Does Ingesting Blood Really Reverse Aging?
One of the most common questions asked when investigating elite pedophile cults and even pizzagate is about Adrenochrome. Can children’s blood really reverse the aging process? Let’s look into it…
This article will be fairly short but all the sources attached carry lots of valuable information.
For more on this subject, check out these other articles:
Injecting mice with human teenagers’ blood has been shown to reverse the aging process in mice and apparently carries beneficial effects on every organ studied. Research in 2012 has demonstrated blood from younger mice enhanced the cognitive brain functioning of older mice by regenerating function to nearly half their age, strengthening both existing neurons and even producing new brain cells, indicating promising results that may rejuvenate the brains of older dementia suffering patients. Isolating the key components in the younger blood that increased 20% of the neural connections in older mice is a long-term goal being applied to the aging human brain. This experiment even made the older mice look younger. In 2014, Stanford researchers began administering blood transfusions from young donors under age 30 to older Alzheimer’s patients in order to explore their positive impact to inhibit and potentially cure the out-of-control epidemic of dementia.
An earlier 2005 Stanford study showed that liver function in older mice was also restored to a younger condition and muscle injuries healed faster, similar to that of younger mice. A Harvard research team in 2012 also experimenting with mice determined that even an aging heart can be reversed with younger blood. The prospect of revitalizing tissue and stem cells appears extremely encouraging. Astounding implications extrapolated from all these recently confirmed scientific findings is that the blood of the young can benefit the old in dramatically profound ways, reversing the aging of both internal organs to prior functioning states as well as becoming a potential “fountain of youth.”
A 2015 issue of Nature summarizes the research this way:
“In the heart, brain, muscles and almost every other tissue examined, the blood of young mice seems to bring new life to aging organs, making old mice stronger, smarter and healthier. It even makes their fur shinier.”
It has also been discovered that young people’s blood carry anti-carcinogenic agents through their bloodstream and thus blood transfusions are being currently explored as a potential treatment for cancer patients. Also, muscle atrophy resulting from both aging and chemotherapy and radiation treatment may be reversed by young blood and plasma transfusions.
As a related side note, when the so-called Pizzagate scandal was reaching fever pitch on the internet, linking the Clintons and Podesta brothers to spirit cooking performed by an occult celeb artist who uses semen, urine, and breast milk amongst her spirit cooking recipes, and frequently human and animal blood in her art and black occult rituals. When artist Marina Abramovic was reported to drink human blood, observers began speculating that her much younger appearance than her actual age of 70 may be attributed to her intake of young blood. At the time of Pizzagate’s zenith implicating Washington VIPs for pedophilia, a DC child sex trafficking ring, and possible satanic rituals involving child victims, a Time Magazine article dated November 22nd featured a story entitled “Young Blood Transfusions Don’t Cure Aging,” as if timed to directly counter all the child blood rumors swirling about online. Even Hillary’s television appearances during her debates seemed to belie her failing health observed just days earlier, repeatedly losing her balance, her strange facially spastic, seizure-like spells, accompanied by strong suspicion she was suffering from Parkinson’s disease. Yet her debate appearances showed her looking miraculously vibrant and healthy, sparking heavy conjecture she may have been artificially propped up by massive young blood transfusions. Her confirmed Wiccan past only fueled these rumored claims.
Time Magazine’s odd timing with its junk science totally debunking all previous research conducted this century that has consistently touted the promising connection between young blood and antiaging seems more than coincidental, especially coming from a globalist publication whose parent company is a longtime top Hillary Clinton donor. Of course, as a fake stream rag, Time’s been notorious for running the never-ending fake story that the Russians secretly influenced the election, using that flagrant lie as a wag-the-dog distraction to diffuse humiliating Clinton, DNC and Podesta scandals like Pizzagate, her FBI criminal investigation and the rampant DNC corruption that apparently cost her long anointed victory.
As another billionaire interested in staying young forever, Silicon Valley entrepreneur Peter Thiel has been hyping the importance of young blood, investing millions in antiaging startups like Ambrosia, a company in nearby Monterey currently running clinical trials of blood plasma transfusions (minus the blood cells) supplied by an under 25 age group pumped into the veins of customers 35 years and older willing to pay $8000 a shot. This pay-to-play 2-liter plasma transfusion has been ethically criticized based on both its hefty price tag and lack of a research placebo control group. While Pizzagate was stealing even MSM headlines at the time, science critics in multiple publications warned that even with matched blood type, the recipient may still reject donor blood or plasma, risking a catastrophic, even lethal immune response.
Additionally, with unlicensed stem cell transplants already a booming industry, the even easier means of opening unlicensed blood or plasma transfusion centers is reputedly posing a public health danger. One researcher believes a fully funded longitudinal study (which he asserts does not currently exist) would take up to six years to determine whether or not infusing young blood into older humans will actually increase the lifespan. Meanwhile, ongoing studies are investigating whether the efficacy of young plasma is a viable form of stroke treatment in China and the original Stanford team is continuing to run a double-blind trial for Alzheimer patients.
The concept of injecting younger blood into older humans for antiaging purposes has been around for a very long time. Nearly a century ago a notable Russian physician, philosopher, sci-fi writer, and early Bolshevik activist named Alexander Bogdanov conducted blood transfusion experiments using university students’ blood on himself and even Vladimir Lenin’s sister with reported positive results. Both Bogdanov and his peers made glowing anecdotal testimonials that injection of young blood took 10 years off the doctor’s appearance in a remarkably short time span.
So are you going to just trust one Time Magazine article supposedly “debunking” centuries of scientific research? That’s up to you.
More coming on the history of satanic rituals and the drinking of blood for power and increased health…