So my newly identified mission in life is to kill germ theory. I've realized that it's pretty much the root of all 'evil', money, you're free to go now, we've apprehended the real culprit, sorry for the confusion.
Think of a world without disease and sickness, which is what the concept of 'germ theory' brings. Instead of nurturing our systems with real, raw, living foods, we try to manhandle them and beat them in to submission with all sorts of poisons and butchery. Do you know how much nicer it is to live free from health issues? It's INSANE, and no problem seems to big when you're feeling like a million bucks, and have the energy and the drive to affect change. If we could get everyone feeling good, and stop producing birth defects, then so MANY of societies issues would vanish. Then at least, we could focus on residual problems, which are actual problems, instead of wasting so much energy on needless suffering. Savvy?
So, I'll be offering more and more of that kind of info as it's now my top priority. Actively and passively, I'll be working to kill this tired old theory for as long as I'm alive, hopefully you'll help, since you know it's (at least mostly) bunk. Learn about germ theory, understand, intimately why science came to accept it, and what it's weaknesses are (there are many since it is by nature, wrong).
Here is a website on biofilms, a concept apparently not yet discussed on this forum. They attack germ theory because of it's artificiality and abstraction from conditions of the real world. But then they try to sell you probiotics/biofilm stuffs, so, like everything you come across, keep the good, leave the rest.
http://quorumbiofilm.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=47:qmodernq-medicine-and-germ-theory&catid=34:demo-articlesHere's an excerpt that nails it....
"Why are so many clinically apparent infections "culture negative"? How does this square with the germ theory? Are we missing something?
We are.
Germ theory is dead, or should be. Today's microbiological studies are based on biological concepts not often exist in reality. The model of the single, freely floating, individually functioning microbe suspended in a test tube or grown in a Petri dish is an artificial lab construct poorly applicable to the actual patient. Indeed, results from these standard assays may be clinically irrelevant. This is because almost all bacteria exist in often complex, poly- microbial ecological systems called biofilm communities. These communities behave very differently from the simplistic test tube model. Thought to be a good diagnostic and therapeutic tool, the traditional MIC actually gives no useful information on the majority of human infections since MIC's are incapable of looking at biofilms."