Sorry about the confusion of the message I just left they are coiled inside of the bodies of insects and scientists did an experiment by putting them in water and watching them crawl out. And the parasite takes over the body of the host killing the host! When the parasite is forced to leave the body because it cannot I assume breath underwater, the host in this case is the praying mantis, is then dead!
I have seen videos where there is a parasite which looks a lot like this, that lives in praying mantises and I have seen where scientist didn’t experiment by putting prey mantis in water and a parasite crawled out of the praying mantis. The parasite was extremely long and have been coiled up inside the small body of the praying mantis. Apparently when I didn’t have is the body of kills the host and takes over the body because once it leaves the body the praying mantis is completely dead! So I don’t know what this is but I think it’s related I think they figured out how to do this on a synthetic scale German habit all of us! What do you think?
I recall seeing similar kinds of footage of parasites inhabiting the bodies of insects. To clarify, what I documented are not fibers (or parsites) that come from within the insects. Or at least not that I'm aware of. Instead, the fibers I recorded were attached to the bodies of dead insects. They seem to hitch a ride when a bug comes into contact with them. Hopefully that answers your questions. They're environmental contaminants, and they seem to exhibit some rather unusual behaviors.
Have you done any experiments with the fibers and ivermectin, fenbendazole, vitamin C, and anything else you can think of the EDTA Dr. Anna is using seems to dissolve the clots. Would be interesting to see live under the microscope have these fibers and the little micro dots floating around the blood cells react. I personally have been using both of ivermectin and Fenbendezol as a parasitic cleanse as I apparently am infested with many different types! Gross gross but true. I have always worked with farm animals and I’ve always had cats and dogs so eventually it will become contaminated. I have noticed a tremendous amount of dust in my house thick layers that you when you brush it off it just stacks up in this pile reminds me of the dryer lint screen. I noticed that when I breathe warm air or move my finger towards the dust on my furniture it actually moves! So it would be nice to know if any of these drugs are really killing these things because they are helping me with the parasites but these more gallons are also parasites and all this other crap that they’ve been spraying on us and injecting people with him poisoning food with etc. keep up your good work and hopefully you can have the answers to my questions soon under live microscopy. Thanks again for everything you do!
Sorry about the confusion of the message I just left they are coiled inside of the bodies of insects and scientists did an experiment by putting them in water and watching them crawl out. And the parasite takes over the body of the host killing the host! When the parasite is forced to leave the body because it cannot I assume breath underwater, the host in this case is the praying mantis, is then dead!
I have seen videos where there is a parasite which looks a lot like this, that lives in praying mantises and I have seen where scientist didn’t experiment by putting prey mantis in water and a parasite crawled out of the praying mantis. The parasite was extremely long and have been coiled up inside the small body of the praying mantis. Apparently when I didn’t have is the body of kills the host and takes over the body because once it leaves the body the praying mantis is completely dead! So I don’t know what this is but I think it’s related I think they figured out how to do this on a synthetic scale German habit all of us! What do you think?
I recall seeing similar kinds of footage of parasites inhabiting the bodies of insects. To clarify, what I documented are not fibers (or parsites) that come from within the insects. Or at least not that I'm aware of. Instead, the fibers I recorded were attached to the bodies of dead insects. They seem to hitch a ride when a bug comes into contact with them. Hopefully that answers your questions. They're environmental contaminants, and they seem to exhibit some rather unusual behaviors.
Have you done any experiments with the fibers and ivermectin, fenbendazole, vitamin C, and anything else you can think of the EDTA Dr. Anna is using seems to dissolve the clots. Would be interesting to see live under the microscope have these fibers and the little micro dots floating around the blood cells react. I personally have been using both of ivermectin and Fenbendezol as a parasitic cleanse as I apparently am infested with many different types! Gross gross but true. I have always worked with farm animals and I’ve always had cats and dogs so eventually it will become contaminated. I have noticed a tremendous amount of dust in my house thick layers that you when you brush it off it just stacks up in this pile reminds me of the dryer lint screen. I noticed that when I breathe warm air or move my finger towards the dust on my furniture it actually moves! So it would be nice to know if any of these drugs are really killing these things because they are helping me with the parasites but these more gallons are also parasites and all this other crap that they’ve been spraying on us and injecting people with him poisoning food with etc. keep up your good work and hopefully you can have the answers to my questions soon under live microscopy. Thanks again for everything you do!
These insect’s parasites are often fongus.