46 Comments
User's avatar
Andreas Oehler's avatar

May 8 is fast approaching, and I will surely watch another Japan wave of Covid deaths in the stats, unless they drop the data reporting altogether.

Kitsune, Maskless Crusader.'s avatar

That is exactly what we have seen after every other relaxing of recommendations. Hard to believe that this time will be different, despite the signs that it might be. Dropping the silly “testing” is the key.

Andreas Oehler's avatar

...as they did in the UK and most other places. Just in time for the spring booster.

Kitsune, Maskless Crusader.'s avatar

Their timing is uncanny, is it not?

Andreas Oehler's avatar

Yep, dropped right before the next jabbing campaign. In Japan.

Kitsune, Maskless Crusader.'s avatar

Here they liked to relax the restrictions…er….Recommendations!, just before a holiday period or seasonal surges. Criminals.

Andreas Oehler's avatar

I have just updated my post with the newest stats - the trend keeps accelerating: https://live2fightanotherday.substack.com/p/japans-9th-covid-wave

Kitsune, Maskless Crusader.'s avatar

Thanks. Just left a comment there.

OUTRAGED HUMAN's avatar

Biomedical engineering students should already understand the toxicity of nanotechnology IN MASKS, INJECTIONS AND PCR TESTS....

https://outraged.substack.com/p/can-toxic-substances-be-mandated

Kitsune, Maskless Crusader.'s avatar

So should medical professionals, in my view and if not, accept that such are out of their lane. At least in Japan they have the excuse of having lived with masks and masking all their lives as they have been worn, fruitlessly, against flu and colds here since the Spanish flu. Still, yes, they should know better.

OUTRAGED HUMAN's avatar

I used to use masks before 'Covid' bought from Kimberly Clark. It did not contain graphene or other nanotechnology. So, at least they weren't killing you with nanotechnology

Kitsune, Maskless Crusader.'s avatar

Masks have their uses, filtering out viruses is not one of them.

I saved the posts you sent links to but have yet to read them in detail. I have read one report that’s for the first time, plastic fibers are being found in lung tissue of the general public. Not at all surprising give that everyone is wearing them for far too long. I doubt this was a major concern back when few wore them and then for much shorter duration. Is that the case with these nanotubes. If masks containing these were changed every 4 hours as surgical masks are, would this reduce the risk to acceptable levels or are these just bad from the get go?

OUTRAGED HUMAN's avatar

I have read so many studies on nanotechnology. Until the 'pandemic', I remember reading only one short sentence/mention in these studies that because the sharp edges of graphene kills bacteria, it MAY also be helpful against viruses. When the "pandemic" started, it became a miracle material against viruses. This is well intended

I did an experiment, I put this mask under water. After 2 minutes some of the graphene was already visible on the surface. So people, children inhale it, it's unbelievable.

Steve Martin's avatar

Nice to meet ya Outraged.

Just prior to surgical removal (6 months ago) of a thyroid gland here in a Japanese hospital, I was required to take a PCR 'test' to get the go-ahead with the operation. The hospital first having already insured their costs are covered, checked me in, shown me the ropes, (and having read Kary Mullis's 'Dancing Naked in the Mind Field') — I had my doubts about the validity of the 'test'.

When the time came, I was ushered into a small room with about a half dozen others, socially distanced of course, and was the first one called to stand on the scales, and then sit behind a portable curtain screen while being 'tested'. The nurse rammed a swab so far up my nose, I thought she was checking for hemorrhoids, and my tear-ducts involuntarily began to water.

Prior to the 'testing', and afterwards, I knew that the swabs could easily be doped to introduce a population-reducing toxin, but there was little I could do about it. If I had insisted on them using my own sealed nasal swab, something could have been directly introduced into me during throat surgery.

Since that surgery about 6 months ago, as was warned, I have a lost a bit of my voice (the high end of an octave or two), but more worrying, I have had a slight hacking cough. Not much and not often, but at least once a day.

Now that I've returned from a family emergency trip to the states to see my rapidly fading mother (her case, I suspect being related to the Big-Pharma treatment ... from about 16:00 of this John Campbell video ... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kEE5OfiVS7o), I am almost afraid to ask for a lung x-ray. I've never been a smoker, but will not be surprised if I hear the worst.

As with Kitsune, I have some background in the sciences ... undergrad in biology, about 20 years as bio-lab director for Temple University Japan, and lots of reading in philosophy of science ... T.S. Kuhn and Karl Popper my biggest early influences. And like Kitsune, I am dumbfounded by the large-scale campaign of gas-lighting the general populace is being subjected to.

I have lost faith in just about all 'authority' and in all domains ... whether institutionally sanctioned, or self-selecting. The predators among us are wrecking havoc. It is far easier to disrupt an intricately complex pocket watch, than to build or maintain one with haphazard 'fixes'.

Either as collateral damage or flattering myself with being targeted for elimination, I suspect I am already a dead man walking. Meh, nobody gets out of this room alive. I just have to go with as much grace and moral autonomy as I can muster, which means defending those least capable of defending themselves.

Cheers Outraged. And followed.

steve

Kitsune, Maskless Crusader.'s avatar

You passed the PCR technique?

Steve Martin's avatar

Hi Kitsune,

Yeah. It cost about $250.00 and took about 45 minutes to get a 'negative result'. I could not figure out how to input the documentation into the Japanese phone app which contains my Passport info, but I only had to show it at the Tucson airport — as it was the first leg of my back-to-Japan trip. A kabuki show ... but perhaps a grim hint at the ease with which travel restrictions may be introduced on a whim.

Other than the showmanship and cost, it was okay. The nurse was more gentle than her Japanese counterpart. She rubbed the swab lightly on the inside of both nostrils. The doctor was a graduate of Dartmouth (I think paid for through his stint in the Airforce), and had visited Japan on a package tour of medical personnel, so we shared a bit of light banter about our connection in both having visited the Daisetsu Suzuki museum in Kanazawa.

When he expressed surprise that I had not taken even the first CoVid shot, I mentioned that none of my Japanese friends had taken the jab ... but rather than risk a 'positive test result', I didn't mention that Japan had identified and rejected one lot of gene treatments as having metallic particles with magnetic properties (which Moderna waved off as a fluke ... a poor production practice at a Spanish factory).

I also did not ask him about informed consent, how many cycles the PCR is run, what, exactly the PCR is detecting, or if he had read anything by Kary Mullis, Laura Dodsworth, RFKJr., etc.

So yeah, I passed, this time. Hopefully old enough and marginalized enough to not be seen as threat by the sociopathic ruling class, but still aspire to be a thorn in their ass. 😂

G'night from No-burrito, no enchiladas, no chimichangas.

steve

Kitsune, Maskless Crusader.'s avatar

$250.!! Not sure why that surprises me. It shouldn’t, but it does. I guess it is because no one has shared the cost before. That’s an extra $1,000 for a family of 4 for a useless (As a diagnostic) procedure. Just another attack on commercial air travel. Did you have to take another PCR upon arrival in Japan? When did you get one from a Japanese nurse?

Steve Martin's avatar

Yep. He's got to pay for his condo somehow. Didn't have to take another test in Japan, but my first and only other test was about 6 months ago. It was, and I think still is, a requirement by all Japanese hospitals prior to surgery. I had my right thyroid gland removed at St. Marianna near Ikuta.

But controlling us through 'health passes' may have outlived its peak usefulness. This is coming, whether we like it or not ... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yt3jFUDDRAQ. Even with my anti-vax, community volunteer buddies here in Japan ... I don't know if I have the skills or social currency to survive outside the coming system.

Kitsune, Maskless Crusader.'s avatar

Vaccine passports for international travel should have rung alarms in all experienced travelers. They are simply not needed, the are redundant. That is one of the big reasons for visas, to make sure the traveler has the necessary vaccines enter the country and return to their own. This being true, they were obviously lying about the need for vaccine passports even without knowing that the covid “vaxxes” didn’t even stop transmission. Thus, it follows, that these vaccine passports were being pushed for some other reason/s.

When you get time, please read my multi post series on Technological Revenge. I go quite deep into the pieces of the puzzle I have run across and how they can be fit together. Though the last is numbered “5” there are actually 6 posts, the first is unnumbered. To these you can the MY Number we have here in Japan.

Kitsune, Maskless Crusader.'s avatar

I will look at the link later but what I know already is what nightmares of made of. The tech to put us all into a digital prison already exists and the infrastructure is being built at this moment, much of it already up and running. If we do not stop it, no one will able to survive outside of it.

OUTRAGED HUMAN's avatar

As for the formation of amyloid plaques - NAC disperses them and does not allow them to aggregate

I would use NAC, Glycine, MSM plus other antioxidants

https://outraged.substack.com/p/causes-of-injuries-and-deaths-from

The mere presence of toxic graphene, and similar components, can cause amyloidosis.

Amyloidosis is also a common complication after Covid-19 injections, as also confirmed by Pfizer documents listing various types of amyloidosis as possible post-vaccination complications in a Postmarketing Experience document: https://phmpt.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/5.3.6-postmarketing-experience.pdf

Amyloid arthropathy;

Amyloidosis;

Amyloidosis senile;

Cardiac amyloidosis;

Cerebral amyloid angiopathy;

Cutaneous amyloidosis;

Dialysis amyloidosis;

Gastrointestinal amyloidosis;

Hepatic amyloidosis;

Primary amyloidosis;

Pulmonary amyloidosis;

Renal amyloidosis;

Secondary amyloidosis;

Tongue amyloidosis; (“Covid tongue”)

So, the presence of toxic graphene can cause amyloidosis. However, if the technology used in these injections is also based on peptides (as has been widely reported in the scientific literature: Self-assembling peptide semiconductors | https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.aam9756), the production of amyloid in the bone marrow can lead to severe amyloidosis and related complications and death, including the currently manifested so-called sudden death syndrome. The key question, therefore, is also what technology was used in these injections.

“Short peptides, specifically those containing aromatic amino acids, can self-assemble into a wide variety of supramolecular structures that are kinetically or thermodynamically stable; the representative models are diphenylalanine and phenylalanine-tryptophan. Different assembly strategies can be used to generate specific functional organizations and nanostructural arrays, resulting in finely tunable morphologies with controllable semiconducting characteristics. Such strategies include molecular modification, microfluidics, coassembly, physical or chemical vapor deposition, and introduction of an external electromagnetic field (EMF).

Myeloperoxidase biodegrades graphene https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/08/180823113613.htm

“Myeloperoxidase is the first and so far only human enzyme known to break down carbon nanotubes, allaying a concern among clinicians that using nanotubes for targeted delivery of medicines would lead to an unhealthy buildup of nanotubes in tissues.”

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/anie.201806906

Medicinal Herbal Compounds With the MPO-Inhibiting Activity Showing Antioxidant, Anti-Inflammation, and Neuroprotective Effects (A GREAT LIST OF NATURAL ANTIOXIDANTS!) https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphys.2020.00433/full

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6500609/pdf/NEUROSCIENCE2019-7547382.pdf Effect of N-Acetyl Cysteine on Intracerebroventricular Colchicine Induced Cognitive Deficits, Beta Amyloid Pathology, and Glial Cells

“It can be postulated that NAC might have reversed the effect of intraneuronal beta amyloid protein by acting on some downstream compensatory mechanisms which needs to be explored.”

https://nationaladdictionnews.com/2021/04/04/study-shows-how-the-nutritional-supplement-nac-can-help-prevent-strokes/ “The study by CHOP researchers suggests NAC may block the precipitation of amyloid plaque deposits, as well as help break up their formation, which could make a dramatic difference for those living with HCCAA.” “Amyloids cannot precipitate without aggregating, so if we can prevent that aggregation with a drug [NAC] that is already available, then we could make an incredible difference in the lives of these patients.”

"One of the most experienced free-radical researchers, the Japanese biochemist Yukie Niwa, estimates that at least 85% of chronic and degenerative diseases result from oxidative damage."

And yes, that's EXACTLY my conclusion!

HOW CAN I PROVE A CAUSAL RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THESE INJECTIONS AND SIDE EFFECTS?

BETWEEN COVID AND ITS COMPLICATIONS?

WHAT DO ALL ADVERSE REACTIONS HAVE IN COMMON?

All of these 22 adverse reactions: (https://www.fda.gov/media/143557/download), as well as these more than 1,200 vaccine adverse reactions: (https://phmpt.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/5.3.6-postmarketing-experience.pdf), as well as complications related to Covid have one common factor that stands at the beginning of each one:

AND THAT'S OXIDATIVE STRESS.

OXIDATIVE STRESS IS ONE OF THE TWO MAIN TOXICITY MECHANISMS OF GRAPHENE NANO TECHNOLOGY.

Steve Martin's avatar

Thank you for the detailed answer, Outraged. My nightly supplementary stack here in Japan includes L-Cysteine (as a proxy for NAC), as well as about a dozen other supplements including zinc, vitamin D, nattokinase, etc. But I am also on a prescription of thyroxine for hyperthyroidism and a prescription for sleeping meds. Will have to get more advice specific to my personal health situation to mitigate any possible negative synergistic effects. Thanks for the info! Will read.

Cheers.

OUTRAGED HUMAN's avatar

Dear Steve,

From what I know, Natto also degrades amyloids

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19117402/

For thyroids, especially hypertension, I also know fluor should be avoided, as it stimulates thyroid gland (https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF01728174, https://www.thyromate.com/blog/effects-of-fluoride-on-the-thyroid, etc.)

I remember reading facts about how green and black teas may have 8 times more Fluoride than a glass of fluoridated water, which is already bad! (E.g. https://truthaboutfluoride.com/fluoride-in-tea/ "In fact, some tea has two, three or even six times the amount of fluoride when compared to tap water. Easily putting millions of people around the world over the safe amount of daily fluoride intake. In fact, the most popular health effect is pineal gland calcification. Which is when fluoride accumulates in the pineal gland, calcifies it (pictured above), and causes it to become in/underactive -resulting in less melatonin production. This can result in poor sleep and a host of other health effects.")

This means that it may be lethal to the thyroid gland. It is also bad for joints and bones (it can be one of the causes of arthritis and osteoporosis).

Anyway, a few years ago I found some scientific studies that was pretty much mind blowing.

e.g.

With regard to quality of tea products, the relationship with F content was studied using 12 brands of tea products in four categories: green tea, oolong tea, black tea, and jasmine tea collected from six provinces. The F level increased with the decline in quality and showed good correlation with the quality grades. The results suggest that the F content could be used as a quality indicator for tea evaluation.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15237954/

People can research this more, but it's good to be aware if someone has thyroid problems.

Steve Martin's avatar

Wow. Thank your for the detailed information Outraged. The good news is that I don't drink much, if any tea ... the bad, that I use Tokyo city water to make my daily cups of very strong coffee. I do, however, include 10 mg of melatonin in my nightly stack. I don't know the flouridation level of the water supply I drink from, but a year or so ago, I was talking with a Japanese friend who did a little digging and found that the Tokyo City government over-flouridated the water to kill any pathogens that are easier to connect to bad public health outcomes than flouride, and thus avoid civil suits. Ha, even in more cut and dry cases, Japanese law does not have a very good record of supporting individual human rights over the corporate nation-state, nor do plaintiffs have the right to a fair and speedy trial. The court system here has ways of stonewally a claim for decades, if not generations.

It will take me a while yet to read up on personal health. This evening, Japan time, I spent a bit more time on James Corbett's Odysee podcasts ... the latest about 5th generation warfare being waged against us, and a throwback podcast that did a very good job of describing the what, how, and why of psychopathy among the ruling class. He referenced, but had not yet read at that time, A. Lobaczewski's book, "Political Ponerology ..." which I finished a couple of months ago, but will take a while to digest. In running GPT4 through its paces, I found that it did a pretty good job of summarizing the book, but in a rather uncritical way.

Cheers, and thank you again for putting in this time. Will be reading you later tonight, Japan time.

steve

OUTRAGED HUMAN's avatar

Yeah, I love coffee too, although I KNOW it kills me, I can feel it when I drink it, eh.... But at least we know about antioxidants to counter....

OUTRAGED HUMAN's avatar

Nice to meet you too :)

OUTRAGED HUMAN's avatar

Dear Steve,

"One of the most experienced free-radical researchers, the Japanese biochemist Yukie Niwa, estimates that at least 85% of chronic and degenerative diseases result from oxidative damage."

He is Japanese! He IS RIGHT!!!

Please read some of my posts on treatment. TREAT OXIDATIVE STRESS!!!!!!!!! NAC and so on!!!!!

Next time, tell them that they poked your brain with this device, you were bleeding and are still bleeding, and the doctors told you NEVER AGAIN put that device in there.

There is no science in this. If they want to test for respiratory diseases, then they should be closer to the lungs and not the brain! Ant-doctors & anti-science

Steve Martin's avatar

Hi Outraged,

Thanks for the heads up about Yukie Niwa. Unfortunately, I live in Japan as a foreigner on a permanent visa. I have even fewer rights to determine how I will be 'tested' than even Japanese citizens ... and Japan does not have a very good record of respecting moral autonomy. Sakamoto Ryuichi was arguably more famous outside of Japan than in, because he was also an outspoken activist against the increasing nuclearization and military build-up of Japan.

I will take a look at your previous posts, but have little choice in future tests and treatments. As you said, science has nothing to do with this ... it is all about sociopaths in positions of authority, exerting their will upon us.

Just wondering if you've read A. Lobaczewski's "Political Ponerology ... "? Though not without flaws, it is a pretty good introduction to repeating patterns in history of how those with sociopathic personality traits rise to power. Religion, the arts, and governance have long been corporate captured. Science is just the latest domain to fall.

Despite it all, Cheers.

steve

Amy Sukwan's avatar

I just found your newsletter. Goodness to be maskless in Japan during this! I was in Tokyo with my daughter for three hours in December of 2022 it was a sea of facemasks. We managed without them and nobody asked me to put one on. I was all but confined to our plot of land in Phuket, Thailand over not wearing one in 2021-2022. They have made the world all around more difficult, haven't they?

Rob Kay's avatar

Interesting.

I taught English in the Kure/Hiroshima area back in the mid 70's.

I t was fun, but I would hate to live in Tokyo.

Kitsune, Maskless Crusader.'s avatar

Apparently, Tokyo is not an easy place to live for many nonJapanese. However, after living aboard two very different naval vessels, anywhere warm and dry suits me. I was told specifically told by my first Japanese employer that they were very interested in me as I had already lived in Tokyo, as a foreign exchange student, and thus knew what I was getting myself into. Many English teachers pack out and return home in the middle of the night. However, I do prefer living in the burbs as we do now.

I was not here in the 70 but as the Japan I knew in the early 90s is no more, I doubt there is much left that you would recognize except for at the ancient sites, many of which have also changed.

Rob Kay's avatar

I'm sure you are right/ Mine was a simple two room Tatami apartment with a drop toilet and no shower or hot water. I loved the local bath-house culture, and the many tiny one front room restaurants and bars, where you could eat for a few Yen. It was simple, and perfect.

Kitsune, Maskless Crusader.'s avatar

The sento or public bath houses are all but extinct. There was one up the road from our house when we moved 18 years ago but it was torn down not so long after that. I run across one very now and then but they were much more common even just 20 year ago.

The ones I have used recently are usually of newer build and in vacation spots. We go to these when camping. There are a couple of the new super sento in my town of half a million, but the local neighborhood baths, well I can not recall a single one in my city, though there may still be a couple. There were still a number of the bars and restaurants of the type you mention 3 years ago but many did not survive the 3 years of lockdown lite we endured, including one we frequented just down the street for home.

Orange Cinnamon's avatar

Well, good to see that more folks are dropping the masks. Depressing to see the notice from the local govt still pushing the vax. :/

How are "case numbers" lately? I don't see much mention of covid on the NHK news broadcasts. Lots on N. Korea, Kishi almost getting blown up, Ukraine, Ukraine, Ukraine, etc.

Kitsune, Maskless Crusader.'s avatar

Case numbers had been climbing but in yesterday’s The Japan Times they were reported to have been the same as the week before. This could be fun with the 9th wave having all the following characteristics, it arrived after the masks recommendation was dropped yet is smaller and of shorter duration that the previous waves when mask use was 100% (statistically).

David Taylor's avatar

Wow, what an odd, mixed day indeed! I can’t speak for the young lady in question, but over the years I have had symptoms of what I only recently learned to be a kind of panic attack. I can go for years without experiencing such episodes and then have a few quite close together. The last three years I had a few sick episodes, usually when visiting people’s homes for social occasions and once in a friend’s car on the way into the city after prolonged periods of relatively little exercise and few trips away from my home during the height of the madness. So maybe she had some kind of panic attack. The attacks can be quite scary and you really think you might be dying and then they go away as quickly as they came, leaving you wondering what all the fuss was about.

Kitsune, Maskless Crusader.'s avatar

I don’t know but I was told that she may not be able to rejoin the class. Whatever her situation is, can not be good for her. Likewise your own. The mind can play some mighty cruel tricks on us.