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Old April 18th, 2009, 04:39 AM
Kammy Kammy is offline
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The Morgellons Pathogen Has Been Indentified In the Dish


I have semi-isolated the pathogen in the Petri Dish that appears to be the one that is producing the fibers and the carbon-like 'black speck' connectors or the Morgellons pathogen.

I believe, this is the MAIN Morgellons fiber/speck pathogen that is 'wrapping itself' around or incorporating itself into the other pathogens. When the other pathogens touch or come into contact with this one, they incorporate and seemingly become a vector for the Morgellons pathogen to grow and spread. There is another one that could be a 'sister', not sure at this time.

It has a very fuzzy, white, a very fine 'spun cottony' look, it's a dense-fluffy; like a very fine cotton ball growth - it's growth is double/triple in size than any other growth in the dish. It's growth (cultured on 2/28/09) at approximately 6 weeks is not in a circular pattern, it is in a 'speading' or random pattern.

I would have to look at earlier digital photographs of it in its infancy to be able to report how it first appeared. I will find a way to show you the two comparative 'real life' photographs of the dish, (wonder if my camera card works?)

There are various different 'other' pathogens around this Morgellons one, and from watching the way it operates, it appears that whatever is in our bodies or the dish, the Morgellons one - reaches out to and transmitts its 'chemistry' to them. Each pathogen in the body or dish - then becomes infected with Morgellons to become what is known as our 'individual' Morgellons. (That is probably why we're all having different physical manifestations in what is showing up in our symptoms.)

You have seen several photographs of mine where there have been 'fuzzy' white, 'hairy-looking' objects that are reaching out to 'touch' other things? I am positive, this is how the Morgellons pathogen operates.

I have left the Petri Dish undisturbed. I have numerous growths that are side by side, apart, and some on top of each other in the dish. After I digitally photograph the dish again, I am going to take a small section of it and isolate it by itself in a new, clean Petri Dish.

After that, I will take some more lesion debris and start a new experiment, in which I will 'map' the specks - so that I can be able to tell you which one of these specks that is coming out of our bodies is precisely the Morgellons speck.

I'm saying that the Morgellons pathogen is semi-isolated because it is undisturbed but touching other pathogens in the dish. It is next to the edge of the dish and approximately half the size of a .50 cent coin, this is a large enough area to obtain a "pure" specimen from, I believe. It will soon be by itself to study in isolation.

I am shooting down into a mass of cotton-like material, that is why these photos appear dark. I will try using other lighting techniques to get better photos. Here is what the semi-ISOLATED Morgellons pathogen looks like microscopically at 100x, I am not cropping these photos:

L Ear debris cultured 2-28-09, @ 100x 6 weeks growth, photographed on 4/10/09, Photo 1:


L Ear debris cultured 2-28-09, @ 100x 6 weeks growth, photographed on 4/10/09, Photo 2:


L Ear debris cultured 2-28-09, @ 100x 6 weeks growth, photographed on 4/10/09, Photo 3:
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