This week I was fortunate enough to meet and to interact with John Campbell, who immediately embraced the Bolus Theory.
Some of his comments are very encouraging:
We decided to spend an hour together to detail out the Bolus Theory. I hope you’ll enjoy it.
Please share the video largely if you believe it can be helpful around you.
The more time passes; the more empirical evidence and studies support the Bolus Theory; the more it becomes solid and consistent. For the record, I recently discovered the reason behind Thrombosis, again in the physical world: it will become evident to all of you when you hear it. I address it in the video.
Most critiques received so far aren’t attacking the body of work, but the person: A testament to its robustness. And I’ll admit I have room for improvement…I want to thank so many of you taking my defence.
Many more professionals are reacting:
Dentists:
or bodybuilders:
In the coming days, I will share with you my latest insight that explains logically the Thrombosis phenomenon. You will see how simple it is to understand.
Next Friday, I will be participating to my friend John Beaudoin’s Rumble Round Table , jointly with my friends Stéphanie Sennef, Jessica Rose, Kevin McKernan and Jonathan Couey. Feel free to join us.
Have a wonderful week.
A hug from Paris.
Marc
Does Marc still work for the vaccine companies?
Thank you for your response to my comment on the hour you spent with Dr. John Campbell (I shared my bee sting story). I found the discussion to make a lot of sense on a lot of levels and have referred some family and co-workers to check it out. I share it again here for you and your readers.
Anectdotal comment on the bee venom: I am a hobbiest bee keeper and stung many times without incident until one day about 4 years ago. I wasn't even working in a hive when I was stung on the back of my hand. The sting was right over a surface vein and within 5 minutes I was on the phone calling a life squad for myself and entering a full blown situation. My nursing education kicked in and I immediately dosed myself with diphenhydramine and utilized my rescue inhaler.
Most of my sting experiences were on my legs (right through my clothes) and caused nothing more than a local reaction. I am convinced that the sting on my hand was indeed IV. Nevertheless, I retired my bee keeper's jacket in favor of a full suit, added an epi pen to my apiary tool set and continue with my fascinating hobby. I have since been stung once on my thigh without any systemic reaction.
I think this gentleman is on track with his ideas. mRNA particles are worse than bee venom because the damage is more insidious.