Spanish Flu
Germ THEORY has been debunked since 1918, when the Boston Health Department failed to infect a single healthy subject they contaminated with the bodily fluids of “Spanish Flu” carriers.

Viruses do not exist the way most have been taught to believe. Viruses are Exosomes – solvents for toxic cells. Allopathic medical doctors are trained in Rockefeller funded medical schools without any real nutritional knowledge, taking about two weeks of classes in all their years of study.
Louis Pasteur was another scientist in league with the Rockefellers, and he pushed the Germ Theory, which is still pushed as fact by the medical schools.
Terrain Theory, put into play by Pasteur’s rival, Henry Bechamp, says our bodies express bacteria and viruses as cleaning and alarm-messenger agents to other cells.
To sell drugs and vaccines, pharmaceutical backed companies, doctors and schools ran with Pasteur’s Germ Theory and tried to blame every disease possible on it.
Scurvy, for example, was blamed on infection, yet proven to be caused by a lack of vitamin C.
When kids ate asbestos-laden wall chips, docs and scientists blamed their parents for being stupid. Instead, the “progress” driven by the big money in the last couple centuries saw a lot of toxins from lead, arsenic, DDT, asbestos and many pesticides being sprayed upon the public.

When people get sick the corrupt medical industry blames it on an “infectious” agent, even though the very toxicity that caused the infection is from the environment.
Polio: As farmers & communities began to spray the first arsenic-based “Paris Green” in the late 1800s to control insects, and then lead-arsenate, more cases of paralysis and poisoning appeared, but with no detectable source of “infection.” When the public began to question possible toxicity from pesticides, they were shouted down and mocked – but not challenged with scientific data.
“Reports of children killed by arsenic poisoning began to surface, and authorities who had worked tirelessly to enforce the mandatory application of pesticides blamed the deaths on improper spraying techniques by reckless farmers.”