how are the chemtrails there, here they are gone since the start corona, i think that might have something to do with it.Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.Username: wizz33Date: 2020-03-31 16:31:14Reaction Score: 1
how are the chemtrails there, here they are gone since the start corona, i think that might have something to do with it.Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.Username: wizz33Date: 2020-03-31 16:31:14Reaction Score: 1
Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.
Username: nanuko
Date: 2020-03-31 16:35:32
Reaction Score: 1
"Hola, paisano!"Hola amigo! My wife and I have been using ozone therapy for years, but we've never heard of carbon dioxide therapy to be honest. Due to respiratory problems we have explored all the available alternative treatments, but never come across that one. Frankly I'd be surprised if it's used for pneumonia as it's really dangerous stuff.
Saludos!

Carbon Dioxide can be very dangerous, bot only if it displaces oxygen in the air. I built my own carbon dioxide bath. Similar to this one: Carbon Dioxide Therapy Bath – CarbogeneticsNote: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.Username: dreamtimeDate: 2020-03-31 20:20:29Reaction Score: 3
Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.
Username: hopesksefall
Date: 2020-04-01 20:10:31
Reaction Score: 6
Having worked in hotels for many years, one of the prime methods for removing unpleasant odors caused by smoking, food items, and others, was to use an "Ionizer" or "O-Zone generating machines", much like the image that I attached. This is purely anecdotal evidence, but I will say that any time I spent time in the room when the machine was running, it would cause an almost instant headache for me. There were warning stickers all over the device itself advising one not to stay in the room while the machine was running, and to give it at least a half-an-hour before entering the room once the machine has stopped running.Ozone has been and no doubt still is, used in public areas, such as lavatories, to neutralise airborne odours and bacteria (it's basically oxygen on steroids [O3] and incredibly effective against germs). You can buy battery operated equivalents to put inside your refrigerator. Ozone therapy has been very popular for many years. However, it is considered evil by TPTB, particularly big pharma and has come under the same demonisation propaganda assault as Colloidal Silver, Hydrogen Peroxide and more recently and more relevantly Chlorine Dioxide or MMS - the Miracle Mineral Supplement.
Please note:
- This is NOT a recommendation for anyone to go and research or use these products. This is simply information regarding the history of Ozone.

Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.Username: ave lunaDate: 2020-04-06 04:13:55Reaction Score: 2
Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.
Username: jd755
Date: 2020-04-06 11:06:35
Reaction Score: 3
Why is he sat in scrubs in his kitchen when there is a killer virus on the loose in his place of employment?very relevant.
Can one get high on Ozone? Just asking for a friend.Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.Username: SuperTrouperDate: 2020-04-06 23:52:11Reaction Score: 1
Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.
Username: Japod
Date: 2020-04-07 00:20:26
Reaction Score: 6
My aunt had her cancer cured with Ozone in Switzerland. For some reason the US has the lowest standards for ozone exposure as well as Borax (sodium tetraborrate) both of which have strong anti viral and anti fungal effects. Probably because we like treating symptoms in the US and not curing people as that is much less profitable.Wondering if there could be any association:
- Corona discharge is intentionally used in certain industrial processes including ozone production and electrostatic printing. But generally, it is considered harmful because it involves substantial power loss and a hazard to nearby people and equipment because of toxic and corrosive ozone emissions.
- The EPA has reported there is a variety of health effects associated with high levels of ozone. This may include decreased lung function, throat irritation, severe asthma symptoms, cough, chest pain, shortness of breath, irritation of lung tissue, and the higher sensitivity to respiratory infection.
- Increasing temperatures due to climate change will shift climatic conditions, resulting in worse air quality by increasing the number of days with high concentrations of ozone, according to a new journal article on air quality throughout the Mid-Atlantic region from researchers at the University of Delaware's College of Earth, Ocean and Environment (CEOE).
- "Ozone has large negative impacts on health, especially affecting the cardiopulmonary and respiratory systems," Archer said. "It is especially bad if you already have a respiratory condition, asthma, for example, or an infection.
- Ozone threat from climate change: Increasing global temperatures will impact air quality
- Global Warming Will Aggravate Ozone Pollution in the U.S. Mid-Atlantic
This stuff could also be related:
Ozone's Effects on Human Health:
- The phenomena of spreading ambient ozone at the west coast air basin of Taiwan
- China is hot spot of ground-level ozone pollution
- Causes of ozone pollution in summer in Wuhan, Central China.
- Community Based Planning for Ozone Reduction
- Ground-level Ozone Pollution | US EPA
- Ozone also triggers asthma and may aggravate other respiratory illnesses such as pneumonia and bronchitis.
- Exposure to ozone at levels we commonly encounter in many of our own communities permanently scars the lungs of experimental animals, causing long-term impairment of lung capacity, or the volume of air that can be expelled from fully inflated lungs.
- Ozone may have similar effects on human lungs.
- Studies in animals also suggest that ozone may reduce the human immune system's ability to fight bacterial infections in the respiratory system.
- Ozone's Effects on Human Health
COVID-19: The virus can cause lung scarring.
Climate Change (there is no escape from it):
Related Threads:
- Ground-level ozone, a serious health hazard, is expected to get worse as the climate warms.
- Ground-level ozone and climate change
KD: Isn't it interesting that many symptoms are very similar to the ones displayed by the "infected" with COVID-19?
Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.
Username: Banta
Date: 2020-04-12 14:35:55
Reaction Score: 1
He said he had to resign his position as director of the ICU and was moved to the ER. So, maybe he has some mandatory downtime?Why is he sat in scrubs in his kitchen when there is a killer virus on the loose in his place of employment?
I've used ozonators for years (even being in the same room) and haven't noticed any problems. It cleans the air from dust and other toxic particles.Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.Username: plamskiDate: 2020-04-18 16:10:08Reaction Score: 1
reminds me of the smell of 2 HP laserjet 9000's printing 15,000 double sided 11x17 sheets during the course of the day...Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.Username: andymDate: 2020-04-19 05:33:59Reaction Score: 0
Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.
Username: codis
Date: 2020-04-19 07:34:18
Reaction Score: 1
I think, breathing into and from a bag, as asthmatics occasionally do, is the makeshift method of the same.Carbon Dioxide can be very dangerous, bot only if it displaces oxygen in the air. I built my own carbon dioxide bath. Similar to this one: Carbon Dioxide Therapy Bath – Carbogenetics
For each session one needs around 300g of CO2. Breathing for eample 1-5% carbon dioxide should be way more effective. Unfortunately I haven't found a way to do it safely. It's easier to look up Buteyko Breathing methods and learn to increase body CO2 by breathing differently. (normalbreathing.com)
Buteyko worked with Chernobyl victims and he could reverse acute radiation sickness with breathing alone, but his work is known mostly for Asthma, and in many countries (like Germany) the Buteyko therapy is officially accepted as a treatment for Asthma.
Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.
Username: andym
Date: 2020-04-19 15:03:08
Reaction Score: 0
interesting you memtioned that because in almost all the cases i have seen that "breathe with a bag" suggestion it was during a moment of someone "hyper-ventilating" ...I think, breathing into and from a bag, as asthmatics occasionally do, is the makeshift method of the same.
Oxygen level decreases and CO2 level increases when breathing the same air repeatedly.
Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.
Username: codis
Date: 2020-04-20 08:25:42
Reaction Score: 0
Not plagued with asthmatic issues.interesting you memtioned that because in almost all the cases i have seen that "breathe with a bag" suggestion it was during a moment of someone "hyper-ventilating" ...
Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.
Username: whitewave
Date: 2020-04-20 13:08:29
Reaction Score: 0
I had asthma as a child up into my teen years and found that when an attack was coming on, if I got really angry, it would go away. Fight or flight response produces adrenaline which is a natural form of epinephrine which is what the hospital gives you when you can't breathe.Not plagued with asthmatic issues.
But I think hyperventilation is a "panick-method" to deal with an asthmatic attack.
Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.
Username: andym
Date: 2020-04-20 13:45:13
Reaction Score: 0
maybe i am misunderstanding it wrong, but in a panic situation or a "flabbergasted" moment, etc, when you'd see it in a movie or a comedy show or cartoon, the person would be breathing super fast and presumably getting more oxygenated air than they normally would, so someone would give them a bag to breath in, which seems like they were then getting less oxygen directly by using the bag to recycle the air...Not plagued with asthmatic issues.
But I think hyperventilation is a "panick-method" to deal with an asthmatic attack.
Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.
Username: codis
Date: 2020-04-20 14:06:51
Reaction Score: 1
That is my superficial idea of it, too. Instinctively increasing the amount of pumps (breaths) per time to make up for the smaller effect.maybe i am misunderstanding it wrong, but in a panic situation or a "flabbergasted" moment, etc, when you'd see it in a movie or a comedy show or cartoon, the person would be breathing super fast and presumably getting more oxygenated air than they normally would, so someone would give them a bag to breath in, which seems like they were then getting less oxygen directly by using the bag to recycle the air...
I think there is already enough critical discussion of "ventilating" elsewhere....and how that related to the use of the ventilators that some of the doctors or others were speculating may be actually over oxygenating people, etc...
Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.
Username: plamski
Date: 2020-04-20 15:21:52
Reaction Score: 0
Hi dreamtime, how did you do it? Can you give us more details?I built my own carbon dioxide bath.
Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.
Username: dreamtime
Date: 2020-04-20 15:43:55
Reaction Score: 0
It's based on the work by Dr. R. Kovarik who pioneered the use of a closed, dry carbon dioxide bath therapy for women suffering from pregnancy gestosis (Preeclampsia), in the 1980s in Germany. He basically had a 100% success rate, and if I remember correctly he was silenced. Afterwards he moved to Paraguay because Germany was too oppressive.Hi dreamtime, how did you do it? Can you give us more details?
Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.
Username: plamski
Date: 2020-04-20 16:03:54
Reaction Score: 1
Thank you.It's based on the work by Dr. R. Kovarik who pioneered the use of a closed, dry carbon dioxide bath therapy for women suffering from pregnancy gestosis (Preeclampsia), in the 1980s in Germany. He basically had a 100% success rate, and if I remember correctly he was silenced. Afterwards he moved to Paraguay because Germany was too oppressive.
Nowadays he lives in South America and is offering the therapy in El Paraiso Verde (Paraguay). Treatment in professional facilities is up to 100€ per session, and they are mostly based in Eastern Europe, so not easily accessible. The CO2 itself costs only 1€ per session, and everything can be done at home.
There's a self-help group that sells his material, as well as the instructions on how to build one. Please contact the group here for further instructions: Arbeitsgemeinschaft Gestose-Betroffene e.V.
Tell them you want to buy the licence by Dr. Kovarik, and the material needed for the therapy (bags, etc.). You will need to buy additional stuff like the bottle itself elsewhere. All in all the setup costs around 400€.
Note that CO2 can kill you if you handle it improperly and it replaces the oxygen in the air (for example when the bottle leaks into a closed room). Otherwise CO2 is entirely non-toxic.