Pasheen Stonebrooke posted on Graphene in Smart Water:
She links a twitter video from 2 years ago that makes the graphene oxide in Smart Water visible and writes:
How long has this been going on? A very long time…
I went back into my poison archives to find this video from two years ago…the other links I saved have been scrubbed. It began in the ‘70’s - Coke, Pepsi and Nestle were some of the first to add GO to their products. … Nano Domestic Quell Project…Snowden talked about it in 2013.
I wrote in a comment to Pasheen:
A month back the husband of my raw milk dairy was so sick he almost died. She is so adamantly anti-vax that she left the Farmer's Market over an altercation where an irate pro-vaxxer attacked them and the FM said it was their own fault. For a year and a half, she distributed out of my driveway in what became the 'unmasked underground' of people sharing info and even a 'covid care kit' that got passed around.
Since they didn't want to get near a hospital, among other things, she sent a hair sample to a lab to be analyzed. It came back with 35,000X the normal amount of graphene, which is zero! She did mention that he drank a lot of bottled seltzer water, Pellegrino, I think.
Sadly, this week he took his life while she was out making deliveries. I've sent condolences but haven't spoken to her. I don't know if what caused it was physical, psychological, financial or a combination. I do know that the attack on small businesses, especially food producers, has been relentless from supply chain issues like no bottles, then no caps, to no access to customers, to sky-high energy bills. I'm certain this is not accidental.
Thank you for putting yourself in this line of fire. May the Truth be with you, as its own force-field of protection.
I flew to San Diego yesterday and just looked at the Gold Peak Green Tea I bought at the airport and noticed it’s also made by Coca Cola with the first ingredient filtered water and the second sugar. On the plane, when I asked for water, they gave me a can that I saved unopened called Deja Blue: purified drinking water made ‘under the authority’ of Dr. Pepper/ Seven-Up. I’ll be tossing both in favor of tap water.
According to Science Alert on What is Graphene?:
Every atom of carbon in a graphene sheet is tightly bound to three other atoms at identical angles, forming a flat, honeycomb-like structure. Similar to diamond – which is a three-dimensional carbon crystal where every atom is connected to four neighbours – these strong bonds lend the structure significant robustness.
Specifically, graphene has incredible tensile strength, especially on a small scale. This means that compared to a thin string of crystalised steel just a few micrometres across, graphene is more than six times harder to rip apart. Tests with other, less ideal forms of steel have previously suggested it could be hundreds of times stronger.
Science Alert on Wrinkled Graphene Nanoparticles to filter water:
Graphene continues to dazzle us with its strength and its versatility – exciting new applications are being discovered for it all the time, and now scientists have found a way of manipulating the wonder material so that it can better filter impurities out of water.
The two-dimensional material comprised of carbon atoms has been studied as a way of cleaning up water before, but the new method could offer the most promising approach yet. It's all down to the exploitation of what are known as van der Waals gaps: the tiny spaces that appear between 2D nanomaterials when they're layered on top of each other.
These nanochannels can be used in a variety of ways, which scientists are now exploring, but the thinness of graphene causes a problem for filtration: liquid has to spend much of its time travelling along the horizontal plane, rather than the vertical one, which would be much quicker.
To solve this problem, the team behind the new study used an elastic substrate to scrunch up the graphene layer into a microscopic series of peaks and valleys. That means liquid can scoot down the side of a peak vertically, rather than trekking across the open plains horizontally (all at the nanoscale, of course).
"When you start wrinkling the graphene, you're tilting the sheets and the channels out of plane," says materials scientist Muchun Liu from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). "If you wrinkle it a lot, the channels end up being aligned almost vertically."
To finish the effect, the graphene and substrate are fixed in an epoxy substance, before the tops of the peaks and the bottoms of the valleys are trimmed off. It gives liquid a quicker route through the graphene while still enabling filtration to happen.
Thanks to le_berger_des_photons from the Breggins’ Substack who told me about Max Igan on The Crowhouse. Crows, of course, are the true owners of my backyard and I share them as my totem creature with Russell Brand. That led me to this link on Nanotechnology Used in Over 2000 Food Items from Facts Matter by Roman Balmakov:
Although not looking at graphene, Roman looks at the nanoparticles of other food additives. He quotes Georgios Pyrgiotakis saying “They may pass through the lining of the gut and enter the bloodstream, which may trigger an inflammatory or immune response. They may also build up in various parts of the body, including the lungs, the heart, and the reproductive organs.”
Dr. Rolf Halden of Arizona State University states, “Asbestos itself is relatively benign. It’s an inorganic material. What makes it toxic and makes it kill 90,000 people a year is that it has particles that lodge in human tissue.
Roman points out that the FDA has a loophole called GRAS: Generally Recognized As Safe. As long as the large form of any additive is good as GRAS, the nanoparticle is not subjected to testing.
So graphene is anywhere from six to hundreds of times stronger than steel and harder to rip apart. It’s two-dimensional at the atomic level of the nanoparticle. Yet water companies are attaching it to an elastic substrata, wrinkling it, embedding it in epoxy and then shaving off the peaks and valleys. That’s like putting asbestos into your blender and then filtering your water through it. It’s taking something that’s more stable than steel when undisturbed but cutting it into little shards so small they’ll pass through the gut lining and maybe the blood-brain barrier. What could go wrong?
The question this leads to is whether it’s part of the depopulation agenda or simply to speed up the filtration process for faster profits after putting the pollution there in the first place in the same old damage-solution one-two punch, with the sequel of the damage control from the solution.
This technology is being used for desalinization, which may explain why that eats away pipes. And in a removed link, it was adapted from the US military who were running out of water to wash chemical and biological weapons off of tanks. So instead, let’s put the bioweapon right in the water! Score one for efficiency.
To follow up, because we need some friggin’ hope, here’s Love & the Great Resist:
You can only change what you love. Following in the footsteps of Tessa Lena and Charles Eisenstein, I talk about love, God, meaning and truth as synonyms. I tell the story of how Tessa became qualified to talk about love with no kumbaya, through haunting personal experience. I relate this to Charles on The Bloodroot & the Raven. And I share the confidence of both that riding on the current of current events is going to bring us to the place I call The Great Rest, where we can be who we were born to be.
and to understand what we need to resist, here’s The Reset’s Three Agendas:
What are the ends and means of The Great Reset? I define them as dispossession through economics and monopolies, depopulation through military and medical, and psychological manipulation through education and media. I look at what our purpose is as societies, communities and families, and how we can measure whether their agenda or our purpose is succeeding. I explain why our existing system is the worst of both worlds because banks create the money but leave government to care for the people. To reverse the flow of predatory capital, three co-existing economies are proposed: a subsistence economy for self-reliance, a trade economy for reciprocity, and a gift economy for creativity and pure joy.
This points to a very serious problem with our water supplies. I've been currently scrutinizing the Reverse Osmosis systems to see if the filter cartridges are laced with this crap. Combine what you present here with the fact that every Corporation that is handling or packaging food and water are owned by the same parasitic weasels, through the Big Investment groups: Vanguard, Blackrock, State Street and Fidelity --- there really is organized crime after all.
Graphene is a poison to all naturally occurring organisms. There was really no reason to add it to our food supply, water supply and the stratosphere, neither was it medicinal to "inject" things like this into our bodies, while calling them "vaccines."
The solution wasn't created to solve a "problem," the problem was intentionally created so that their "solution" for it could be rolled out. The question is; what is the "solution" they want to roll out for this one?
Some crunchy(?) 'food (and drink) for thought! (And we now eat carbon to purify ourselves! [Headshake.])
Thank you for putting this together. More evidence of how amazing our bodies are! We waste of spacers seem to take most everything the 'the' have given us and keep on walking.
That is a great sign of hope, truly, how resilient is the human creature in body and spirit.
Now what to do with that information? For me, to continue to expand my meditation spiritual practice and more deeply embody Gautama Buddha's direction of mindfulness of the *body* and that we can and are to trust ourselves.