Masters of Health Magazine September 2021 | Page 90

“If you explore the history of the medical profession and the various ideas regarding the cause of disease that were held by leading physicians before Pasteur first promulgated his notorious ‘germ theory’, you will find convincing evidence that Pasteur discovered nothing, and that he deliberately appropriated, falsified, and perverted another man’s work.”  (Page 11, ‘Béchamp or Pasteur? A Lost Chapter in the History of Biology’ by Ethel Douglas).

In fact, the idea of germs causing disease goes back to the 16th century when Geronimo Fracastorio of Verona, published a work (De Contagionibus et Contagiosis Morbis, et eorum Curatione) in Venice in 1546, which contained the first statement of the true nature of contagion, infection, or disease organisms, and of the modes of transmission of infectious disease.

Better yet in 1762, M. A. Plenciz, a Viennese physician, published the first germ theory of infectious diseases which maintained that there was a special organism by which each infectious disease was produced; that micro-organisms were capable of reproduction outside of the body; and that they might be conveyed from place to place by the air.

So, nothing in the germ theory that the ‘genius’ Pasteur gave us was unique. Worse still, Pasteur then outright plagiarized the work of his French contemporary, Antoine Béchamp, the originator of the competing Terrain Theory of disease.

No less a historical figure than Florence Nightingale, the visionary of modern nursing practice, published her own attack on the idea of germ theory in 1860, over 17 years before Pasteur was hailed for his ‘breakthrough.’ (id. Page 12)

Be in no doubt that if she lived today Florence Nightingale would be a champion of the anti-vax movement and a champion of Béchamp’s terrain theory. As pointedly stated:

“True nursing ignores infection, except to prevent it. Cleanliness and fresh air from open windows, with unremitting attention to the patient, are the only defence a true nurse either asks or needs. – Wise and humane management of the patient is the best safeguard against infection. The greater part of nursing consists of preserving cleanliness. – The specific disease doctrine is the grand refuge of weak, uncultured, unstable minds, such as now rule in the medical profession. There are no specific diseases; there are specific disease conditions.”

In essence, Nightingale’s words are prescient today because in the aftermath of the COVID Pandemic Fraud, the world is finally grasping that Vitamin D (via sunlight), good sanitation, a healthy diet, and avoiding stress are the better part of good health, such that prevention is better than cure.

Big Pharma, just like the crooked politicians and media peddling the narrative, never advises us to live healthily. Instead, they push their expensive potions as treatments belying the fact that a strong immune system need not be vaccinated or tampered with.

Adherents of Terrain Theory will insist that symptoms of viruses and germs are the by product of dis-ease (disease) wherein a disrupted and poorly functioning immune system becomes overwhelmed by the toxicities the body ordinarily successfully excretes and must engage in ‘emergency clean out’ –  otherwise misidentified as a foreign body  “infection” such as influenza, cholera, measles, TB, etc. Promoters of Germ Theory say the opposite that invasive bacteria causes disease.