Yes. The end product of the penicillin-producing fungus is also given to the sick body in a concentrate, which destroys the cell wall. If the body is so weakened by toxins that it considers it a breeding ground for a type of fungus, then I think it is possible to get sick even from the substance digested by the fungus in the body. Although by this time the body is already very poisoned...
Yes. The end product of the penicillin-producing fungus is also given to the sick body in a concentrate, which destroys the cell wall. If the body is so weakened by toxins that it considers it a breeding ground for a type of fungus, then I think it is possible to get sick even from the substance digested by the fungus in the body. Although by this time the body is already very poisoned...
This is serious! We learned in elementary school that the byproduct of paper production is a highly toxic and corrosive substance... What do they "cure" with it, life?
I once saw a video on a TV channel where a man had his entire face—eyes, nose—removed due to an alleged black mold infection. If the diagnosis was true, I don't understand how he got moldy.
Mold on the wall certainly indicates that it consumes something that can be toxic. When the wall is wet, the humidity might dissolve some of that stuff, because under such circumstances, mold grows rapidly.
When I lived in the desert, the average humidity was about 8 percent, but black mold was still there in the bathroom.
Antibiotics eradicate the gut flora (especially in those who have their appendix removed), which gives the body a chance to start over, assuming the illness was due to a major imbalance in the gut flora, but ABs also poison the body in ways that are not publicized. The only public argument against them is that they cause AB-resistant "superbugs" to develop.
I can't imagine black mold in someone's face; it was most likely sensationalism or a cover-up for poisoning.
After all, the presence of mold seems to indicate the presence of stuff that mold eats, and those are usually pretty nasty things...
Yes. The end product of the penicillin-producing fungus is also given to the sick body in a concentrate, which destroys the cell wall. If the body is so weakened by toxins that it considers it a breeding ground for a type of fungus, then I think it is possible to get sick even from the substance digested by the fungus in the body. Although by this time the body is already very poisoned...
That reminds me of the latest psyop fad, DMSO. It had quite a few "commenters" to defend it, too:
https://rayhorvaththesource.substack.com/p/more-miracle-drugs-dmso-and-methylene
This is serious! We learned in elementary school that the byproduct of paper production is a highly toxic and corrosive substance... What do they "cure" with it, life?
I once saw a video on a TV channel where a man had his entire face—eyes, nose—removed due to an alleged black mold infection. If the diagnosis was true, I don't understand how he got moldy.
Mold on the wall certainly indicates that it consumes something that can be toxic. When the wall is wet, the humidity might dissolve some of that stuff, because under such circumstances, mold grows rapidly.
When I lived in the desert, the average humidity was about 8 percent, but black mold was still there in the bathroom.
Antibiotics eradicate the gut flora (especially in those who have their appendix removed), which gives the body a chance to start over, assuming the illness was due to a major imbalance in the gut flora, but ABs also poison the body in ways that are not publicized. The only public argument against them is that they cause AB-resistant "superbugs" to develop.
I can't imagine black mold in someone's face; it was most likely sensationalism or a cover-up for poisoning.
After all, the presence of mold seems to indicate the presence of stuff that mold eats, and those are usually pretty nasty things...