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49 minutes ago, Tinfoil Hat said:

John O'Looney - Hospitals Are Covering Up Baby Deaths By Cremating Babies Themselves

mariazeee Published July 14, 2022 81,240 Views
 
Link to interview video...
 

John O'Looney is a brave Funeral Home whistleblower who has been raising the alarm since early on in the pandemic.

He joined us to discuss the findings from his embalmer which are in line with what Dr. Jane Ruby, Richard Hirschman and others have found - long, fibrous strands inside people who have been injected.

During our interview, John revealed shock information regarding hospitals covering up baby deaths by cremating the babies themselves.

 

The above is quite long, so I will give a summation.

 

I saw a video of this John O'Looney (unfortunate and inapproptiate name imo) quite recently performing an autopsy, and extracting the 'calamari like' shite out of someone's artery or vein (can't remember which) some of which were a couple of feet long.

 

He comments on the fact that Dr's KNOW the damage being done. He says he's known many of them for a long time, and describes them as good people who are now doing something bad because they are hiding what's happening, and he is urging them to do the right thing, saying whether they like it or not, the truth is slowly coming to light. He's telling them to get on the right side of history, and warning them to think of what will happen once the reality is known - he says they (the Dr's) don't hjave bunkers to go and hide in, unlike the people who are the real guilty.

 

He speculates that they may have been coerced by  possibly having being given big pay-outs to sign non-disclosure agreements and are now afraid of spilling the beans because of the consequences. Maybe they no longer have that money to pay it back which will have been one of the clauses, on top of being sacked and struck off. 

 

He's seen a notice up in Milton-Keynes Hospital regarding their dealing with the cremation of deceased babies, and that shocked him because it has never happened before.

When he's asked people he knows there, he's been told (but has not seen it with his own eyes) that they are dealing with 6 to 8 babies bodies at a time, which he says is highly abnormal. He suggests the best people to question about it would be midwives.

 

He sounds extremely plausible, and has been threatened for speaking out. And actually he believes they went after him. He became ill and was hospitalised. They couldn't tell him the medical benefit of the medication they tried to get him to take, and he looked them up and knew they were absolutley the wrong med's to prescribe to someone who's suffering from breathing difficulties. (3 lateral flow tests for Covid had been negative).

He believes they wanted a staunch anti-vaxxer to die "of Covid", so they tried to kill him with the med's so that they could portray his death to have been the result of Covid. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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4283.jpg?width=620&quality=45&fit=max&dp

 

 

Here we go with a look at 'Prof' Fry's outfit.. on one side, Glacier Buttercup (Ranunculus glacialis) ..poisonous and on the other Fly Agaric (Amanita muscaria)..also poisonous.

 

An odd  choice for a programme on vaccine safety!

 

Or is this just a coincidence?

 

Or is it the high ups having a laugh at the gullible, trusting peasants?

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46 minutes ago, Youknownothingbutyou said:

Wow, good clue.

yeh, that mushroom is fly agaric, not fun at all. Its not magic mushroom lol, its dark and evil effects

 

 

 

Thanks. They do like leaving little clues around, knowing that only 1 in a 1000 or 1 in 5000 will ever notice them.

 

The crap BBC documentary pretends that vaccines are safe, but the presenter's top says not.

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1 hour ago, KingKitty said:

I understand. Was not a knock against you specifically. The King Kitty is beyond the point of fed up with all things "Covid". 

 

I hope some day all these employers get their comeuppance for forcing their employees to do all this crap.  

I know mate I'm sick of it all as well and can't quite believe I am stuck here and can't believe I did the test tbh. 

 

I'm in a shit job at the moment and they treat us all like kids I have a terrible record on my CV so can't resign until I find something a bit better. 

 

 

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47 minutes ago, Tinfoil Hat said:

 

The above is quite long, so I will give a summation.

 

I saw a video of this John O'Looney (unfortunate and inapproptiate name imo) quite recently performing an autopsy, and extracting the 'calamari like' shite out of someone's artery or vein (can't remember which) some of which were a couple of feet long.

 

He comments on the fact that Dr's KNOW the damage being done. He says he's known many of them for a long time, and describes them as good people who are now doing something bad because they are hiding what's happening, and he is urging them to do the right thing, saying whether they like it or not, the truth is slowly coming to light. He's telling them to get on the right side of history, and warning them to think of what will happen once the reality is known - he says they (the Dr's) don't hjave bunkers to go and hide in, unlike the people who are the real guilty.

 

He speculates that they may have been coerced by  possibly having being given big pay-outs to sign non-disclosure agreements and are now afraid of spilling the beans because of the consequences. Maybe they no longer have that money to pay it back which will have been one of the clauses, on top of being sacked and struck off. 

 

He's seen a notice up in Milton-Keynes Hospital regarding their dealing with the cremation of deceased babies, and that shocked him because it has never happened before.

When he's asked people he knows there, he's been told (but has not seen it with his own eyes) that they are dealing with 6 to 8 babies bodies at a time, which he says is highly abnormal. He suggests the best people to question about it would be midwives.

 

He sounds extremely plausible, and has been threatened for speaking out. And actually he believes they went after him. He became ill and was hospitalised. They couldn't tell him the medical benefit of the medication they tried to get him to take, and he looked them up and knew they were absolutley the wrong med's to prescribe to someone who's suffering from breathing difficulties. (3 lateral flow tests for Covid had been negative).

He believes they wanted a staunch anti-vaxxer to die "of Covid", so they tried to kill him with the med's so that they could portray his death to have been the result of Covid. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Quite possibly they tried to give him a respiratory depressive such as Midazolam or a high dose of opioids.

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Anyone picked up on this yet? Adenovirus delivered gene therapy ( same as the ChadOx Oxford vaccine delivery system) and the other non mRnA vaccines. Openly described as GENE THERAPY delivering DNA to permanently alter genes. From the New Scientist but widely reported in the MSM.

 

"Gene therapy trial shows early success in people with haemophilia B

In a small study of 10 people with haemophilia B, nine were still forgoing the condition's standard treatment about two years after receiving a single gene therapy injection

HEALTH 21 July 2022

By Jason Arunn Murugesu

 

A form of gene therapy has shown initial success in treating a rare form of haemophilia, but whether the treatment will be effective in the long term is unknown.

Haemophilia B is a rare genetic condition that prevents blood from clotting effectively, sometimes causing life-threatening bleeds. It occurs due to a genetic mutation in the X chromosome that leaves people unable to produce sufficient levels of the protein factor IX, which is crucial for blood clotting.

It is currently treated by regular injections, usually weekly, of laboratory-produced factor IX. Despite this treatment, some people continue to have debilitating joint damage.

To test the potential of gene therapy to correct this genetic fault, researchers at University College London, the Royal Free Hospital in London and the biotechnology company Freeline Therapeutics infused 10 adult men experiencing haemophilia B with a single dose of a treatment called FLT180a, administered via an adenovirus-associated virus.

Any form of haemophilia is far more common in males than females as the latter carry two X chromosomes and therefore only experience the condition if both their chromosomes are affected or if one chromosome is missing or non-functioning.

Twenty-six weeks after the gene therapy was administered, all the participants had increased factor IX levels, which varied according to the gene therapy dose the individual received.

About two years later, this response was sustained in nine of the 10 participants. At the start of the study, all the men had factor IX levels of 2 per cent or less of what is considered normal. At their last reported check-up, this ranged from 23 per cent to 260 per cent in the nine participants, depending on their gene therapy dose.

Moreover, the nine participants no longer needed to undergo their previous treatment regimen of factor IX injections.

 

“Removing the need for haemophilia patients to regularly inject themselves with the missing protein is an important step in improving their quality of life,” Pratima Chowdary at University College London said in a statement.

This form of gene therapy uses a packaging from the proteins found in the outer coat of the adenovirus-associated virus to deliver a functional copy of a gene directly to an individual’s tissues, compensating for the gene that isn’t working properly, according to the researchers. Newly synthesised proteins are then released into the blood.

The participants will be followed for 15 years in total. “The long-term follow-up study will monitor the patients for durability of expression and surveillance for late effects,” said Chowdary.

Based on the evidence so far into this type of gene therapy, John McVey at the University of Surrey in the UK thinks the participants’ factor IX levels will drop in the long term. In addition, people cannot receive this specific gene therapy with the same type of viral vector more than once.

“The body might recognise it [the viral vector] as foreign and increase antibody levels, which immediately bind to the virus and neutralise it,” says McVey.

The therapy also requires participants to regularly take immunosuppressants to ensure their body doesn’t reject FLT180a. Long-term use of immunosuppressants has been linked with an increased infection risk. McVey says it is unclear how long the participants will need to be on immunosuppressants.

Of the reported adverse events in the study, about 10 per cent were related to the gene therapy and 24 per cent to immunosuppression. A serious blood clot occurred in one of the participants who received a high dose.

Overall, McVey says the findings are encouraging: “There’s a lot of work to be done but it’s very promising.”

“There’s a big difference between one injection that cures you for a particular length of time compared to replacement therapy – which is what we use now – that requires injections at least once a week for the whole of their lives,” he says.

Journal reference: New England Journal of Medicine, DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa2119913

 

FOLLOW US

© Copyright New Scientist Ltd.

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Edited by kj35
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4 minutes ago, Fluke said:

I know mate I'm sick of it all as well and can't quite believe I am stuck here and can't believe I did the test tbh. 

 

I'm in a shit job at the moment and they treat us all like kids I have a terrible record on my CV so can't resign until I find something a bit better. 

 

 

Same here. I took the test once because I wasn't going to die on that hill. Once done I had a strong conviction that I had done wrong and motioned never to do it again. I've since faked tests on a few occasions by wiping the swab on objects such as toilet seats and the sole of a works boot.

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48 minutes ago, pete675 said:

4283.jpg?width=620&quality=45&fit=max&dp

 

 

Here we go with a look at 'Prof' Fry's outfit.. on one side, Glacier Buttercup (Ranunculus glacialis) ..poisonous and on the other Fly Agaric (Amanita muscaria)..also poisonous.

 

An odd  choice for a programme on vaccine safety!

 

Or is this just a coincidence?

 

Or is it the high ups having a laugh at the gullible, trusting peasants?

Wow!!
amazing what one does not see.

 

I would suggest “subliminal reassurance” 

 

as kids those two images were commonplace in storybooks.
 

 

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27 minutes ago, kj35 said:

Anyone picked up on this yet? Adenovirus delivered gene therapy ( same as the ChadOx Oxford vaccine delivery system) and the other non mRnA vaccines. Openly described as GENE THERAPY delivering DNA to permanently alter genes. From the New Scientist but widely reported in the MSM.

 

"Gene therapy trial shows early success in people with haemophilia B

In a small study of 10 people with haemophilia B, nine were still forgoing the condition's standard treatment about two years after receiving a single gene therapy injection

HEALTH 21 July 2022

By Jason Arunn Murugesu

 

A form of gene therapy has shown initial success in treating a rare form of haemophilia, but whether the treatment will be effective in the long term is unknown.

Haemophilia B is a rare genetic condition that prevents blood from clotting effectively, sometimes causing life-threatening bleeds. It occurs due to a genetic mutation in the X chromosome that leaves people unable to produce sufficient levels of the protein factor IX, which is crucial for blood clotting.

It is currently treated by regular injections, usually weekly, of laboratory-produced factor IX. Despite this treatment, some people continue to have debilitating joint damage.

To test the potential of gene therapy to correct this genetic fault, researchers at University College London, the Royal Free Hospital in London and the biotechnology company Freeline Therapeutics infused 10 adult men experiencing haemophilia B with a single dose of a treatment called FLT180a, administered via an adenovirus-associated virus.

Any form of haemophilia is far more common in males than females as the latter carry two X chromosomes and therefore only experience the condition if both their chromosomes are affected or if one chromosome is missing or non-functioning.

Twenty-six weeks after the gene therapy was administered, all the participants had increased factor IX levels, which varied according to the gene therapy dose the individual received.

About two years later, this response was sustained in nine of the 10 participants. At the start of the study, all the men had factor IX levels of 2 per cent or less of what is considered normal. At their last reported check-up, this ranged from 23 per cent to 260 per cent in the nine participants, depending on their gene therapy dose.

Moreover, the nine participants no longer needed to undergo their previous treatment regimen of factor IX injections.

 

“Removing the need for haemophilia patients to regularly inject themselves with the missing protein is an important step in improving their quality of life,” Pratima Chowdary at University College London said in a statement.

This form of gene therapy uses a packaging from the proteins found in the outer coat of the adenovirus-associated virus to deliver a functional copy of a gene directly to an individual’s tissues, compensating for the gene that isn’t working properly, according to the researchers. Newly synthesised proteins are then released into the blood.

The participants will be followed for 15 years in total. “The long-term follow-up study will monitor the patients for durability of expression and surveillance for late effects,” said Chowdary.

Based on the evidence so far into this type of gene therapy, John McVey at the University of Surrey in the UK thinks the participants’ factor IX levels will drop in the long term. In addition, people cannot receive this specific gene therapy with the same type of viral vector more than once.

“The body might recognise it [the viral vector] as foreign and increase antibody levels, which immediately bind to the virus and neutralise it,” says McVey.

The therapy also requires participants to regularly take immunosuppressants to ensure their body doesn’t reject FLT180a. Long-term use of immunosuppressants has been linked with an increased infection risk. McVey says it is unclear how long the participants will need to be on immunosuppressants.

Of the reported adverse events in the study, about 10 per cent were related to the gene therapy and 24 per cent to immunosuppression. A serious blood clot occurred in one of the participants who received a high dose.

Overall, McVey says the findings are encouraging: “There’s a lot of work to be done but it’s very promising.”

“There’s a big difference between one injection that cures you for a particular length of time compared to replacement therapy – which is what we use now – that requires injections at least once a week for the whole of their lives,” he says.

Journal reference: New England Journal of Medicine, DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa2119913

 

FOLLOW US

© Copyright New Scientist Ltd.

Back to top"

 

It's the in thing, don't you know.

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1 minute ago, Tinfoil Hat said:

 

It's the in thing, don't you know.

It's interesting though as I heard some people even in the 'truth movement' almost defending these non mRNA options as not gene therapy, as an option if forced to be vaccinated instead of the mRNA pfizer types.   Seems they were wrong ( as we thought,  said, were laughed at, etc)

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42 minutes ago, Tinfoil Hat said:

He does tell you in the video what they were, but I started typing a precis while part way through listening 

This is big sinister part of whole thing how they are using these respiratory suppressants and getting away with it .

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2 hours ago, Tinfoil Hat said:

 

The above is quite long, so I will give a summation.

 

I saw a video of this John O'Looney (unfortunate and inapproptiate name imo) quite recently performing an autopsy, and extracting the 'calamari like' shite out of someone's artery or vein (can't remember which) some of which were a couple of feet long.

 

He comments on the fact that Dr's KNOW the damage being done. He says he's known many of them for a long time, and describes them as good people who are now doing something bad because they are hiding what's happening, and he is urging them to do the right thing, saying whether they like it or not, the truth is slowly coming to light. He's telling them to get on the right side of history, and warning them to think of what will happen once the reality is known - he says they (the Dr's) don't hjave bunkers to go and hide in, unlike the people who are the real guilty.

 

He speculates that they may have been coerced by  possibly having being given big pay-outs to sign non-disclosure agreements and are now afraid of spilling the beans because of the consequences. Maybe they no longer have that money to pay it back which will have been one of the clauses, on top of being sacked and struck off. 

 

He's seen a notice up in Milton-Keynes Hospital regarding their dealing with the cremation of deceased babies, and that shocked him because it has never happened before.

When he's asked people he knows there, he's been told (but has not seen it with his own eyes) that they are dealing with 6 to 8 babies bodies at a time, which he says is highly abnormal. He suggests the best people to question about it would be midwives.

 

He sounds extremely plausible, and has been threatened for speaking out. And actually he believes they went after him. He became ill and was hospitalised. They couldn't tell him the medical benefit of the medication they tried to get him to take, and he looked them up and knew they were absolutley the wrong med's to prescribe to someone who's suffering from breathing difficulties. (3 lateral flow tests for Covid had been negative).

He believes they wanted a staunch anti-vaxxer to die "of Covid", so they tried to kill him with the med's so that they could portray his death to have been the result of Covid. 

 

 

Regarding the part of your post specifically concerning veins, Richard D Hall recently removed a video he had made concerning claims that embalmers are, in the aftermath of the Covid injections, finding unusual veins in dead people.

 

I see Richard D Hall as a man of integrity. When retracting the video from his Richplanet platform, he issued the following correction.

 

Quote

The video explored rubbery strands that have been found by embalmers inside the veins of dead people. The claim is that these strands are like nothing that has been found before and are caused as a result of COVID vaccination. I received an email which contends the claims, see below ...

 

"As a former military medic and having been in theatre on many occasions seeing the procedure done, I can tell you outright that the samples shown in the Infowars video are pure disinformation. What the samples in the video are, are varicose veins that have been removed from a said patient, these come in many sizes as seen in the vile show in your video, you might want to reconsider taking down the link and do your own research before posting such content."

 

https://youtu.be/E5NU869cfyo

 

If you want to watch the video that I posted on Richplanet (which has since been removed by me), you can find it here ...

 

https://www.brighteon.com/f972efaf-1a17-4cee-82f0-62a37e740765

 

I do not know whether the strands being extracted by embalmers ARE something different to normal varicose veins ? I'd appreciate any analysis by suitably qualified persons to determine whether they are unusual, and whether they may be due to vaccination.

 

Thanks, Richard

 

In light of this, until such time as what he has been saying is substantiated, I take John O'Looney's claims with caution.

 

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2 hours ago, Youknownothingbutyou said:

Wow, good clue.

yeh, that mushroom is fly agaric, not fun at all. Its not magic mushroom lol, its dark and evil effects

 

 

 

If I am not mistaken that's the stuff witches used to take to make them feel like flying. You know... broomsticks and stuff.

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7 minutes ago, Freaky Dragonfly said:

 

If I am not mistaken that's the stuff witches used to take to make them feel like flying. You know... broomsticks and stuff.

Thats ergot they would rub on their pussies.

 

My bad was henbane.🤡😂😋

Edited by oddsnsods
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1 minute ago, oddsnsods said:

Thats ergot they would rub on their pussies.

 

I am sure I saw it somewhere...

 

Fly Agaric Witches Flying Ointment

https://thejaggedpath.com/products/fly-agaric-witches-flying-ointment

https://curiousminds.co.uk/blogs/curious-mind-blog/the-magic-of-witches-broomsticks-fly-agaric-mushroom

 

Anyway you put it the Prof is a nasty witch (look at her twisted face) and we all know what happens to nasty witches.

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6 hours ago, Freaky Dragonfly said:

 

We are both around 70 and with the lockdowns and all that we very rarely go out apart from once a day go walking the streets around our residence because I need the exercise. It most definitely isn't food poisoning. And yes we do eat meat but very occasionally, say, twice a month. In the last two weeks we went together once to a small supermarket down the road as most of our shopping gets delivered.

I see what you mean and I agree that viruses don't manifest symptoms overnight. We don't have 5G coverage here and I just checked and the nearest 5G tower is about 1 mile away.

All I can say is that it feels like a cold without any of the waterworks and with additional elements like severe dizziness, confused minds, muscle aches and total loss of appetite. By the way, we are both much better today and I can see that in a few more days we will be back to normal. What confused me the most is the point that we have appeared to have the same 'disease' but some of our symptoms are totally different... like her throat felt practically closed while mine was fine and she had mild diarrhea while my stuff was normal.

After everything you have said, it is possible that we picked something up at an earlier date that we cannot pinpoint. It is the weirdest thing I have ever experienced and as somebody else described it, brutal. My SO thinks that some of our older friends would probably not have survived it. Thanks for your interest. Very much appreciated.

Thanks very much for your reply. I'm glad you're both feeling better.
 

I'd agree that if it's a viral infection you probably both picked it up around the same time earlier. Our immune systems are amazing, beautifully complex things and will often respond differently to infections depending on a variety of factors (e.g. infection vector, overall health, prior similar infections), hence your differing symptoms. It would also explain why your wife took ill slightly earlier.

 

I've been lucky to avoid whatever is causing this so far, although I've been very ill with the flu a couple of times in the last 10 years with symptoms identical to 'Covid'. Most recently in 2015 which left me with neurological symptoms (severe migranes) for almost 18 months.

 

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6 minutes ago, Mitochondrial Eve said:

 

Regarding the part of your post specifically concerning veins, Richard D Hall recently removed a video he had made concerning claims that embalmers are, in the aftermath of the Covid injections, finding unusual veins in dead people.

 

I see Richard D Hall as a man of integrity. When retracting the video from his Richplanet platform, he issued the following correction.

 

 

In light of this, until such time as what he has been saying is substantiated, I take John O'Looney's claims with caution.

 

 

I saw that and have a high opinion of Richard D Hall. He's not infallible though, and although I've found most of his coverage to be very high calibre, I have also seen a live presentation from him that (to me) seemed ludicrous. It's not necessarily right to accept or reject something on the strength of someone else's judgment unless they divulge some particular knowledge they have that qualified them to judge more accurately than you.

 

Also, I don't know what particular footage he retracted. While I accept that you can't always tell what's real on film and what isn't, the video I saw looked genuine to me. He made incisions, then rooted about and found the end of the anomalous thing and extracted it (not singular - he did this several times at different points of the body). The things were stretchy and looked like veins themselves, some very long. It would be very difficult to fake that convincingly. However, as always, if someone can present a persuasive argument for that being the case I am keen to see or hear it.

 

May I ask whether you watched the video I posted?

 

 

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Just now, Freaky Dragonfly said:

 

I am sure I saw it somewhere...

 

Fly Agaric Witches Flying Ointment

https://thejaggedpath.com/products/fly-agaric-witches-flying-ointment

https://curiousminds.co.uk/blogs/curious-mind-blog/the-magic-of-witches-broomsticks-fly-agaric-mushroom

 

Anyway you put it the Prof is a nasty witch (look at her twisted face) and we all know what happens to nasty witches.

 

Flygaric is where you get the Santa Claus & Rudolph flying...as reindeers love to eat flygaric or amanita muscaria. Very popular in Britain in days of old it seems & with the church too.

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3 minutes ago, oddsnsods said:

 

Flygaric is where you get the Santa Claus & Rudolph flying...as reindeers love to eat flygaric or amanita muscaria. Very popular in Britain in days of old it seems & with the church too.

 

I remember reading that some people would then drink the reindeer's unrine because containing the flyagaric, it was still a potent halucinogen. 

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