenic Mycoplasma used to be very innocuous, but biological warfare research conducted between 1942 and the present time has resulted in the creation of more deadly and infectious forms of Mycoplasma. Researchers extracted this mycoplasma from the Brucella bacterium and actually reduced the disease to a crystalline form. They "weaponised" it and tested it on an unsuspecting public in North America.

Dr Maurice Hilleman, chief virologist for the pharmaceutical company Merck Sharp & Dohme, stated that this disease agent is now carried by everybody in North America and possibly most people throughout the world.

Despite reporting flaws, there has clearly been an increased incidence of all the neuro/systemic degenerative diseases since World War II and especially since the 1970s with the arrival of previously unheard-of diseases like chronic fatigue syndrome and AIDS."

A friend shared this article from Nexus Magazine with me a short time ago and since I feel so strongly this is information that everyone should have and perhaps discuss with friends, loved ones, and even doctors, I decided to do a hub to spread the word.

First link below will take you to the remainder of this story...

I don't know about you, but even though their theory about mycoplasma being the underlying cause of so many illnesses hasn't been proven by double blind studies yet to be indisputable facts, it seems it would be a very good idea to at least talk with our doctors about appropriate testing if we have conditions that might be able to be improved if testing did show the presence of mycoplasma in our bodies.

Because they have found the presence of mycoplasma organisms when they've done autopsies on people with all the conditions they mention.

When there are new discoveries, and often even new studies just being started, not every doctor across the land even knows about it for a while, as once a doctor goes into private practice there is simply not enough time to do constant personal research on the newest information coming out, that hasn't made it through double blind studies at this point.

Only after final study results do articles make it into the peer reviewed journals the doctors do always read.

So the only way they hear of many of the newest findings is if they happen to run across information on their own, or if a patient does, and then mentions it to the doctor.

And I know I surely intend to let everyone I know, everywhere, about these findings so that more people can speak with their doctors and other health care advisors regarding how this information might be helpful in charting a new course for their continued care and treatment.

Life is simply too short to not explore every possibility available to us for improving the quality of every person's life by caring and sharing all information any of us receive with all the other people we can.

DJ

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