"It’s not uncommon for one or two people who live or work together to
get the flu at the same time. But if there is no such thing as a viral
disease, how is this possible? Before we discuss why or how this is
possible, it’s very important to understand what the FLU is. Influenza,
which is commonly known as the flu, is classed as an infectious disease by mainstream science. But, as we have already established, modern science and medicine is flawed. So, we need a brief history lesson.
"Before 1889, flu had the same characteristics for thousands of years. People knew influenza as an unpredictable disease that came; and without warning. At times, it wouldn’t be seen for years or even decades. This is the reason people called it "influenza," because they believed the comings and goings of this mysterious disease was governed by the "influence" of the stars. However, from 1889, influenza took on different characteristics.
"For one, it became a YEARLY disease that appeared more or less at the same time each year, and broke out in widely separated parts of the world. Doctors also couldn’t understand some of the symptoms, including mental issues, stillbirths, birth defects, neurological disorders etc.
"Equally, influenza seemed to target a particular age group, which was between 21 - 50 years old. But the most important thing they observed is that influenza was NOT contagious because it was physically impossible for people in different parts of the world to be sick at the same time WITHOUT having come into contact with others, especially if the breakout was within a day or two of each other. There were no planes, of course.
"In 2001, a team of three experts, including two physicians and the Canadian astronomer Ken Tapping, found that, for at least 300 years, influenza pandemics have most likely occurred during peaks of solar magnetic activity, which is at the height of each eleven-year sun cycle.
"Johannes Mygge, a Danish physician , also noted that influenza had something to do with electricity. In fact, 1889 was the YEAR man-made electrical disturbances of the earth’s atmosphere took on a global character. It was the year the modern electrical era opened and central power stations were commercially possible.
"R. Edgar Hope-Simpson, one of the world’s authorities on influenza, also pointed out that there was no evidence that influenza can be transmitted from person to person. Through his research, Hope-Simpson found that there are variations in solar radiation, and that it’s electromagnetic in nature.
"Like Hope-Simpson, many experts who looked at the evidences, and did not have any financial incentives to lie, came to the same conclusion: influenza is not a virus, but an electric disease. So this begs the question, how can one person "infect" another?
"There are two ways that two or more people can simultaneously get the "flu" around the same time. Firstly, the atmosphere affects different people at the same time. So, if there’s an increase in electromagnetic radiation, this will affect different people in a local or worldwide scale. But why does it affect some people and not the others?
"As explained in the Terrain Theory, if our body’s internal environment is healthy, then we won’t be affected or easily affected by environmental toxicity. If, however, someone has a compromised immune system, they become more susceptible to these toxins.
"Another reason why some get the flu is because of the FEAR factor. Countless studies show that chronic fear has a significant effect on the immune system, which manifests in illness. This happens when we’re anxious around others who are sick, and fear getting sick ourselves. When we already have a compromised immune system and add fear to it, this can be a recipe for disaster.
"According to Hope-Simpson, another possibility is that the flu remains "latent" in humans until it’s reactivated by an environmental trigger, especially electromagnetic radiation. This is why, even if one or two people in the same family have the flu, other members of the family do not get it. If it was contagious, as claimed by modern science, everyone in the same household would get it.
"For instance, during the "Hong Kong Flu" pandemic, in 1968, it was also observed that only one person in a household had the flu; and even if a second person came down with the flu, it was clear they did not catch it from each other because they caught it on the same day.
| https://archive.org/details/you-cant-catch-a-virus
Experiments to prove it:
| https://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/67902
| https://t.me/terraintheorychat/150
Additional detail:
| https://www.bitchute.com/video/PAZL8bnPKp7i
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