Health & Wellness
He co-founded Waterkeeper Alliance — the world's largest clean water advocacy group — and provides legal counsel for the Natural Resources Defense Council, which help protect organic producers. He has also fought legal battles on behalf of the Informed Consent Action Network, founded by Del Bigtree, and chairs the board of directors of the Children's Health Defense.2
Kennedy wrote a brilliant foreword to Judy Mikovits' book "Plague of Corruption," in which he quotes his father saying, "Moral courage is the rarest species of bravery ... rarer than the physical courage of soldiers in battle or great intelligence." His father believed "moral courage was one of the most vital qualities required to change the world," Kennedy says.
A total of 73 cases of the new disease, involving toddlers and elementary school children, have been registered in New York to date, the governor's office has said. The illness is believed to be linked to the novel coronavirus that has been gripping the state for more than two months and has since infected almost 333,000 and claimed more than 26,000 lives.
New York is not the first to report an inflammatory syndrome in children amid the Covid-19 epidemic. Earlier, British doctors voiced concerns about a similar disease described as affecting children in the UK. The illness has often been compared to Kawasaki disease - a rare disorder of the immune-system which usually affects children younger than five years old, causing severe fever and virus-like symptoms.
Based on a broad array of scientific data, Just Facts has computed that the anxiety created by reactions to Covid-19 — such as stay-at-home orders, business shutdowns, media exaggerations, and legitimate concerns about the virus — will destroy at least seven times more years of human life than can possibly be saved by lockdowns to control the spread of the disease. This figure is a bare minimum, and the actual one is likely more than 90 times greater.
This study was reviewed by Joseph P. Damore, Jr., M.D., who concluded: "This research is engaging and thoroughly answers the question about the cure being worse than the disease." Dr. Damore is a certified diplomate with the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, an assistant professor of psychiatry at the Weill Medical College of Cornell University, an assistant attending psychiatrist at New York Presbyterian Hospital, and an adjunct professor in the Department of Behavioral Sciences and Leadership at the U.S. Military Academy.
Comment: An excellent way to offset the harmful stresses of the lockdown - and all its various knock-on effects - is to use the deep breathing detoxofication and meditation of the Éiriú Eolas system:
Planet-wide COVID-19 vaccination — the overt objective that has all of these players salivating in anticipation — ignores a number of irrefutable obstacles. For one, the RNA virus being targeted, SARS-CoV-2, already "has mutated into at least 30 different genetic variants." The variants include 19 never-seen-before as well as "rare changes that scientists had never imagined could happen." Knowledge about these mutations may prove useful to clinicians wanting to better tailor their COVID-19 treatments, but the proliferation of mutations makes the chances of developing an effective vaccine immensely more uncertain.
Not to worry, say the entities funded by Gates (and also the Pentagon). Scientists working in the burgeoning field of synthetic biology are confident that they can "outdo" and outsmart nature using next-generation vaccine technologies such as gene transfer and self-assembling nanoparticles — along with invasive new vaccine delivery and record-keeping mechanisms such as smartphone-readable quantum dot tattoos. Does it matter that the researchers who have been experimenting with these approaches have never been able to overcome "nasty side effects"? Apparently not. Aided and abetted by the generous Gates and military funding, high-fanfare COVID-19 vaccine planning is proceeding apace.
Led by Northwestern University, the research team conducted a statistical analysis of data from hospitals and clinics across China, France, Germany, Italy, Iran, South Korea, Spain, Switzerland, the United Kingdom (UK) and the United States.
The researchers noted that patients from countries with high COVID-19 mortality rates, such as Italy, Spain and the UK, had lower levels of vitamin D compared to patients in countries that were not as severely affected.
This does not mean that everyone — especially those without a known deficiency — needs to start hoarding supplements, the researchers caution.
"While I think it is important for people to know that vitamin D deficiency might play a role in mortality, we don't need to push vitamin D on everybody," said Northwestern's Vadim Backman, who led the research. "This needs further study, and I hope our work will stimulate interest in this area. The data also may illuminate the mechanism of mortality, which, if proven, could lead to new therapeutic targets."
The research is available on medRxiv, a preprint server for health sciences.
The US study, "Vitamin D Insufficiency is Prevalent in Severe COVID-19," was done in New Orleans. It showed the Vitamin D Insufficiency, VDI, prevalence in ICU patients was 84.6% vs. 57.1% in floor patients. Insufficiency is defined as < 30ng/mL. The study states that "VDI affects 80-90% of the African American population."
Comment: The virtues of Vitamin D: It's time we saw the light
- Focus on Vitamin D for COVID (and much more)
- How to get more vitamin D during the winter when the days shorten
- Vitamin D's flawed recommended daily allowance
- Anti-inflammatory effects of vitamin D can prevent heart failure
- Low vitamin D levels correlated with magnesium deficiency

coronavirus sample test technician france
A technician scans test tubes containing live coronavirus samples at a laboratory in the Robert Ballanger hospital in Aulnay-sous-Bois near Paris, France, April 30, 2020.
A new study, published Thursday in the Journal of the American Medicine Association, found the coronavirus in semen, too. Particles were detected in the semen of both men who had active infections and those who had recovered.
The researchers aren't yet sure, however, whether the finding means the virus can be sexually transmitted.
Roughly 16% of the men studied had the virus in their semen
A team of Chinese researchers took semen samples from 38 male COVID-19 patients in a hospital in the Henan province, which borders Wuhan, between January 26 and February 16.
The researchers detected the virus, whose official name is SARS-CoV-2, in the semen in six of the 38 patients — roughly 16%. Of the six, four were at the acute stage of active infection and two had recovered.

NHS Nightingale Hospital, an ExCel center field hospital, London, March 30, 2020.
'Protect the NHS'. It's a phrase we've heard ad nauseam in Britain the past few weeks, but has the slogan and the policies underpinning it, actually done more harm than good? The evidence strongly suggests it has. Rather than saving lives, it's actually claimed them in large numbers.
On 17th March, NHS trusts in England were instructed to 'free-up the maximum possible in-patient and critical care capacity'. That meant a large scale discharge of 'all hospital in-patients who are medically fit to leave' and stopping all 'non-urgent elective operations' for at least three months from 15th April at the latest.
How many of these sick patients, rushed out of the hospital to 'free up' beds for COVID-19 patients have subsequently died? This could help explain the sharp rise in non-COVID-19 excess deaths in early April.

Update: Dr Siobhán Ní Bhriain, consultant psychiatrist and HSE integrated care lead, speaks at a Covid-19 press conference at the Department of Health yesterday.
An analysis of the first 327 of the sickest patients with the virus revealed that half (165) had chronic heart disease.
Chronic respiratory disease was diagnosed in 76 patients and another 74 had diabetes.
Comment: It's amazing that in one article they can effectively debunk the entire coronavirus shenanigans. The numbers are unimpressive, almost all the deaths are present with co-morbidities (which is really a misnomer - no one is dying from the coronavirus, they're dying with it) and social distancing measures are really accomplishing nothing but authoritarian compliance. If only people were able to read what is actually being said and started asking questions.
See also:
- Where have all the heart attacks gone? Except for treating Covid-19, many hospitals seem to be eerily quiet
- Trump says coronavirus crisis is 'worse' than Pearl Harbor, 9/11 attacks
- Poll: Two-thirds of Americans doubt coronavirus death tolls
- Funeral directors blow whistle on fake coronavirus death reports
- '60,000 cancer patients could die because of lack of treatment or diagnosis': Oncologist on coronavirus dilemma
This sort of maintenance is necessary to wash away waste cells and fluids, and we know that brains make use of a tiny network of pipes known as the glymphatic system, similar to the lymphatic system that clears out rubbish from the rest of the body.
New tests on mice and rats show that the structures at the back of their eyes - like the optic nerve and the retina - take a page or two from the glymphatic system playbook. In the absence of the standard lymphatic vessels, they funnel waste products through a network a lot like the one the brain uses.












Comment: See also: