- If you want to routinely cull the population, then an invisible virus that you cannot see or prove would be the perfect lie to cover it up.
Another excellent, pithy analysis of a complicated situation by Greg Reese, followed by a very stimulating conversation between Greg and Dr. Lee Merritt…
3/12/24 – “No one has ever isolated a virus. This is admitted by modern science, who claims it’s impossible. So instead, they mix it with a soup of other genetic materials, run it through a computer and create what is known as a consensus genome.
“In the 1930s, engineer Royal Rife, created microscopes capable of magnifying material over seventeen-thousand times. Modern microscopes can only provide a magnification of about twenty-four hundred. We've been denied the magnification required to actually see if a virus exists.
“This idea first gained a foothold during the HIV/AIDS scare when people such as Peter Duesberg, Kary Mullis, and Celia Farber, were exposing the lies of Anthony Fauci. And it gained serious traction during the COVID era with the work of Andrew Kaufman, Tom Cowan, Denis Rancourt, and Dr. Lee Merritt.”
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Parasites and the Virus Deception - with Dr. Lee Merritt - The Sunday afternoon podcast with Greg Reese
In this very thorough and engaging discussion, with quite a few unusual details, Lee gives one of the best, simplest explanations about the history and storytelling of virology; a basic course in what happened and what it means to us.
3/10/24 – “Dr. Lee Merritt began her medical career at the age of four, carrying her father’s “black bag” on house calls, along the back roads of Iowa. In 1980 she graduated from the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry in New York, where she was elected to life membership in the Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society. Dr. Merritt completed an Orthopaedic Surgery Residency in the United States Navy and served 0ver 10 years as a Navy physician and surgeon. In 1989 she was the only woman to be appointed as the Louis A. Goldstein Fellow of Spinal Surgery at the University of Rochester, Strong Memorial Hospital.”
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