Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Pleomorphism

I've been doing a lot of research lately on the history of medicine, disease, the AMA, etc.  The information I've been gathering has been astounding, and I'm in the process of writing a screenplay based on just one of the many stories which would shake the medical world if everyone knew about them. 

But the most important single thing I've learned is about pleomorphism.  The mere fact that it exists (and it does, it's been scientifically proven over and over again) should alter the entire way medicine is practiced today.  Yet, even though this phenomenon was proven 150 years ago, the medical "industry" has neither embraced it nor even accepted it.  What is pleomorphism?  Simply put, it means that bacteria can change form, from one type of bacteria to another.  All modern medicine is built around the idea that bacteria can NOT change form (monomorphism), even though this has been proven and WITNESSED!  What pleomorphism shows us is that disease does not come to us externally, but rather internally.  Our own good bacteria, when living in a nutritional deficient environment, actually changes form and becomes bad bacteria.  If the environment is fixed, it changes back again to good bacteria.  This is a bit of an oversimplification, but that's the basic idea. 

I encourage everyone to read about this and explore it in detail - you'll be amazed at what you will discover.  When you understand this concept, you will understand why the pharmaceutical approach to disease is detrimental and why we can never really be cured that way.  Look up Antoine Bechamp, the Frenchman who first proved pleomorphism, and you will understand why the health care industry is in the mess it's in today.  See how Pasteur plagiarized Bechamp's research and worked unscientifically, yet is treated as the father of modern medicine.  His story is one of the great examples of how ambition and money can actually brainwash an entire society (not to mention his responsibility for countless deaths and unfathomable sickness).