Below is a great lecture given by Dr. Chris Exley,
who is one of the worlds’ leading experts in the subject of aluminum
toxicity, and, as he points out in his lecture (2nd video below), which
was spoken at a vaccine safety conference, aluminum has absolutely no
place in Earth’s biota. Sure, a portion of the Earth’s crust is made
from it, but it does a great job of keeping it (aluminum) completely
separate from living things, it cannot penetrate up to where life
thrives, until we started using it. Aluminum has no place in the
exterior world, biochemically speaking.
Since this lecture was given, multiple
studies have surfaced showing that aluminum, from vaccines in
particular, does not come into the same methods of excretion as it does
when we ingest it from other sources. Injectable aluminum is different
because it’s used as an adjuvant, which means “helper” and without it
the vaccines are pretty much useless. Injectable aluminum is meant to
stick around, and eventually it finds its way to the brain.
Here’s a great video of scientist Dr. Christopher Shaw from UBC explaining why aluminum is a problem, biologically speaking.
This is all information that make one
wonder, what is going on here, and why are aluminum containing vaccines
constantly marketed as completely safe? As we know, a causative role has
already been established in patients who have a macrophagic
myofasciitis (MMF) lesion in patients who have myalgic
encephalomyelitis, or brain inflammation. Myalgia, arthralgia, chronic
fatigue, cognitive dysfunction, dysautonomia, and autoimmunity have been
temporally linked to aluminium adjuvant-containing vaccine
administration (Gherardi
and Authier, 2003; Authier et al., 2003; Exley et al., 2009; Rosenblum
et al., 2011; Santiago et al., 2014; Brinth et al., 2015; Palmieri et
al., 2016).
Another fairly recent study (2015) points out:
“Evidence that aluminum-coated
particles phagocytozed in the injected muscle and its draining lymph
notes can disseminate within phagocytes throughout the body and slowly
accumulate in the brain further suggests that alum safety should be
evaluated in the long term.” (source)
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