Health & Wellness
Fuellmich is leading the committee's corona crisis tort case — an international class-action lawsuit that will be filed against those responsible for using fraudulent testing to engineer the appearance of a dangerous pandemic in order to implement economically devastating lockdowns around the world.
He estimates more than 50 other countries will be following suit. In the video [below], Patrick Bet-David interviews Fuellmich about how and why the group was formed and the status of this work.

In 2015, the brain disorder overtook heart disease and stroke as Britain's biggest cause of death
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) published its first ever figures linked to dementia and Alzheimer's disease deaths, which also include comorbidities, for England and Wales
Researchers found that in 2019 there were 530,841 deaths registered. Of these, there were 66,424 deaths due to dementia and Alzheimer's disease (12.5 per cent) compared with 69,478 deaths in 2018.
The ONS also found that there was a "significant decrease" in the age-standardised mortality rate in 2019 in comparison to 2018 (a decline from 123.8 per 100,000 people in 2018, to 115.1 per 100,000 people in 2019).
Comment: See also: Studies show ketogenic diet's promising results for all stages of dementia
And check out SOTT radio's: The Health & Wellness Show: Dementia and the Absolute Terror of Losing One's Mind
Angelina Friedman — a Westchester County nursing home resident with "an iron will to live" — battled COVID-19 back in March, as well as in October, her daughter told WPIX-TV.
"She's not the oldest to survive COVID, but she may be the oldest to survive it twice," Joanne Merola told the outlet.
The centenarian was born Angelina Sciales on Oct. 18, 1918, on a ship taking immigrants from Italy to the Big Apple in the midst of the influenza, Merola said.
Friedman's mother died in childbirth on the ship, and she was raised with the help of her two sisters.
Her father later joined Friedman and her 10 siblings in America and the family settled in Brooklyn.
Comment: This woman has one strong immune system - we salute her! As for testing positive for Covid a second time, that is debatable, considering the high rate of false positives from PCR tests.
- Everything You Think You Know About Coronavirus...
- Coronavirus: Why everyone was wrong - immune response stronger than thought
- NYT accidentally breaks big Covid story: Humans have immune systems - lockdown policies destroy them
- Covid-19 & SARS immunity discovered in recovered patients - also in over 50% of subjects who were never infected
- Your immune system 'remembers' microbes it's never fought before, new study says

Patient being treated from Covid-19 at Roseland Community Hospital in Chicago
American medics officially registered their first Covid-19 patient on January 19, 2020, but the findings in a paper published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases suggest the virus may have been circulating in the US prior to that.
Comment: The coronavirus COVID-19 was present in the general population before it was officially declared a pandemic.
- Was Covid-19 spreading freely worldwide before last Christmas? The evidence keeps stacking up
- Coronavirus emerged in Italy in September 2019 - Italian study
- Covid-19 was in Spanish sewage as early as MARCH 2019, study finds
- Chinese defector virologist Dr Li-Meng Yan publishes report claiming COVID-19 was made in a lab (UPDATE)

New research has shone further light on the connection between the gut microbiome and sleep.
The research follows similar studies carried out on mice and fruit flies earlier this year, in which scientists found changes to the gut microbiome could lead to high blood pressure and fragmented sleep, as well as early death from sleep deprivation. The latest work carried out at the University of Tsukuba focuses on the role this bacteria plays in affecting sleep via the production of the neurotransmitters serotonin and dopamine.
To investigate this connection, the researchers gave a group of mice strong doses of antibiotics over the course of four weeks. This depleted the diversity of bacteria in their intestines, which led to significant differences in their metabolites compared to a control group of mice fed the same diet.
Comment: See also:
- Common mutation leads to 'night owl' sleep disorder discovery
- How the 'lost art' of breathing can impact sleep and resilience
- Better sleep? Prebiotics could help
- US sleep scientists want to cancel daylight saving time
- How viruses and bacteria balance each other in the gut microbiome
- The gender sleep gap? Wake me up when the nightmare of modern feminism is over
- Microbiome collaborate to cheat death
- US average sleep time drops, increasing health risk
- Sleep inconsistency may increase risk to cardiovascular health
- The truth about sleep
With the newest phase in the Covid19 roll-out set to begin, it's time we addressed the five biggest questions about this vaccine, its effectiveness, its safety and whether or not we'll be forced to use it.
Comment: See also:
- The well-known hazards of coronavirus vaccines
- Vaccine roundtable discussion with Andrew Wakefield, Del Bigtree and Bobby Kennedy
- Retroviral Plague: An interview with molecular biologist Judy Mikovits
- Plandemic Documentary, Part 1: Interview With Judy Mikovits
- Operation Warp Speed: U.S. Troops will be among the first to get COVID-19 vaccine
- Scientists worry as more Americans say they'll refuse COVID-19 vaccine
- Here's why you should skip the COVID vaccine
This week we first look into masks... again. The recent news is that the long awaited Danish mask study has finally been published and it shows exactly what we'd expect (spoiler alert) - there is no statistically significant difference between wearing or not wearing mask. Surprise!
Then move on to the latest in the elites trying to change the way everyone eats to genetically modified, lab-grown, processed garbage that has no right to be called food. Purina is putting bugs in their pet foods, McDonald's announces the release of their apparently long-awaited veggie burger and a new study shows vegans and vegetarians are more likely to break bones than meat eaters.
Join us for another informative episode of Objective:Health!
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Running Time: 00:34:53
Download: MP3 — 31.9 MB
Only a day or two before, I had associated this attire solely with surgeons and people living in heavily polluted regions. Now, my friends' favorite pastime during our weekly Zoom sessions was excoriating people for running or socializing without masks in Prospect Park. I was mystified by their certitude that bits of cloth were the only thing standing between us and mass death, particularly when mere weeks prior, the message from medical experts contradicted this new doctrine.
On February 29, the U.S. surgeon general infamously tweeted: "Seriously people - STOP BUYING MASKS. . . They are NOT effective in preventing general public from catching #Coronavirus." Anthony Fauci, the best-known member of the coronavirus task force, advised Americans not to wear masks around this time. Similarly, in the earliest weeks of the pandemic, the CDC maintained that masks should be worn only by individuals who were symptomatic or caring for a sick person, a position that the WHO stood by even longer.
Comment: See also:
- Danish mask study finally published: No statistically significant difference between wearing or not wearing mask
- Masks are neither effective nor safe: A summary of the science
- 4-year-old almost dies due to lung infection caused by prolonged mask wearing - doctor rants 'how many children must die?'
- 'What happened to academic freedom?' Scientist fumes as Facebook flags Covid-19 study questioning mask effectiveness as 'false'
- Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton censored for tweet about mask study
- Sweden REFUSES to recommend mask-wearing, "state of knowledge on this is uncertain"
- Wisconsin to extend mask mandate as lawsuit seeks to strike down of COVID orders in state Supreme Court

Some 95% of people have a gene variant that affects their response to at least one drug.
The stories he hears from patients and their families bring home the impact that these gene-drug interactions can have. It can even have fatal consequences, as one man described to him.
'He told me about his wife, who had breast cancer and underwent surgery. The prognosis was very good. The tumour was removed by the surgeon but, to prevent micro-metastases, his wife had to receive six courses of (chemotherapy drug) fluorouracil. During the second infusion of the drug, the patient collapsed, went to the intensive care unit and died,' he said.
Comment: One wonders when they'll apply this same thinking to vaccines...
Comment: See also: