Bolivia’s Use Of Chlorine Dioxide Led To The Best Outcomes In South America
Sun 1:34 pm +00:00, 29 Dec 2024
In my first post in this series, I introduced the topic of chlorine dioxide as a therapeutic within its “political” context, not scientific. After a cursory introduction regarding its safety along with a few citations of its efficacy, I highlighted the regulatory, media, and judicial attacks against any who manufacture, recommend and/or sell chlorine dioxide for medicinal purposes via oral ingestion. A key point I brought attention to is the bizarre prohibition against “oral ingestion” that “they” are trying to block at all costs (despite studies of both oral and IV administration showing little to no toxicity and the fact that there are numerous products already on the market for oral and/or dental applications). In this post, I will share what I recently learned of what happened in Bolivia around chlorine dioxide. I think it is a story the world needs to hear. Again, these are the first of a series of posts on chlorine dioxide with later ones going more deeply into the data on safety and efficacy fas well as treatment approaches for various conditions. If you don’t want to miss the rest of the series, I suggest you subscribe now: THE BOLIVIAN EXPERIENCE The most notable event around chlorine dioxide in Bolivia was when a group of parliamentarians managed (somehow) to pass a law which allowed for the manufacture and distribution (and use) of chlorine dioxide in Bolivia on October 14, 2020: Although this was a national law, one of the largest of the 9 departments in Bolivia, that of La Paz, had already passed a similar version on Sept 9, 2020: However, before these laws were passed in Bolivia, media attacks on the legislators responsible already began in June 2020. This one is a doozy: “A chemical discredited to exhaustion by the world scientific community.” You can say that again. To give what the Bolivians did some additional context, know that other South American countries also attempted such legislative efforts: a similar petition action was taken by Brazil’s chamber of deputies a year after Bolivia, but the law was quickly rescinded after the president changed from Bolsonaro (right) to Lula (left) – i.e. the latter’s administration quickly ended the petition: And then in Peru, a group of parliamentarians passed a resolution to “study its use” in Covid (49 parliamentarians to be exact). However, as this newspaper article outlines, the fight over the resolution and over chlorine dioxide was both highly political and either willfully or negligently misinformed by the health authorities in opposition. To wit, this is the concluding paragraph of the article:
Also know that in Peru in June 2020, the Chief of the Covid Command in Ayacucho, a region of 100,000 people, was dismissed for treating patients with chlorine dioxide: A similar pro-chlorine dioxide petition effort also took place in Paraguay’s Chamber of Deputies. Below is a screenshot of the title and cover page followed by a ChatGPT translated summary:
THE BOLIVIAN EXPERIENCE Lets get back to Bolivia now because that is where the “action” really happened around chlorine dioxide in South America. After the law supporting the manufacture and use of chlorine dioxide was passed, the Bolivian Ministry of Health quickly issued a press releaseattacking the law and also the idea that chlorine dioxide was safe or that there was evidence it had anti-viral properties (which is astounding given it is likely the broadest and most effective viricide in use). The Ministry tried to assert their authority by stating that the law was in opposition to its guidelines as a health authority and its responsibility to protect the health of the general population in Bolivia. Of course the “health of the Bolivian people” was their primary institutional concern! Who would ever openly question that? I bolded the most relevant parts of the Bolivian Ministry of Health release below (translated using google translate). Before you read it, I think it will be helpful to remind you of the definition of an “appeal to authority” argument which is used incessantly in the media and by public agencies around chlorine dioxide (and ivermectin, HCQ, Vitamin D etc, etc). Definition of “appeal to authority” argument:
Now read the Health Ministry’s release below and notice how I helpfully bolded for you the number of times that they used this type of “logical fallacy” – they referred to a “disapproving expert” no less than thirteen times in 4 paragraphs to be exact:
Now, although the law was passed in La Paz on September 9, 2020, interestingly, already back in July, there were reports of Bolivian universities producing chlorine dioxide to treat Covid: Now watch this short news interview below with a physician who served as a Bolivian military representative to announce the distribution and treatment program. The below is subtitled, and a transcript in English can be found here, it is less than two minutes: Unsurprisingly, after Bolivia passed the law allowing for the manufacture and distribution of chlorine dioxide, newspapers (gleefully?) reported that this action directly defied the PAHO (a specialized health agency of the United Nations) as reported in this news article): A paragraph from the article:
Check out CNN jumping in with coverage of the Bolivian legislator’s efforts: Know that the physician in the video above was asked to represent the military’s program at the time (although she is not in the military). Her name is Dr. Patricia Callesperis and she has become a new and trusted colleague and friend to me as I pursue my research into chlorine dioxide. Here is a short bio of Dr. Callisperis:
More pertinent is that during the last ten years of her career, she became professionally dedicated to researching and promoting the use of chlorine dioxide as an alternative therapy. The “origin” story of her interest into chlorine dioxide as a therapeutic is both visually and emotionally telling:
After overcoming the chronic lesions in 2017 with chlorine dioxide, she began using it to treat and publish reports of patients with varicose ulcers, diabetic foot, and other conditions, achieving promising results.
Here she is more recently, with all lesions in the distant past: Back to Covid now: when I asked her for the published results and/or data on the impacts of the national and military chlorine dioxide program, she informed me that, unsurprisingly, the Bolivian “FDA” (known as AGEMED) denied her and her colleagues’ application to do a prospective double blinded study (even though they had manufactured a “placebo” – i.e. a solution that tasted like chlorine dioxide but was inert). Dr. Callisperis pointed out that the “pharmaceutical division” of AGEMED actually did approve the study but the “higher-ups” in AGEMED then rejected it. Then AGEMED went even further and denied their application and access to data to be able to do a retrospective observational study. This was shockingly unsurprising to me (odd paradox I know) just as it would be for the vast majority of my readers. Thus the actual scientific and clinical data results of the Bolivian program are not accurately known (which I would argue is as intended) however, as you will see below, the epidemiological and anecdotal evidence is overwhelming (including reports of eradication of Covid in certain cities). The below interview televised on “El Pais” is fascinating given that El Pais is one of the largest media outlets in Bolivia. Unlike the way the U.S media treated the topic of ivermectin, El Pais “presented both sides” by interviewing one clinical researcher who stated its safety and efficacy and then they interviewed a pharmacy regulator who stated there is insufficient evidence for chlorine dioxide and that it is dangerous to patients. The actually broadcast contrasting opinions instead of having someone simply call it a horse dewormer (or toxic bleach in this case) over and over again. Worth a watch (I added English subtitles, 6:16 total): One statement from the clinician expert in chlorine dioxide jumped out:
I swear that was my initial vision/fantasy after discovering the potent efficacy of ivermectin in Covid – I first imagined a U.S national ivermectin distribution program! I had thought we could just “copy” the 40 year old WHO ivermectin distribution programs against parasitic diseases that had been conducted across Africa and other continents. Do you guys remember Fauci’s national ivermectin distribution program for Covid in the U.S.? I didn’t think so. Anyway, let’s contrast some statements from the “regulator” and the “expert clinician:” Chlorine Dioxide Expert Clinician:
Ed: His statement “they are going to threaten us with trials,” really resonated with me given that is what they did with ivermectin – health authorities across the world refused to recommend its use until “they” could publish trials deliberately manipulated to try to show ivermectin did not work. This is extremely important to be aware of because I am certain that if they ever remove the restriction on chlorine dioxide research, the first trials to be conducted and published will be trials manipulated to obtain “negative” results. This is a tactic from the Disinformation Playbook called “The Fake” as I have harped on many times before and is literally the primary tactic at which they suppress, prevent, and distort evidence of efficacy of safe, inexpensive, widely available therapies that produce little profit to industry: Bolivian Health Regulator comments:
Ed: Notice how he provides no data to support that people are hurting themselves. As I detailed in my first post, recall that the worlds “authorities” moved against chlorine dioxide even before their later coordinated attacks on HCQ and then ivermectin. So, with all the fervor and national attention on chlorine dioxide in Bolivia, the powers that be hit back.. with lies (if you read the article below they mention 5 people being poisoned but no links or references to this statement were given, plus, even more absurdly, if you look at the sub-headline, they mention 10 people being “poisoned.” Isn’t it weird that a simple number was so different in the headline and the text of a major media newspaper? Dr. Callisperis recently told me,
This is further substantiated with this interview with a Rector of a Bolivian University on this news program (in subtitles): The interview above was held with the Vice Rector of the Gabriel René Moreno University, Dr. Osvaldo Ulloa. He first admits that the university was producing it for their workers and students:
Basically, if you listen to the whole interview, the Rector of the University states that they were having excellent results treating students, staff, and the community while pointing out that “the Ministry of Health calls it a toxic product.” Further he points out that in order to treat the patients in the hospitals, they “need the collaboration of the Ministry and municipal governments and federal government” (which they were not getting). Interestingly, the head of Human Rights for Bolivia ended up intervening on the side of the chlorine dioxide program by going after the Ministry of Health for not drafting the regulations on the use of chlorine dioxide which the law demanded they do. This article below called out the “administration” for not obeying the law of the people. Imagine that? On the issue of the University Rector calling out for collaboration with authorities to help the patients in hospitals, in the below article, the Mayor of San Juan De Chiquitos boldly proclaimed that they “emptied their ICU of 16 critical patients” after using chlorine dioxide and that “he was bringing the records of all 16 patients to La Paz” (Ed: like data makes a difference). Again, here is another anomaly in reporting – read the translated headline below and then go read the article, you will find a massive discordance between the headline and what is actually written in the article which is almost all positive towards chlorine dioxide! So, a law was passed allowing for the production and use of chlorine dioxide and the military and universities started producing and treating Bolivians ill with Covid and Bolivians were lining up all over the country to receive treatment. What were the impacts of this campaign? Since the clinicians and researchers were not allowed to gather nor publish data in an organized way we are left with, once again, epidemiological data. Let’s see, from Our World in Data: As you can see, Bolivia suffered a sudden and unprecedented spike (even for South America) in Covid deaths in early September 2020, where on Sept. 8, they were recording 133 deaths per million and then 6 weeks later, they recorded the lowest in S. America at 2 per million. But notice the sharpness of the spike – soon after the first of “the laws” were passed in La Paz, the rates and deaths disappeared rapidly and within a month, Bolivia had the lowest death rate in S. America. Coincidence? Does the “sharpness” of the spike on the graph of Bolivia remind you of India’s delta wave in Uttar Pradesh (from my previous series called “The Miraculous Success of Uttar Pradesh”) where they distributed ivermectin using 160,000 workers (who were all taking ivermectin prophylactically) that visited 97,000 villages, testing widely and treating all positive cases with ivermectin and prophylaxing all family members of positive cases with ivermectin. This is the graph of cases that resulted in Uttar Pradesh: Another graph that one of my subscribers just sent me is this one: Next, the below article highlights the fact that the first city to adopt chlorine dioxide in a coordinated program, San Jose De Chiquitos, found that their program led to “epidemiological silence” for 39 straight days at the time the article was published on Nov. 8, 2020:
Bolivia’s performance in combatting Covid with chlorine dioxide, like Uttar Pradesh’s performance with ivermectin, did not go unnoticed by the WHO. Recall this report from the WHO that celebrated Uttar Pradesh’s success without mentioning their systematic use of ivermectin! Same thing happened with Bolivia – the below WHO report on Bolivia’s success also somehow did not see fit to mention the nation’s use of chlorine dioxide. Curious no? See below, translated awkwardly by Google: From above:
Now, one of the most compelling and sincere testimonials regarding the efficacy of chlorine dioxide against Covid was this below testimony by a Mexican surgeon who treated three thousand patients with 99.6% success (4 deaths out of a 1,000). In addition, he was forced to treat the patients at home and not at his clinic, because he claims that when they were reporting the near 100% effectiveness of chlorine dioxide, he says the “authorities” came and closed down the Covid unit of his clinic. He was then forced to individually treat patients in their home without his medical staff to support him or the patient. I excerpted this clip via “fair use” from the documentary “The Universal Antidote.” Please watch: He ends with:
Now, just for kicks, I sent the above video to a friend and colleague of mine who is a world expert in detecting “deception” or “dishonesty.” His name is Louis Conte and besides being the guy who recruited me to SkyHorse publishing to write my book The War on Ivermectin, he is also considered one of the world’s experts at polygraph testing. However, know that polygraph data analysis is only one tool he uses in determining truthfulness, the rest relies on the voice, facial expressions/movements, mannerisms, tone, speech, etc.. Check out his assessment of truthfulness after I asked him to watch the video and comment:
(Ed: I laughed out loud reading the last line… until I remembered it’s not funny 🙂 CONCLUSIONI have spent many weeks researching numerous aspects of chlorine dioxide and, in my opinion, I believe there currently exists a “wealth of evidence” of its safety and effectiveness against a broad array of microbes including viruses, bacteria (even multi-drug resistant), parasites, and fungi. Its efficacy in a broad range of non-infectious diseases also appears promising and I will be sharing evidence of that in future posts. I now believe, like ivermectin, HCQ, nitazoxanide, and DMSO, chlorine dioxide should be a critical component of the medicine cabinet of every family’s household that is intent on preserving their health against future viral and/or bioweapon pandemic assaults. If it is a living organism making you ill, I believe there is likely a single effective treatment for it and that is chlorine dioxide. To prove that, a lot of work needs to be done to overcome the regulatory barriers on research, however I have joined a promising international group of clinicians and researchers who are all collaborating on this mission. More will be revealed (I hope). If this post wet your appetite for learning more about chlorine dioxide, please subscribe because my next posts will contain more detailed and referenced information on its safety and efficacy, as well as how to source and use chlorine dioxide in treatment of infectious (and other) diseases.
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