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Our current era is defined by aluminum. For most women facing early-onset breast cancer, chemotherapy is unnecessary.

This reissued article focuses on the extraordinary levels of glyphosate contaminating soils worldwide, especially in North America, and raises awareness about heavy metal pollution, including aluminum.

Our current era is defined by aluminum. For most women facing early-onset breast cancer, chemotherapy is unnecessary.

This content is being shared again to highlight the historically high concentrations of glyphosate detected in soils across the globe, particularly in North America. It also aims to increase awareness about heavy metal contamination, with aluminum being one of several metals now pervading our environment at levels never before seen in human history.

Equally crucial to note: when aluminum is introduced through injections such as vaccines, it remains in the body rather than being eliminated, migrating to various organs and ultimately reaching the brain. For further details and scientific evidence, refer to the two articles provided via the links below.

Beyond mapping aluminum's post-vaccination journey within the body, recent research has revealed that upon examining the brains of several deceased individuals with autism, scientists recorded some of the highest aluminum levels ever documented in brain tissue.

According to Dr. Christopher Shaw, a neuroscientist and professor at the University of British Columbia, aluminum was not biologically available in the world's biota before the Industrial Revolution. Consequently, it played no role in any normal biochemical reaction. Now, because we are increasingly surrounded by it, we live in what is termed the Age of Aluminum. It appears in countless products—excellent for manufacturing airplanes and computers, but also present in our food, water, air, medicines (including vaccines), antacids, and various other substances we ingest. This compound, foreign to all normal biochemical processes on Earth, can only cause disruption, leading to numerous unusual biochemical reactions in the body, including the brain.

The preceding excerpt from Dr. Shaw highlights the pervasive infiltration of aluminum into our daily existence—found in deodorants, vaccines, household items, and food. He notes that although the body is efficient at removing aluminum, there is a limit to its capacity.

Dr. Shaw further distinguishes between naturally occurring aluminum and the form used in vaccines. Adjuvants, with aluminum being among the most common, are vaccine components designed to enhance the immune response to an antigen. Their purpose is to trigger the desired immune reaction. Consequently, the body cannot eliminate this form of aluminum because adjuvants are intentionally engineered to persist, repeatedly presenting the antigen to the immune system. This sustained exposure is the very reason aluminum adjuvants are included in vaccines.

The toxic nature of aluminum is indisputable, as established by decades of scientific research. A compelling video by Dr. Christopher Exley—a renowned authority on aluminum toxicity and a professor of Bioinorganic Chemistry at Keele University, also holding an honorary professorship at UHI Millennium Institute—is available for further insight.

Glyphosate, the principal active component of Monsanto's Roundup herbicide, regrettably pervades nearly every environment. A study by the U.S. Geological Survey, 'Pesticides in Mississippi Air and Rain: A Comparison Between 1995 and 2007,' reported that Roundup (glyphosate) and its toxic breakdown product AMPA were detected in over 75% of air and rain samples collected in Mississippi during 2007. This finding came as no surprise to researchers, given that 2 million kilograms of glyphosate were applied across the state that year.

What does the presence of glyphosate in most air samples mean toxicologically? In August 2007, breathing the sampled air meant inhaling roughly 2.5 nanograms of glyphosate per cubic meter. Considering that an average adult inhales about 388 cubic feet (11 cubic meters) of air daily, that translates to approximately 27.5 nanograms (billionths of a gram) of glyphosate per day.

Glyphosate has also been found in California wines—including those labeled organic—as well as in food products and animal feed, sparking ongoing controversy between the public and Monsanto.

Corporate influence has infiltrated nearly every tier of scientific evaluation used to approve consumer products—ranging from food to cosmetics—and numerous respected scientists have long been opposing this overt corruption.

This context explains why John Ioannidis, an epidemiologist at Stanford University School of Medicine, authored the most-read paper in the history of the Public Library of Science (PLoS): 'Why Most Published Research Findings Are False.'

That was over a decade ago. More recently, Dr. Richard Horton, editor-in-chief of The Lancet, echoed similar concerns, suggesting that up to half of all published research may be unreliable.

According to a 2014 study in Biomed Research International by R. Mesnage and colleagues, the common belief that Roundup is among the safest pesticides is propagated by manufacturers through favorable reviews often cited in toxicological assessments of glyphosate-based herbicides. However, the experiment found Roundup to be 125 times more toxic than glyphosate alone. In fact, despite its reputation, Roundup proved to be the most toxic among all herbicides and insecticides tested. The authors attribute this discrepancy between scientific evidence and industry claims to substantial economic interests that have been shown to falsify health risk assessments and delay health policy decisions.

A German study completed in June 2013 detected substantial glyphosate levels in urine samples from humans and animals throughout Europe. Every sample showed glyphosate concentrations 5 to 20 times higher than the drinking water limit. Beyond its growing use in agriculture, glyphosate-based herbicides are frequently applied to railway tracks, city sidewalks, and roadsides.

The study analyzed urine from urban professionals—city workers, journalists, and lawyers—who had no direct exposure to glyphosate, yet the chemical appeared in their samples. This is notable because they lived in cities, not agricultural areas. A separate study gathering urine from 18 European countries yielded comparable findings.

Recently, as evidence accumulated, the World Health Organization (WHO) acknowledged that glyphosate is carcinogenic.

Content Divisions

Aluminum, Glyphosate, and the Pineal Gland

It is shocking that despite decades of knowledge about these hazards, little action has been taken. Nearly twenty years ago, scientists at the National Research Council urged swift measures to protect developing bodies from pesticides. Yet today, children in the United States continue to be exposed to harmful pesticides in the places where they live, learn, and play.

– Pesticide Action Network North America (PANNA) (source)

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