Posted on 04/24/2020 8:34:58 AM PDT by Zenyatta
OMG, I could go anywhere and keep social distance, everyone would run the other way.
Many medical applications that we now take for granted - such as vaccines and many other medicines - come from sources, or use methods, that once would have sounded crazy or impossible. It’s called “thinking outside the box,” and seems difficult for the left, which insists on absolute conformity to a party line.
That’s what the aliens wanted you to think...that it was a doctor that was probing your throat with that UV light wand....can’t remember it, eh?....;)
Just phoning home, Elliot...Just phoning home...awaiting the “Wow” signal...I’m just phoning home....
LOL!
I never put those two together! No wonder I don’t have good remembery.
Trump says a lot of wacky things, no need to put words in his mouth though. He didn’t suggest injecting cleaning liquid. That’s a lie.
Liberals would believe the moon is made of cheese if told to think it.
Questions like that are why Trump can be successful. I see it all the time, people don’t come up with the best solutions because they are afraid to ask “dumb” questions and then you end up getting group think as a result. Fauci’s of the world thrive on this dynamic. You even notice it in these briefings. Someone yesterday asked the “brilliant techy” why places like Florida can still have the virus if the sun rays kill it and instead of thinking about it and given a thoughtful answer they brush it off as a “layman’s” question. Well, people who ask “layman’s” questions are the people who end up causing major breakthroughs. Imagine how crazy a satellite in the sky would have sounded 100 years ago but someone asked that first “dumb” question that got the ball rolling. Imagine we had a camera in space and and you could take a picture of EVERYONE — How a satelite thought might have sounded in 1920
But not gin and tonic. Gin makes the people who drink it belligerent.
Gin, or any other alcohol, doesnt make anyone belligerent.
It does tend to remove inhibitions - so that if a person has underlying belligerent tendencies, but is able to keep it under wraps when sober, the alcohol may reveal those belligerent tendencies.
Bottom line: some people shouldnt drink.
.
WE know what The President means and understand Trump speak. We actually read and listen to him. The left is on alert 24/7to get gotcha quotes and twist anything to their advantage. If more of us could keep our blood pressure down and read and listen to the other side and how they spin things,more of us would recommend that President Trump has to use words more carefully. I know that is not who he is and that will never change but when that a-hole Pelosi tells anyone who will listen that he wants us to inject Lysol into our body they left believes it no matter what.
Exactly! By the way, the Fauci’s of the world don’t thrive in that environment they only accept “proper” questions and thoughts.
I have heard of a therapy that entails using UV light on blood that is then injected back into the body.
Ultraviolet Blood Irradiation (UBI) is a procedure that exposes the blood to light to heighten the body’s immune response and to kill infections. With exposure to UV light, bacteria and viruses in your bloodstream absorb five times as much photonic energy as do your red and white blood cells.
from WIKIPEDIA:
“Phototherapy” or “photobiolumination,” as it was called in the early 20th century, was used to treat lupus vulgaris or tuberculosis of the skin, by Niels Finsen, who won the Nobel Prize for Physiology and Medicine in 1903. 900 patients were treated by Finsen. His work led to the introduction of heliotherapy as standard therapy for tuberculosis patients before the advent of antibiotics.
Then in 1928, Dr. Emmet Knott and a medical student named Lester Edblom received a U.S. Patent for a “Means for Treating Blood-Stream Infection” that incorporated a rudimentary ultraviolet bulb, vacuum extraction system and a cuvette. The “Knott Hemo-Irradiator” was used from the 1930s through the 1950s on patients with multiple infectious diseases.
George P Miley at the Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, PA published a series of articles on the use of the procedure in the treatment of thrombophlebitis, staphylococcal sepsis, peritonitis, botulism, poliomyelitis, non-healing wounds, and asthma.
One of the best known and most comprehensive set of studies was published in 1947 by Dr. George Miley, M.D. and Dr. Jens A; Christensen, M.D. (From the Blood Irradiation Clinic of the Hahnemann Medical College and Hospital of Philadelphia, PA). The authors studied 445 cases of acute pyogenic infections and 74 cases of virus and virus-like infections. Findings included the following: sulfa resistant and penicillin resistant infections have responded to the treatment. Further finding included: We have observed that toxemias due to various virus and virus-like infections subside rapidly Some of the more impressive results included cases involving septic infection, 57 out of 57 cases recovered. In treating peritonitis, 16 out of 18 patients recovered. With puerperal sepsis, 14 out of 14 patients recovered. With Thrombophlebitis, 34 out of 34 recovered. The authors emphasized the need to follow the protocol set for by Dr. Emmett Knott. Of importance, this protocol included the use of a chamber or cuvette with a flat quartz surface.
Henry A Barrett at the Willard Parker Hospital in New York City, in 1940 reported on 110 cases including a number of infections. Twenty-nine different conditions were described as responding including the following: infectious arthritis, septic abortion, osteoarthritis, tuberculosis glands, chronic blepharitis, mastoiditis, uveitis, furunculosis, chronic paranasal sinusitis, acne vulgaris, and secondary anemia.[6]
This procedure fell out of favor in the late 1950s, at a time when antibiotics and the polio vaccine were becoming widely used.[6]
The FDA has given approval to one type of this treatment.https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cdrh/cfdocs/cfpma/pma.cfm?ID=406577 Also see, https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cdrh/cfdocs/cfpma/pma.cfm?ID=337698 , which approval relates to it treating T-Cell lymphoma. This particular process was developed by a team at Yale, led by Dr. Richard Edelson developed a photopherisis machine. This machine separates the white and red blood cells. The white cells are then routed into a blood chamber, where those cells are subjected to UV light from the A part of the spectrum. https://www.yalemedicine.org/conditions/photopheresis/ This process uses a photosensitizing agent which enhances the effectiveness of the light https://www.yalemedicine.org/departments/ecp-immunotherapy-program/ Observational evidence suggests that photopheresis might be effective in the treatment of graft-versus-host disease,[7] though controlled trials are needed to support this use.[8][9]
There is ongoing research into whether ultraviolet blood irradiation can help with difficult bacterial and viral infections, such as hepatitis C.[10]
He was just about this, by a presstitute, at the Bill signing.
I ordered a Sunlighten Infrared Sauna last week. I had been reading about the benefits of preventing dementia and wrinkles.
“WE know what The President means and understand Trump speak.”
—
Assuming that everyone else does would be a mistake. Even a moth of clarifications by him and other officials can’t unring the bell once the general public has heard it. Unforced errors can often be the worse errors.
Once again, President Trump is way ahead--and way ABOVE--the yahoos.
Maybe I need one. Do they come in industrial strength?
Unforced errors? Haha. What errors? That Trump brought up something that people are not aware of and it makes the Dem/TDS monkeys dance? This is brilliant not an error.
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