34 Comments
Apr 4, 2023·edited Apr 4, 2023Liked by Ray Horvath, "The Source" :)

The MM ads are touting Lysol as a life-saver, but they've left some important information out....youtube.com/watch?v=GLE4FKlaQwA ' How and where to use Lysol Disinfectant Spray'

Is Lysol Toxic To Humans?

nontoxicforhealth.com/toxic-household-cleaners.html

Disinfectant sprays like Lysol and Clorox contain lots of asthmagens and endocrine disruptors.

These include Ethanolamines like MEA and DEA, quats, fragrance chemicals and dyes.

So what's going to make you sick- the germs you're fighting or the toxic chemicals you're using to sanitize your house?

recyclenation.com/2009/11/lysol-harmful-helpful/

The main ingredient in the Lysol products is benzalkonium chloride,

which is highly toxic to fish and other aquatic life,mildly toxic to birds and only slightly toxic — passing as safe — to mammals.[sic] ----

sarahbarendse.com/2014/11/25/is-lysol-toxic-to-humans/

Lysol is a VOC (Volatile Organic Compound) that h as been shown to lower IQ in children developmentally. In a report by CBC Marketplace,Toxicologist Shawn Ellis, President of Building Health Center Inc, went to various peoples homes testing air quality in the rooms where their cleaning products were kept. Lysol was the worst offender...

---Is Lysol Toxic To Humans? .

naturalnewsblogs.com/lysol-toxic-humans/

n-alkyl Dimethyl Benzyl Ammonium Chlorides -Can cause immunotoxicity, respiratory toxicity, skin and organ toxicity,and can cause asthma.

-------

How Is Lysol Health Hazardous? healthfully.com/lysol-health-hazardous-6304154.html

Lysol Anti-Bacterial Action Spray contains 79 percent denatured ethanol,which may cause irritation of the eyes and mucous membranes and may cause central nervous system depression

if inhaled or ingested. ....

Expand full comment
author
Apr 4, 2023·edited Apr 4, 2023Author

https://rayhorvaththesource.substack.com/p/can-you-smell-bs-not-if-you-sniff

Of course, all ingredients are not going to be on the label for Lysol, either. :)

Expand full comment
Nov 24, 2022·edited Nov 24, 2022

Imo the hermit died because he accepted the ideas of the community about his lifestyle. And ... probably he knew he would die, he accepted that.

On the matter of 5G : everyone is radio-active. Our body act as a bio-radio. We spread our ideas all around us.

Expand full comment
author

He died, because soap changes the pH of the skin, which is an essential part of the body's detox system. It also absorbs whatever you put on it. His metabolism couldn't put up with the stress caused by the sudden change.

Bio-electricity is not radioactive, but people have their own magnetic fields. That's not radioactive, either. As far as I can see, water molecules seem to act as the communication field between humans even when the subjects are hundreds of miles away.

Expand full comment

Well, in my experience with our two children and ourselves, dirt is the best way to get a robust and defensive nature - my best experience I always had with our son when he was little - he just put everything in his mouth, whether it was an earthworm or something else... often we weren't fast enough to stop him.... it has absolutely not harmed him, but he was never really sick and also my two grandchildren, who are constantly outside and sometimes really over and over with dirt practically concreted, are healthy and strong natures - I also never wear gloves when gardening, because I do not want to miss the feeling of connection with the earth - when I was still in the profession I could not enjoy all this so much, but now all the more and it is an indescribable feeling - so my family and I always go e.g. barefoot from spring to autumn... it's a very good feeling

Expand full comment

Great reference book!

The Lost Book of Herbal Remedies

By Nicole Apelian, PHD

Well indexed and recipes 💕.

I find myself opening it regularly both to see what plants are about and for making teas and tinctures.

Expand full comment

I am guessing the old hermit did not want a bath, but was 'encouraged' ie forced to do so by the DO GOODERS, otherwise known as Liberals. Maybe they jabbed him in the tub as well, cause 'cleanliness'.

Re cleanliness, there is much to be learned if you study the history of French/American household laundries. Our clothes and bedding are important to keep somewhat clean, esp. the bedding. No antibacterials, no perfumes, they kill us too. Just some old fashioned soap and water here and there.

http://www.researchjournal.yourislandroutes.com/2012/09/they-owned-laundries/

Expand full comment

i spend my days rummaging around in underground telecoms pits with all the years old 'pit juice' spiders and rats etc, still here

Expand full comment
Nov 18, 2022Liked by Ray Horvath, "The Source" :)

"...Well, after the “covid” protocols, it is safe to observe that hospitals have become the most life-threatening places in America..." Reminds me of this video of a guy who was in a car accident (no breathing problems; conscious when they found him and several hours later woke up on a ventilator: https://rumble.com/vu3de2-stew-peters-show-bizarre-medical-kidnapping-car-crash-survivor-wakes-up-on-.html

Expand full comment

My mother agreed: cleanliness can kill you. She let us play in the dirt, like a sandbox - how horrifficc!! A little less extreme than this guy.

Expand full comment

I live on a farm and am careful of bacterial infections. My elderly horse is a carrier of MRSA. Rainscald. We use fuciderm on him. And ourselves when we have active infections. Usually small cuts that ooze pus. My daughter uses onions wrapped on cut instead. Both work. Washing wound with Hibiscrub does too.

We have rats. Everyone in the countryside have rats. They carry Weil’s disease contracted through cuts in contact with their urine. When we must sweep or move items where they’ve nested we follow COSH Regs. Ventilator masks and gloves. Wash with Hibiscrub hands.

As for C19 - no mask. No gloves. No antibiotic washes. No alcohol gels. Just washing our hands before eating.

As for our cleanliness hygiene score in the home vs suburbia it’s a negative. As we change clothes after yard work and wash our hands with soap and water. But that’s it. The kitchen floors where farm dogs live only periodically get washed. Like when the mud is too much that you can’t see the colour of the vinyl.

Grandchildren play in the mud and with the animals here. We all have lively biosphere!

But as I’ve got older I’m finding my resistance to my farm germs dwindling. So I wear a mask when grooming the MRSA horse. And wear rubber gloves when cleaning out fowl. Wash hands. And boots do not go past the kitchen door into house. The house is ruled by cats. So… germs everywhere.

If someone with Cleanliness Anxiety came to visit they’d run away in horror.

I only get sick after hospital or GP visits. So avoid with the plague medical facilities. Pigs OK!

Expand full comment

would recommend MSM gel for cuts, they will heal faster and it seals the wound if placed on the pad of a plaster

Expand full comment

I spent a little time in former Bombay India back in the late 1980s…. that’s where I learned people co-exist with billions/trillions of germs.. and somehow miraculously survive.

Expand full comment

I spent a few months in Pakistan, north of Rawalpindi to Islamabad. the filth was awesome. I went into a cafe in Rawalpindi, best balti chicken ever according to the taxi driver. (probably his cousin's or a friend) So I go in and there are flies crawling over everything and I mean everything. I said, well yeah but what about the flies? the guy answers, what flies? Then we go out to the court yard, the waiter comes out with glasses, inspects them and cleans them with his filthy apron. Every alley was filled with you guessed it.

Expand full comment
Nov 18, 2022Liked by Ray Horvath, "The Source" :)

Experience with gardening and yard work, paying attention to how my physical self aligns with it has me all in with the terrain theory. Zach Bush has some great presentations on this idea.

I’ve been mulling over your previous post (s) about the graphenes and other toxins being spread about our playground. A post from Dr. Ana that you cited has some info as to trying to rid the body of this stuff. I haven’t had time to search but Chlorine Dioxide was shown to dissolve them and she mentions horse radish! No chemist here but I have increased my uptake of this nice condiment as I grow it and prepare a spread to keep in the frigid and it’s great on sandwiches- my fave is pickle, sharp cheadar, horseradish and mustard and sprouts if they are ready.

Blessings buddies.

Expand full comment
author

Yes, Dr. Ana has a few relevant observations.

I have been having cravings for horseradish (we prepare it from scratch with organic apple vinegar) in the last two years. Same for pickes. We buy the mustard and don't dare to buy sprouts, and they are only seasonal in our garden. Melted good cheese has always been a favorite with me; I can eat it on just about anything, but prefer casseroles. :)

Expand full comment
Apr 4, 2023·edited Apr 4, 2023Liked by Ray Horvath, "The Source" :)

of course You know, Prof Ray, it takes ~20 lbs of milk to make 1 lb of cheese& that ALL dairy is rife with salmonella,listeria,mycoplasma,TB,brucellosis,etc & the cherry on top, Fecal bacteria. Cheeseheads are turbocharging their bodies for disease...[FYI dumping dairy KO'd this ol'mechanic's RhArt !,gut,skin&lung illnesses.].

drmcdougall.com/education/lectures-all/john-mcdougall-md-marketing-dairy-and-disease/ [1hr vid] John McDougall, MD: Marketing Dairy and Disease

... 🐮 Dairy Is Liquid Meat _The Facts' Mycobacterium paratuberculosis causes a bovine disease called "Johne's."

Cows diagnosed with Johne's Disease have diarrhea, and heavy fecal shedding of bacteria. This bacteria becomes cultured in milk, and is not destroyed by pasteurization.

Occasionally, the milk-borne bacteria will begin to grow in the human host,

andthe results are irritable bowel syndrome and Crohn's Disease.'

https://rense.com/general26/milk.htm

Dangers Of Milk AndDairy Products - The Facts By Dave Rietz www.notmilk.com

...Cow's milk is an unhealthy fluid from diseased animals that contains a wide range of dangerous and disease-causing substances that have a cumulative negative effect on all who consume it.

MILK'S BASIC CONTENTS

*ALL* cow's milk (regular and 'organic') has 59 active hormones,scores of allergens, fat and cholesterol. Most cow's milk has measurable quantities of herbicides, pesticides, dioxins (up to 200 times the safe levels),up to 52 powerful antibiotics (perhaps 53, with LS-50), blood,pus, feces, bacteria and viruses.

(Cow's milk can have traces of anything the cow ate...including such things as radioactive fallout from nuke testing ...(the 50's strontium-90 problem).

Expand full comment
author

Most cows are fed GMO soy and, perhaps, corn, and are treated with growth hormones and antibiotics, making the dairy products from them, well, questionable.

Even grass-fed and organic milk is nearly exclusively UV pasteurized, which kills just about everything in the milk; might as well drink water...

Haven't I said that "viruses" as the official narrative states, do not exist? Please, read my flagship post:

https://rayhorvaththesource.substack.com/p/what-makes-people-sick-apart-from

Expand full comment

Well this is interesting. I've always liked horseradish but it's not something I have very often because I don't use much of it and my husband doesn't care for it; so I don't bother buying it and very seldom think of it. But in the last two days I've 'suddenly' and inexplicably had a craving for it. I bought horseradish 'sauce' instead of ground plain horseradish thinking I would probably use more of that than plain horseradish; but it has a kick to it so I'm sure it has a lot of horseradish in it. My point is that it's 'funny' how I suddenly crave it and now I'm reading two comments from you and another person about eating horseradish (Because it's good for our health.) I guess God leads us to things that will help us; if we are willing to listen.

And I too was brought up believing that playing....and working...in the dirt is actually good for you. Hard work; fresh air (that's impossible to find now), sunshine, and getting dirty now and then are the best preventatives to sickness and weakness. My Mom did keep a VERY clean house; using bleach was a common thing back then; but not much else in the way of chemicals. Too many chemicals now; and we wonder why we are so sick. If you want to disinfect anything; use Grapefruit Seed extract; you don't need much of it and it's chemical-free.

Expand full comment

How cool about the grapefruit seed extract, a few weeks ago I read a paper that quercitine (sp? Source for hydroxychloroquine ). is found in them, as well as in elderberry flowers.

Is nature conspiring to save that which is aligned with it ? 💕

Expand full comment

It is really interesting stuff. I'm going to add a few links to websites that talk about the various benefits AND some potential negative side effects of it; particularly that it can interfere with some medications:

https://universityhealthnews.com/daily/nutrition/grapefruit-seed-extract-uses-and-benefits/

https://draxe.com/nutrition/grapefruit-seed-extract/

https://minnetonkaorchards.com/grapefruit-seed-extract-uses/

I learned on one of the sites that some companies that make G.S.E. add synthetic antibacterial ingredients; some without displaying them on the label. (That should be illegal.) So somehow you'd have to search for a reputable company that states clearly that they do not add any such synthetics.

I believe that God is helping us by directing us to nature that He created to help us to help ourselves to be healthy. His creation is filled with His life-giving nutrients and other compounds that He graciously and lovingly made just for us; it's pretty awesome!

Thank you so much for responding! I appreciate it.

Expand full comment

I appreciate the links! Now I want to be able to make GSE!

Then I’ll know what’s in it;)

Expand full comment

You're most welcome! I KNOW; I thought the same thing; I need to make some myself to avoid all of the nasty stuff in the commercially made products! (Sad that we have to worry about that isn't it?)

Expand full comment
Nov 18, 2022Liked by Ray Horvath, "The Source" :)

Rubber gloves are handy in prepping the Horseradish! It’s almost as irritating to handle as hot peppers. ;)

Expand full comment
author

And to the eyes! :)

Expand full comment

Why no sprouts?

Expand full comment

I’m curious too. No way from the grocery, but so easy to do at home, mung bean, or smalls like alfalfa, broccoli, radish etc.

three - four days and the half gallon jar is full. Not just great survival food but good always esp in winter when fresh gets scarce.

Expand full comment
author

Our house is a tiny one-bedroom one and there is no more room in it to grow anything else than what we already have. :)

Expand full comment
Nov 19, 2022Liked by Ray Horvath, "The Source" :)

All that is needed is a glass jar, I use half gallon mason jar but a quart jar will do. It’s at the top of my list of easy must have for nutritionally packed clean food.

They do need rinsed daily until sprouted, so water is important- then just eat or store in fridge.

Expand full comment
author

Of course, but you haven't seen our house; you couldn't even drop a needle. :D

And both fridges are packed! :)

Expand full comment
Nov 18, 2022Liked by Ray Horvath, "The Source" :)

I grew up the same way as your Wife. We live on a small acreage in the country with lots of animals.

We do the raw milk and make our own butter, keifer, cottage cheese etc. Some germs are good for your immune system. I avoid Doctors and hospitals as much as possible, especially since the COVID lies. I had a young Doctor ask me "why do you think they call us practicing physicians?" The answer was, "We practice on you".

Expand full comment
author

While I was a city boy up to the age of 28, I spent my days in the nearby huge park, playing soccer, when I was not in the library. In the evening, my mother (who kept everything squeaky clean) made me use a brush on my ankles, because she thought they were dirty (the skin was definitely darker). I told her, "it's only shadow; there is not enough light here."

While doctors saved my life twice after other doctors made nearly-fatal mistakes, I also had an honest doctor in my life:

https://rayhorvaththesource.substack.com/p/thats-what-i-call-a-doctor

He sounded like yours. :)

Unless I'm mistaken, something like 92% of cells in the human body are bacteria.

I became a villager only eight years ago and I cannot imagine living in a city again. These days, my wife and I are starting up a little homestead, but the environment (large fields with GM soy and corn starting less than half a mile from our place, although it's nearly always upwind) doesn't exactly favor that. For one, we must forget about beekeeping b/o the pesticides on everything.

Expand full comment

I have a friend whose husband worked on a farm for years; and I remember him telling me that every time he had to be confined indoors for any length of time...even just a couple of days...he would start to not feel well. But as soon as he was back outside working through all four seasons in all weather with the animals and working in the soil; he felt completely healthy. So I have no doubt that 'being dirty' in THAT way has some serious health benefits.

But there's a difference between 'new' dirt and 'old' dirt. Meaning; it's one thing if you have 'new' dirt on you that you acquired from working/playing outside all day. It's another thing to have 'old' dirt clinging to your body from not bathing for a length of time. It's a balance. Being dirty in the wrong way has been proven to be detrimental to our health just as being 'too clean' (More like 'sterilized'!) is bad for us.

Expand full comment

I have wanted to dive into the raising of bees, as here in the southwest is one of our least butchered environments (and now that honey is almost $60 per gallon...), at least as far as pesticide and herbicide use go (though there is too much of that, also, imo) but there are several illnesses attacking them here, even, according to the local experts, and I'd go mad watching my poor, relatively enslaved, little friends dying from all of man's ingenious tactics, not limited to his mere stupidity and greed, but much of mankind also seems quite capable of finding cruel delight in his monstrous abilities to destroy the Creation, and I am unsure of what category these behaviors fall under, for I am not a professional, but it is at the very least a psychosis of some sort, I venture. Yes, a Mass Psychosis, I venture...

Remember the rash of episodes (spread all over the nation) where youngsters were destroying various beehives for the hel of it?

Not even out of any valid desire for revenge, but apparently just for the "fun" of it... poor, misled little miscreants.

Also, I never thought to bring it up, as it is a point of contention among many of my peers, but I have a mason jar that I use as my drinking glass, and I rarely clean it at all, which disgusts most people, but I have often credited it with at least part of the reason that I never get sick, but that is just a guess.

My cup is likely deadly to "cleanies" - what I call the folks scared of dirt and germs, washing their hands in their chemicals, which are Proven Harmful (endocrine disruptors)-- just like most, if not All of the Hype being pushed.

Country dirt= Good

City dirt= Bad

Of course, many eat (good, rich, "clean") dirt, because of the mineral and vitamin wealth that it can provide , and there are even soil-borne probiotics, which help bring back our destroyed biota when ingested.

Do your own due diligence before rushing out to sample the goods right there in your own yard, though, as I am not a medical expert, so take imy words with caution.

A Blessed Day for you all!

Expand full comment