Parasites, Good or Bad?
For the last 200 years or so scientists have spent a lot of time and money in
researching the ominous parasite. We have poured antibiotics into our bodies
until we have developed severe allergies, excessive fungal growth, lymphatic
suppression, tissue damage and new diseases, including strains like MRSA—
methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus. And in many cases, the use of
antibiotics has resulted in death. The pharmaceutical cartel, the U.S.
Government, and various scientific communities have experimented with the
oftentimes deadly “vaccination,” as we discussed in Chapter 4. Vaccinations
have proven to be one of the greatest killers ever invented. From this
methodology we have started a genetic landslide that we cannot stop, which is
why we are seeing chronic and degenerative conditions in infants and young
children. We have created so many mutations in bacteria from the use of
antibiotics; we have created so many mutant and deadly viruses that these
pathogens are rapidly destroying the human species.
People oftentimes become so intellectually obsessed that they cannot see
the forest for the trees. Let’s take a simple look at why nature (God) created
parasites. Webster’s Dictionary defines a parasite as “an organism that feeds
off of another.” For our purposes I would change this definition to “an
organism that feeds upon the toxicity and weaknesses of others.”
To understand the parasite’s function better, let’s look at what happens if
we shoot and kill a deer. (This is an example only.) Flies are the first
creatures attracted. Their work is to lay eggs, which become maggots. What is
the job of a maggot? The same as other proteus (protein-splitting) types of
parasites—to eliminate the dead carcass of the deer. This is the way nature
cleans itself. Otherwise, the bodies of all dead animals would still be here.
Nature is constantly changing from one form into another.
Did you know that maggots are currently used in hospitals to debride
(clean) wounds? In World War I, when medical attention was slow and so
many of the wounded men developed maggots in their wounds, the maggots
kept their wounds partially clean so that many were able to survive.
Certainly God did not design parasites to attack healthy tissue or we
would all be dead. Parasites are everywhere, and you can see their vital role
on this planet in helping nature eliminate the weak so that the strong survive.
This keeps the cycle of nature going. The atoms in this world are never