Site icon Forbidden Knowledge TV

White Mystery Clots: Scientists Weighing in From All Over the World

Dr Jane Ruby is back with more developments on the white rubbery clots unexpectedly discovered in the bodies of the deceased by morticians, including this photograph of a pile of them removed from the leg of a woman by Board Certified Embalmer Richard Hirschman, after the clots had been rinsed and placed into a bowl of water.

At first glance, they looked like Taenia saginata tapeworms to me but we’re told the horizontal marks are not original, they are an artifact of the tool used to remove them from the body.

Hirschman has been connecting with physicians around the world and he is arranging to run a chemical analysis of these samples by a laboratory.

Dr Sucharit Bhakdi is a highly-credentialed, highly-awarded retired professor of immunobiology and microbiology in Germany who was among the first, along with Dr Luc Montagnier to warn us about Antibody-Dependent Enhancement from these injections.

He believes that the endothelial cells that line the all blood vessels throughout the vascular system are taking up the genes from the spike protein in the mRNA from the vaxx. These endothelial cells, in turn, start to produce more of these spike proteins, which then start to protrude from the endothelial cell walls of the blood vessels.

When platelets in the bloodstream brush against these spikes along the vessel walls, their blood clotting factors are activated. Then, the natural killer lymphocytes (NK) come along, whose job it is to provide rapid responses to virus-infected cells and to other intracellular pathogens. These NKs are then triggered to release cytokines to kill the infected cells.

Dr Ruby thinks this is a plausible explanation and that once we get the chemical analysis, we’ll understand a lot more but the mysterious white clots appear to be an immune response and it’s the reason why blood thinners aren’t alleviating the clotting problems being experienced by the vaxxed.

She says she was contacted by a surgeon who removed these from a live patient and that, weeks later, the clots were back.

Per Dr Bhakdi’s explanation, she believes this is because, “It is the mRNA driving the body, especially the endothelial cells in the vasculature to produce the spike protein, which is highly toxic and…turns on platelet signaling and a major clotting cascade.”  

Dr Bhakdi has been roundly denigrated in the German media and throughout the Internet, so for those questioning his credentials, here they are:

Summary of Dr Bhakdi’s Credentials

Bhakdi studied at the Universities of Bonn, Gießen, Mainz and Copenhagen, and at the Max Planck Institute of Immunobiology and Epigenetics in Freiburg.

He studied medicine at the University of Bonn from 1963 to 1970, during part of which (from 1966 to 1970) he was a scholarship holder of the German Academic Exchange Service. Bhakdi worked for a while as a private assistant to the internal medicine specialist Walter Siegenthaler. In February 1971 he received his doctorate in medicine. From 1972 to 1978, he studied at the Max Planck Institute for Immunobiology in Freiburg on scholarships from the Max Planck Society at the Max Planck Institute of Immunobiology in Freiburg and the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation.

He worked at the University of Copenhagen for a year before moving to the Institute of Medical Microbiology at the Justus Liebig University in Gießen, where he worked from 1977 to 1990. In July 1979 he habilitated.

Scientific and medical career

Bhakdi was appointed C2 professor at Gießen in 1982. He spent a further year in Copenhagen and became C3 professor of medical microbiology (at Gießen again) in 1987 before being appointed to the University of Mainz in 1990. From 1991 he headed the Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene as a C4 professor.

Bhakdi retired on 1 April 2012. Since 2016 he has been a visiting scholar at the University of Kiel.

Prior to his retirement, Bhakdi produced scientific work in fields such as bacteriology and atherosclerosis, and published hundreds of scientific articles in these areas. Awards he received include the Order of Merit of Rhineland-Palatinate.

Memberships and functions

Member of the Collaborative Research Centres of the German Research Foundation “Proteins as Tools in Biology” at the University of Giessen (1987-1990),Deputy Spokesperson of the Collaborative Research Center “Immunopathogenesis” (1990-1999)
Spokesperson of the Collaborative Research Center “490 Infection and Persistence in Infections” in Mainz (2000-2011).

He was Editor in Chief of Medical Microbiology and Immunology from 1990 to 2012

Professional awards

1979 Preis der Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen
1980 Konstanzer Medizinischer Förderpreis
1987 Preis der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Hygiene und Mikrobiologie
1988 Dr.-Friedrich-Sasse-Preis
1989 Ludwig-Schunk-Preis für Humanmedizin
1989 Robert-Koch-Förderpreis of Clausthal-Zellerfeld
1991 Gay-Lussac Humboldt Prize
2001 Aronson Prize for „wegweisende Arbeiten auf dem Gebiet des Komplementsystems und bakterieller Toxine“ tr. “pioneering work in the field of the complement system and bacterial toxins”
2005 H. W. Hauss Award
2005 Verdienstorden des Landes Rheinland-Pfalz
2009 Rudolf-Schönheimer Medal of the Deutschen Gesellschaft für Arterioskleroseforschung

Contributed by

Contact

Exit mobile version