Angels, Demons, and At-Home Pandemic Safety
Why surviving this pandemic is going to require a little bit more than listening to the corporate media and the entrenched medical establishment, and might even involve the Good Book.
Dan Sirotkin is the co-author of the first peer-reviewed paper examining a laboratory origin for SARS-CoV-2, as well as its addendum, which formally linked the H1N1 Spanish Flu pandemic strain release of 1977 to gain-of-function research.
Although it’s more visibly preserved within modern Christian traditions, the existence of angels and demons has been a topic of discussion within Judaism for millennia, as both are described throughout the Old Testament in several different ways. Many of these descriptions are otherworldly and kaleidoscopic, presenting them as entirely unfamiliar beings that are utterly alien to the limited scope of our human perception.
Then within later rabbinic discussions around how evil could exist in a world mastered by an omnipotent God, a more familiar idea emerged: “Goodly deeds created good angels, destructive behavior created destructive behaviors… most angels are the creation - really a by-product - of humans rather than God. Thus the balance between the angelic and demonic forces in the universe is a direct result of human decision and action.”
So it would follow that only humanity’s vilest and most destructive behaviors would be able to summon heaven’s most fearsome angel, named in Islamic traditions as Azrael, and within Judaism as the Angel of Death and given many names: Malach Adoni the Angel of the Lord, Mashchit the Destroyer, Samael the Gall of God, and Mavet the Personification of Death.
And perhaps most importantly, in almost all cases the Angel of Death is considered the slowest angel. “Except in times of epidemic, when he is the fastest.” Sure seems like it might be a little bit of a bad thing if this pandemic started as a reverting live-attenuated vaccine (LAV), just like the H1N1 outbreak of 1977 as outlined in our second paper linked above, whose origins have been very intentionally buried by the billionaire sociopaths who conceptualized and funded a SARS-live LAV in the first place.
Something that, incidentally I’m sure, was only being worked at in one place and by one person in the world: Dr. Ralph Baric at UNC.
But you don’t need to believe that this pandemic started as a LAV, nor that the Passover Seder was in fact humanity’s first LAV protocol, designed to protect against the highly-pathogenic swarm of farm-animals viruses that would emerge in the spring as sheep were taken for shearing after a long winter stuffed together in their stalls - just like highly-pathogenic avian influenzas emerge on industrial farms only among the workers in close-contact with the birds - and first took the form of the Angel of Death.
Nor do you need to believe that the only miracle in the Bible that’s supported by archeological evidence, Sennacherib’s retreat from Hezekiah’s Jerusalem in 722BCE after being destroyed by a plague, was the result of yet another highly-pathogenic angelic swarm. This time emerging from the mice that’d infested Sennacherib’s besieging army over the many months of their campaign, the virus finally going highly-pathogenic and slaughtering the Assyrians just in time to save the sometimes City of Peace, saved since the stinky sulfuric fumes from Holiest of Holies repels mice like it does most critters.
After all, that’s why the site for the Holiest of Holies was purchased by King David in the first place, it’d been at this particular threshing floor where an ancient God-sent plague came to a sudden and inexplicable halt, as we learn in the twenty-fourth chapter of second Samuel:
15 So the Lord sent a plague on Israel from that morning until the end of the three days, and seventy thousand of the people from Dan to Beersheba died. 16 When the angel stretched out his hand to destroy Jerusalem, the Lord relented concerning the disaster and said to the angel who was afflicting the people, “Enough! Withdraw your hand.” The angel of the Lord was then at the threshing floor of Araunah the Jebusite.
Lucky for you, you can leave all that religious stuff behind if you’d like, and just focus on the science around what happens when SARS-CoV-2 is exposed to air that’s acidified by sulfuric fumes or by acidic industrial intent:
Hydrogen sulfide might be a bit stinky, but its trinity of immunological benefits is once again the only thing standing between humanity and our utter destruction. This was largely already the case given how long SARS-CoV-2 can exist in normal commercial air, since while natural viruses like influenza are inactivated just floating around in the air after just thirty minutes it takes our novel coronavirus several days to become inactivated in typical commercial air.
However, regardless of ventilation, if that air’s acidity-level is increased, these airborne viral particles that would otherwise remain alive floating around the air for days become inactivated in just thirty seconds. One way to do this is with nitric acid, which can also be derived from volcanic gasses since the nitric oxide found there reacts with water to form nitric acid, and hydrogen sulfide can also serve the same role, albeit more stinkily.
A theory that has been put into practice within commercial settings a few times during this pandemic, with fantastic results:
Evidence is emerging of the beneficial effects of inhaling microaerosolized hypochlorous acid (HOCl) as an intervention in the prevention and treatment of respiratory virus infections, including SARS CoV-2. However, little information is available about the effects of inhalation of homogenous HOCl solutions in normal human subjects or in experimental animals. In this report we establish through independent laboratories that the SARS-CoV-2 virus is rapidly inactivated by exposure to HOCl. Inhalation of an aerosolized form of the same HOCl solution by rodents, in accordance with a US-EPA acute 4-hour inhalation toxicity protocol, then provided observational, gross pathological, and histopathological evidence that their pulmonary exposure did not result in any difference when compared to control animals.
[NOTE: Hypochlorous acid is much more potent acidifier than either sulfuric acid or nitric oxide, and has the benefit of just smelling like a pool instead of farts, so it mimics the effects of those volcanic fumes without the fuss.]
Efficacy of pure HOCl solutions versus SARS-CoV-2 virus Coronavirus suspensions exposed to HOCl for 120 seconds showed a log reduction value (LRV) of 4.25log10 , equivalent to a 99.994% inactivation compared to control recoveries.
[NOTE: Hypochlorous acid kills viruses real damn dead, which is probably why its used in numerous commercial and medical settings.]
At one location in Tacoma, Washington, roughly 35 miles from the authors, machine-shop employees opted to place a single-person tent near their front door. A pump, fogging nozzle, and HOCl reservoir were installed in the tent to provide a dense mist of HOCl. Self-selected employees chose to be exposed to 2 minutes of that aerosolized HOCl in an enclosed chamber for periods averaging 2 minutes prior to entering the facility.
Between 16 April and 24 June of 2020, information on a total of 102 aerosolized HOCl inhalation exposures within that machine shop in Washington state were submitted to the authors. The exposures documented a cumulative total of 191 minutes (3 hours, 11 minutes) of adults inhaling a dense 0.9% saline fog containing HOCl in a closed space. Ages ranged from 18 to 71, and 87% were male. The total volume of HOCl entering the pulmonary tree in those 102 exposures was roughly 72 ml. With that volume of pure hypochlorous acid in contact with delicate respiratory epithelium, zero serious issues were declared. All minor issues reported (6.9% of reports describing “nose tickle”, “runny nose”, and the like) were transient and resolved in less than 1 minute after leaving the tent.
Of the 102 human subject exposures to aerosolized HOCl for 2 minutes, 7 (6.9%) reported minor side effects. All side effects disappeared within 60 seconds of exiting the tent, and all reports were trivial (e.g., "nose itched”). That reporting is contrasted with 12 reports from within the same remote cohort stating improved respiration, relief from nasal congestion, relief from a sore throat or bronchitis, description of an eased headache, and a reduction in bronchodilator use for asthma over subsequent days.
A recent report on systemic administration of HOCl as a part of the therapeutic intervention in COVID-19 patients halted the progression of symptoms.(10) The authors attributed the success of their HOCl treatment of COVID-19 patients to its antiviral properties. Published evidence of the value of HOCl in vitro in protecting nasal mucosal epithelial cells against respiratory viral infections supports that interpretation.(5) Page 10/17 The changes experienced by healthcare workers who inhaled nebulized HOCl within the study conducted by Rafael et al. (11) indicate that there are systemic effects resulting from exposure to HOCl in this way, some of which are clearly beneficial and do not seem to be simply antimicrobial. Whether or not those are affected by HOCl directly or through reaction products arising at the point of mucosal contact remains to be determined.
There is a high likelihood that HOCl rapidly modifies a variety of constituents of both extracellular and intracellular fluids, with the interaction with taurine being one of the most prominent, resulting in the formation of N-chlorotaurine (NCT).(15, 16) Taurine is present in body fluids in amounts that can total 0.1% of total body weight and is particularly likely to be involved in the biological effects of HOCl exposure.(17) Previous work indicates that HOCl and NCT have anti-inflammatory properties (18, 19) and, while beyond the scope of this evaluation, it seems feasible that the anti-inflammatory properties of HOCl and NCT might also lead to reduced local inflammation, lower infectivity through reduced permeability, and perhaps lower morbidity and mortality overall.
So although I’m far from qualified to offer professional medical advice, if you were really inclined to replicate these results, hypochlorous acid smells just like bleach but is non-reactive to household material so doesn’t stain like bleach, and can be easily and fairly cheaply purchased from Amazon.
And although I don’t have any experience with industrial foggers, you can get a home-use humidifier just about anywhere. Just make sure to read the manufacture’s instructions, since most of them are only designed to take water, so adding something else may eventually lead to some issues.
Finally, since you don’t need to run that thing all day, to mimic the paper above just fill it with about two parts water and one part hypochlorous acid, and depending on the size of your room or house and if you’re sharing air in an apartment, use a timer like this to only have it turn on here and there throughout the day and night.
Since I just set mine up last night and had to read the directions for that model at least thirty-seven times, below there’s a translation for anyone who gets the timer and also has trouble with the on-off instruction settings. This shouldn’t replace doing nasal irrigation, which you should definitely start if you haven’t already - you can find a handy and not-at-all ridiculous instructional video embedded within this article along with a lot more guidance.
So especially if you’re at-home situation involves being unwillingly nasally bukkaked by the respiration of other folks in your apartment building or house, you should probably consider whether or not you’re doing enough to keep the Angel of Death from knocking at your door.
Okay so setting up the days of the week for the timer was pretty easy, the first prompt you get is all seven, but if you travel or something you can scroll through other options. Setting up the time was also clear, but here’s how you do the alarms after you’ve selected your days:
Press the HOUR button until your desired hour of the day is selected. Do the same with MIN, for minute of the day. While you’re doing this, you’ll see “1on” in the bottom left, indicating that you’re setting the on time for your first alarm.
Then press the PROG button once, now you should see “1off” in the bottom left, indicating that you’re now setting the off time for the first time that you just set the on time for. Now do the same thing with HOUR and MIN.
If you want to keep going, press PROG again, and you’ll see “2on” in the bottom left, indicating that you’re about to set the on time for your second alarm - so you can do that following the same instructions to set a second alarm’s start and stop time, you can do up to eight different ones. If you just want one alarm, press CLOCK instead, and you’ll go back to the current time and save all the alarms you’ve just set.
Since dividing 24 hours by the eight alarms you can set gives you three hour chunks, you can set the humidifier to go for 15 to 40 minutes every three hours depending on how big your space is. And the good news is that you can see the fog working to estimate how long it takes to fill a room, if you darken your room and only let in a slit of sun from outside, you can easily see it dancing in the light.
More impactful than angels on pinheads, hopefully.
Is the HOCl superior to iodine reconstitutions for nasal spray?