An End to Upside Down Medicine: Contagion, Viruses, and Vaccines—and Why Consciousness Is Needed for a New Paradigm of Health
By Mark Gober
Waterside Productions
If you think that bacteria cause diseases, you may want to think again. In An End to Upside Down Medicine, Mark Gober asserts that bacteria appear at the scene of underlying toxicity or injury as part of the body’s cleanup crew. Thus far, no agency has provided convincing evidence that bacteria cause disease.
If you think that researchers follow the scientific method when they claim to isolate viruses, rethink that one, too. Like other critics of virology, Gober asserts that studies that do not physically isolate viruses cannot claim that those viruses exist—and if the existence of a virus has not been proven, a nonexistent thing certainly cannot be proven to be an intracellular parasite that causes disease in its host. It follows that drugs invented to help the body fight the unidentified virus are an impossibility.
One virus never proven to exist is polio. Gober explains the flaws in the research allegedly proving its existence and cites the plausible perspective that links “polio’s” typical symptoms to toxic pesticides such as lead arsenate, benzene hexachloride and DDT. Jim West compiled data suggesting that polio cases tracked closely with pesticide use from 1940-1970. Crediting polio vaccines as the savior fails to consider the reduced use of toxic pesticides.
Eleanor McBean, in her 1956 book The Poisoned Needle, concluded that the “Spanish flu” was caused by vaccine-induced poisoning. Her research indicated that the flu only hit the vaccinated; those who refused the shots escaped it.
There are also other ways to understand smallpox; as Gober notes, the treatments of choice for smallpox (mercury, arsenic, antimony) were toxic. As soon as those treatments stopped being used, smallpox started to go away. Gober considers alternative theories for other conditions, too, including chickenpox (is a hormonal element involved?), hepatitis (the role of alcohol consumption is known) and rabies. He cites Dr. Samantha Bailey’s speculation that “rabies” could be a neurotoxin secreted from the animal.
The WHO states, “Black Death is an infectious disease caused by bacteria. . . usually found in small mammals and their fleas,” but Gober discusses evidence from Dawn Lester and David Parker (authors of What Really Makes You Ill: Why Everything You Thought You Knew about Disease Is Wrong), who dispute the theory that fleas spread disease to rodents and from there to humans. A compelling counternarrative is that major environmental events caused “corruption of the air and earth”; Mike Baillie, professor at Queen’s University in Belfast, believes the Black Death was caused by high levels of ammonium released due to the impact of comet debris and a major earthquake on January 25, 1348.
Finally, if you think vaccinated populations have better health outcomes than the unvaccinated, Gober suggests questioning that assumption as well, observing that the “solutions” (that is, vaccines) proposed for many diseases create more problems than they solve. Vax-Unvax by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Brian Hooker assembles considerable evidence on that point, but the medical establishment has a clear vested interest in perpetuating the myth that “germs” rather than medical poisons kill people.
Gober’s common-sense recommendations are to consider factors such as sanitation, toxins, electricity, radiation poisoning, overall lifestyle, nutrition, environmental changes, medications and vaccines. He also proposes that one person’s sickness could cause a physiological change in someone else via an unseen energetic connection. I am not sure about that, but my thumb is up for this look at the flaws in modern medicine.
This article appeared in Wise Traditions in Food, Farming and the Healing Arts, the quarterly journal of the Weston A. Price Foundation, Fall 2024
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