83 Comments

" I am constantly amazed that anything works in biology. There are so many ways that things can go wrong. Which, is again, why I don’t understand why there are so many exceedingly arrogant humans who think it’s a good idea to mess with biology. "

1. Excellent comment

2. It is all my fault; 100% hubris...

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I'm amazed how resilient we are as animals, given all the insults to our systems.

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I'm convinced. You should publish this is a clinical journal.

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I am planning on it. Hemotology? Any suggestions?

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I would love to see Jessica and her surf board on the cover of the Sports Illustrated annual swimsuit edition.

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Jessica is not fat enough. You can't be healthy or female for SI anymore.

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I must be out of the loop as I have not seen SI since Kathy Ireland was on the cover.

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And I have not seen Playboy since Katarina Witt was featured.

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I can't wait to see Jessica and her drums on the cover of the Rolling Stone!

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I would love to see Jessica and her surf board on the cover of the Sports Illustrated swimsuit edition.

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Not entirely qualified to say I too am convinced, but I can say without doubt that this is brilliant! A big thanks for your continuing vigilance and dedication!

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Maybe you are pointing to another reason besides being “flush with cash” that Pfizer just purchased Global Blood Therapeutics (GBT.O), the company that makes the drug Oxbryta, a novel treatment for Sickle Cell Disease. Is Pfizer anticipating the need to focus efforts on managing the impact of its vaccine-induced hemoglobin misfolding?

https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/pfizer-buy-global-blood-therapeutics-54-bln-deal-2022-08-08/

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Can you imagine telling the Worlds population that they all must now take “our new post vaccine” drug! And it’s only $900 a pop!

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Yes.

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Regarding reference 9 - I paused there to look at it. The mechanism of action of Artemisinin is not well understood https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24304352/ but involves heme https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10991867/ and more to the point - it really helped me with post CoV fatigue which to my dietitian training seemed exactly like Anemia of Chronic Inflammation. I took 200 mg artemisinin am and pm for a couple months, then switched to once a day for about a year. And now use (Sweet) Wormwood tea if I feel a flair up of cold or autoimmune symptoms. It is a strong antimicrobial and too much use can be hard on the gut microbiome.

So if the goal is restoring health - please look into Artemesia species. Artemisia afra is used in malaria areas of Africa as a preventive tea but with some controversy as to the phytonutrients that may be effective. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31376515/ Caution during prenatal/child-bearing years with the whole herbs a the thujone content can be dangerous.

There are many varieties that grow around the world. Most people could likely find some type of Artemesia sp. in their region. https://alaskaethnobotany.community.uaf.edu/artemisia-moon-plants-for-women/

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Having finished reading - yes, anti-malarials. Artemisinin is a slightly different iron chelator than the other zinc ionophores. It can bind with minerals in many locations from what I remember reading a few years ago: June 25, 2020, Artemisinin, arteannuin-B, sgp130Fc and COVID-19 - this includes an excerpt from my book draft which I added to for CoV treatment ideas - the sgp130Fc protein is an additional possibility for care. https://transcendingsquare.com/2020/06/25/artemisinin-arteannuin-b-and-covid-19/

Malaria was a topic I had already written about: March 25, 2018, Malaria, climate, and vector control. https://transcendingsquare.com/2018/03/25/malaria-climate-and-vector-control/ *the US "not for profit" insecticide laced bednets were a health negative for African people. Draining ditches and sprinkling diatomaceous earth is more effective.

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August 12, 2022
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Very welcome!

More info about sgp130Fc for bowel issues is here: https://www.gastrojournal.org/article/S0016-5085(21)00467-4/fulltext

It helps reduce negative effects of IL-6 without over inhibiting the positive immune functions of IL-6. There are two slightly different forms - one more inflammatory and one more anti-inflammatory. sgp130Fc protein inhibits the inflammatory version specifically, but we don't make enough sgp130Fc to handle a cytokine storm type increase in IL-6.

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Have you shared your knowledge with the FLCCC doctors? Their latest Covid protocol includes black seed oil. The vaccine injured seem to have endless maladies! Other than the FLCCC protocols I don’t know what else to tell them? I look forward to reading your Substack.

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No, I haven't sent FLCCC anything personally. I have shared my work in progress, Protocol Collation & Therapy Goals - https://docs.google.com/document/d/1RmdgbxBUuJa9nFUmCfSoZdnEB8EPc181WOvhGakAKTU/edit?usp=sharing on my sites & on Twitter, before getting suspended, Gab and GETTR don't seem as interested in health info.

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I will check this out! Thank you. Twitter and Facebook suspensions for trying to help people. Sad.

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You have a brilliant mind and are a great detective.

Very intense info here. Think I need to lie down for a bit…

Malaria observations intriguing

Thank you!

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I wonder if this explains why injected friends have trouble breathing but all the tests and standard bloodwork show "normal"? The Dr's can't explain the dyspnea, perhaps the folded red blood cells prevent adequate oxygen uptake? Many jabbed athletes are also suffering with lack of energy and breathing...

Cancer patients' red blood cells are totally whack from cancer and/or chemo, radiation and immunotherapy, low hemoglobin with high/ variable width, So much of mRNA side effects track with the side effects of immunotherapy/immune checkpoint inhibitors.

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Pfizer purchased company that makes a medication for treatment of sickel cell anemia. A strategic purchase related not to the specific medication as being developed and marketed but to underlying technical knowledge of blood disorders?

https://medicalxpress.com/news/2022-08-pfizer-sickle-cell-drugmaker-gbt.html

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"Nor winks the gold fin in the porphry font;"

A line from the immortal short poem "Now sleeps the crimson petal" by Tennyson, much loved by composers, for example here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wZrdtmoxyFU

[Jessica - my way of saying thanks for writing articles and asking questions in a style that we mere mortals can understand, if we only have a little time and patience.]

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i love it :)

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Really great post, thank you. I want to add that magnetism also plays a role. Speaking of goodie oldies, this is a very interesting paper:

Ferromagnetic Resonance in Metals. Frequency Dependence (1965)

https://journals.aps.org/pr/abstract/10.1103/PhysRev.139.A1173

and

Discovery of the magnetic behavior of hemoglobin: A beginning of bioinorganic chemistry (2015)

https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1515704112

Its another aspect and certainly hospitals are frequency disasters

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And I just became a PAID SUBCRIBER to you as a result of this article. I was on the zoom conference with the FLCCC when you appeared with Dr. Kory, and I liked you.

But this one hit it out of the park.

What I like most about your articles, since I've been following you is that.. you ASK QUESTIONS.. that the research or data produces... like your mind says.. ok, I get that, and then what. Instead of some of the Doctors (all be it good intentioned).. quoting research papers that come out, and keeping the information in a vacuum.. The body is connected as a WHOLE... every system affects every system...

So, I notice as you go through the research, you connect the dots, and then ask the next logical question- what's next.

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thanks :)

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You are amazing!!!!

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thanks :)

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"The oxygens diffuse into muscle cells, get transported to mitochondria and ATP is produced. It’s kind of like tickling your sister to make her let go of the apple you want to eat. You’re the pH, she’s the hemoglobin, her hand is the heme and the apple is the oxygen. "

Ha, ha <3...

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This is a very helpful and thorough article. I learned a lot of the terminology, at least for now, to try to understand the interrelationships between all these things. The more I see about how wonderfully complex yet perfectly synchronized our system is, the more clear it is that Frankenstenian creations like the C19 injectibles are, as Dr. Sucharit Bhakdi said at the start, “an insane and delusion undertaking”.

I learned a lot about why people with serious COVID get low O2 saturation. I’ll have to read it again, but I’m so glad you and others are working out many of the pathways of harm these shots are causing.

Thanks Jessica 🤗

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So would this apply to natural infections as well? Should those who have developed mild covid be concerned?

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i don't think so...

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The following article link suggests that our body has some, perhaps limited, ability to cope with prion exposure.

Repetitive Immunization Enhances the Susceptibility of Mice to Peripherally Administered Prions. September 25, 2009

stimulation of the immune system by repeated immunization does not accelerate the general progression of the disease, but rather renders mice susceptible to amounts of peripherally administered prions that would be innocuous to non-immunized wild-type mice.

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0007160

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A paper published yesterday refutes the role of purported CD147 binding of SARS-Cov-2 spike protein (this excerpt is in response to the Wang paper referenced in your article):

Basigin is ubiquitously expressed in human tissues and forms a complex with monocarboxylate transporters (MCTs) and the glucose transporter GLUT1, among others (22). In the context of infectious disease, basigin has also been well characterized as an essential receptor for Plasmodium falciparum invasion into human erythrocytes, during which it is bound by the malaria parasite’s reticulocyte-binding protein homolog 5 (RH5) (23, 24). Based on the initial observation that appeared to show that basigin binds to the SARS-CoV-2 spike glycoprotein receptor binding domain (RBD) (10), clinical trials were initiated investigating an anti-basigin MAb as a therapeutic for COVID-19 (30) (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT04275245).

Having worked extensively with basigin in the context of its RH5 interaction, we aimed to validate the finding that basigin directly interacts with the receptor binding domain of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein. Here, we show that we could not replicate this finding. Although we saw clear binding of recombinant SARS-CoV-2 full-length spike trimer (FL-S) and RBD to ACE2 and the anti-RBD MAb CR3022 (26), we did not see any binding to glycosylated or nonglycosylated basigin by size exclusion chromatography (SEC) or surface plasmon resonance (SPR). Meanwhile, recombinant RH5 showed clear binding to both glycosylated and nonglycosylated basigin by the same methods. Finally, we show that anti-basigin polyclonal rabbit IgG can potently inhibit in vitro growth of malaria parasites but has no impact on SARS-CoV-2 infection of Vero E6 cells. In sum, this evidence does not support a role of basigin in SARS-CoV-2 infection.

Now I have not gone through the methodology of either paper in order to discern whether the experiments are sufficient to support their conclusions. https://journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/mSphere.00647-21

Regardless, much hubris needs to be taken on all sides. The inter-workings of the human body are utterly spectacular and beyond our comprehension. Thank you for trying to make sense of the madness.

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Great article, Jessica. Now we know why Mikovits, Tenpenny, and Seneff were warning us 2 years ago that these spike shots could cause prion diseases as well as 40 other ways to kill us. Did Luc Montagnier also warn us about prion diseases from these bioweapons?

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