[D-G] Holbrooke / Glastonbury Thorn
charles hubaker
solntsepyati at yahoo.com
Thu Feb 3 12:19:13 PST 2011
Theodore notices that the Russians are offering their expert knowledge on
Stuxnet phenomenon from what they learned at Chernobyl. T. recognizes the
diagnotics for hyper- and hypokalemia (high and low potassium) periodic
paralysis, and that a glucose-insulin challenge indeed helps the clinician to
decide which is which in those cases. T. also notices a cause, by tick-bite
(especially in Australia) is flaccid paralysis, a curare-like symptom.
'....No significant increases of birth defects (BD) nosology has been found,
although there is an increasing tendency in the groups 'polydactyly' and
'multiple congenital malformations'. No correlation between BD incidence and
dose exposure has been noticed.'
(Lazjuk GI et al, abstract: The Dynamics of Birth Defects Incidence in Fetuses
and Newborns in Byelorussia after Chernobyl Accident, Am. J. Hum. Genet.
[1991] 49 [Suppl.]
T. forgot, in haste, to ask Delattre about it, yet since fungal
trichothecenes cause poisoning that mimics nuclear poisoning, and because they
may not show up at autopsy, these compounds, too, are also of investigative
value in the Holbrooke 'disappearance.' Fungal toxins would disturb the
collagen-elastin ratio, just as most clinicians think of hyper- and hypokalemic
periodic paralysis as sodium-channelopathies. Yet this is misleading, for T. has
been shown another ratio of god's dx/dy assemblage: sodium exchange is 50 times
faster than potassium in the gastrointestinal tract. That 50: 1 ratio will link
to ECG waveforms in the 300-400 millisecond range as well as thyroid pulse of
the ferret, air quality monitor par excellence.
Egyptian expeditions into Sudan and the Congo, whether or not
military, parallels the Dane, Hamburger, and the 1911 expose which points the
link to the Month of Low Potassium:
Hamburger's Egyptian Stele, 1911
(Scroll down to the fifth image)
http://www.johnpowell.net/pages/clevedon.htm
It is the sugar-accumulating strains of banana from New Guinea that are
important when perusing the literature on tick-borne paralysis, polio, or
cardiac hyper- and hypokalemia. Since bananas are endemic to northern India, it
seemed worth mentioning, since the CDC must not know that Chikungunya virus
could as well have been named by the Indians rather than the Makonde tribe.
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