Nanobacteria - Staphylo-nanococcus aureus

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Uploaded by on Jan 6, 2008

Antigen-antibody reactions on the surface of Staphylococcus bacteria give rise to the formation of nanobacterial structures, which may be implicated in allergies, SARS, etc..

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  • There is no evidence to support the link between Staph. aureus and the resulting nanobacs. Visual images are no proof. Run a PCR or something.

  • Well, there are antibacterial combinations like astragalus, rose hips and zinc... that usually is pretty potent. And there are other things like ashwaganda and oregon grape, too, that are antibacterial and immunostimulatory.

  • I understand and have utilized a similar protocol, I just can't do the tetracycline part...makes me very sick and destroys too much intestinal flora. I am researching healthier alternatives, and am open to any ideas in that regard...thanks for the input.

  • The guy who made this video says that nanobacteria are nothing more than fragmenting Clostridium or Staphylococcus, but I haven't heard that anywhere else. Maybe he's right, but the important thing is that they form the sort of dams I'm talking about here, and can be removed via the treatments I'm mentioning.

  • The results are incredible. If you can, find a recent book called "The Calcium Bomb" and do a Google search for a company called "Nanobac", that has pioneered the treatment.

  • The nanobacteria leeches calcium out of bones and teeth, and builds a hard, protective cover out of it. Over time, they build "barnacle clusters" throughout the body that cause inflammation and gather cholesterol and cause further fibrous protein encapsulation over their calcium complexes.

    The way to get rid of all of it, is with a three-part protocol of digestive enzymes, EDTA or citrate to dissolve the calcium shells, and then tetracycline to kill the nanobacteria.

  • msm

  • I don't understand what kills the nanobacteria...an "anti-soy" of sorts? What could a person ingest to help destroy the calcium coating this form of bacteria has? Wish the video was more lay-person.

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