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| Morgellons Disease (Fiber Disease) General discussion on Morgellons Disease |
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| I've held onto this video for a long time now, it was made by a member here at MDR that hasn't signed in for a long time, this video is too important not to be made public so I've decided to do that. I will let the person who made it decide whether or not they would like everyone to know who this is. I don't think it has already been posted here if it has pardon me. This video is best if you right click on it and select to watch it at you tube in full screen. Last edited by Steve Frey; October 6th, 2009 at 01:50 AM. |
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| I used to see this kind of stuff in the yellow goo and scab material with fibers and stuff. i do not know where you picked this collectable up from but it has a pile of blue fibers. In my first vison of these they were all clear or amber a bit. Maybe wile it is still fresh check what they do with a tiny current. I imagine by now you know I think the black forming stuff in the blood that morphes into long running fibers of tubes is a huge part of this. I wish I had more time to experament with this and had a partner with a mad scientist mind. I think the blood reaction starts from loss of the electric current of the body. It could be many things, chemical reactionm doubtful but possible, sunlight who knows. I have once again used the Hulda Clark box on my ear lobes to see another tiny spot open showing another tiny lesion, so will electricity have them move or grow. set it in a bit of water on the slide then ery the sparkies. I was thinking of doing that with the blood to see if the black stuff starts to form. |
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| My best guess of the identity of this organism is a rotifer, another symbiont of the sponge. One thing I know for sure, it's not a fly, fungi. or a nematode. Last edited by Steve Frey; October 6th, 2009 at 01:51 AM. |
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| ...to see this posted… thought for sure this had been gathering dust in a basement somewhere all this long while. I second your compliments for Chester’s & Cliff Mickelson’s work reporting what they have observed. Would love to see an update from Cliff of his more recent observations & thoughts. REALLY, really miss seeing Nancy on here too. Hope she decides to visit us again sometime soon. These two statements really hit a cord with me. I have observed similar behaviors & actions whilst wrestling lesions & then pondering scoping results. Quote:
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ps Yep, I’m still here…just around, logging in & posting under one of my 2,000 + aliases pps Hey Joey.... yes.... I am old….but not THAT old ![]() rl Last edited by rocklady; October 7th, 2009 at 06:12 AM. Reason: typo |
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| RL, so nice to hear from you! I thought you might have left us, glad you haven't. I still think your video is one of the most remarkable pieces of evidence in existence when it comes to proving that morgellons is in fact the result of a parasitic organism, there is absolutely no denying the fact that there are living organisms in this video and that they are swimming amongst the classic red and blue morgellons fibers. I would sure like to know what the skeptics would say after seeing it. I miss Nancy too, hope she is doing okay, and I'd love to here more from Cliff as well. What he said about the organism moving in consecutive blobs is a critical piece of evidence. Now I'm no expert, I don't have PhD behind my name, but I did go to school and I have done an awful lot of studying in the past three years and to this day I can find only one organism on the planet that would have the ability to "move in consecutive blobs" and that organism is the sponge. Does anyone know of another organism that might be able to do this? |
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| The organism in RL's video might be a Protozoa, any opinions? http://videoserver.magnet.fsu.edu/mi...mum04ob_t1.wmv Here is more info on this species of protozoa Olympus MIC-D: Pond Life Digital Movie Gallery - Spirostomum (Protozoa) Movie #4 |
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| Yes Steve, I believe it is a protozoa in this video. Wow. What a great vid!!!! Toxoplasmosis Gondii. I sent an attactchment of T Gondii in which looks like this video. Last edited by fritolay66; November 16th, 2011 at 09:57 AM. |
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| Your awesome Frito, you've just help me connect a few more dots here, I knew I had seen the name T. Gondii somewhere before and then it came to me, I had ran across it as a significant genome alignment with a sponge a while back. So here it is, the 18s ribosomal RNA gene of the sponge Petrobiona massiliana has a significant genome alignment with the Protozoa Toxoplasma gondii, there is an 83% alignment and BLAST gave it a score of 1576, from what I can tell this is a very high score. ![]() ![]() It is a great video isn't it? I think it's the best evidence yet that proves morgellons is caused by a parasitic organism. Last edited by Steve Frey; October 9th, 2009 at 03:29 AM. |
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| Disease Morgellons on RightHealth | This thread | Refback | October 8th, 2009 02:59 AM | |
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