Nicotine, Nanotechnology and Health
Nicotine Sources Under the Microscope - Discussion and Images
There has been a lot of cause for hope lately when it comes to Nicotine, as well as a fair amount of controversy. In his Spring, 2022 interview with Stew Peters, entitled: “Live World Premiere: Watch the Water,” Dr. Bryan Ardis put forth a complex hypothesis regarding the cause of Covid-19 and accompanying deaths. In the video, he hails Nicotine as a protective substance against Covid-19, and suggests that Covid-19 is a response to venom poisoning.
Many of Dr. Ardis’ claims have subsequently been questioned by others, including: Amandha D. Vollmer, who released a video debunking Dr. Ardis’ claims. Here is the address for that video. I can’t seem to get all of my links to work for some reason, but you should be able to copy and paste the address in a web browser and have it come up. https://rumble.com/v11b9go-amandha-d-vollmer-the-deeper-snake-agenda-revealed-watch-the-water-debunked.html I’m assuming that most of my readers are already acquainted with “Live World Premiere: Watch the Water” but, if not, you can use this address to access it: https://rumble.com/v10mnew-live-world-premiere-watch-the-water.html
A few months back, Rafa Calvin of La Quinta Columna produced video images of what were assumed to be microchips in dental anesthetic. In the video, a tobacco/water mixture is added to the anesthetic and the ‘chips’ dissolve.
On August 25, 2024, shortly after the La Quinta Columna video was released, Dr. David Nixon posted an article, entitled: “Nicotine Does NOT destroy 'nanotech structures’” on his Substack: Nixonlab. I strongly recommend that anyone interested in the subject read Dr. David Nixon’s article, which also contains the original video of Rafa Calvin’s images. In the article, Dr. Nixon explains that he has seen similar structures in vaccine samples dissolve when liquid is added, but says these structures typically reform after some time. Karl C. followed up by posting an article of his own entitled: “Some truth and insight… lets talk real!” on his Substack: Karl.C’s Substack on October 3, 2024.
I have my own thoughts on all of this, of course. I remember getting a strange: “I don’t know,” feeling while watching “Live World Premiere: Watch the Water,” and not liking the religious overtones. Part of the ‘I don’t know’ feeling had to do with my own memory of early news reports indicating that smokers were not experiencing the same Covid-19 death rates as nonsmokers. Dr. Bryan Ardis did point this out, but I had seen the news myself and still remembered it.
I found the La Quinta Columna video exciting at first, but wasn’t too sure about the ‘chips’ that were being shown. When I saw Dr. Nixon’s article, I remembered seeing earlier work done by him, and other researchers, including Mat Taylor, which showed how easily and quickly these sorts of chips can reassemble. That pretty much killed my hope in Nicotine as a chip dissolver, but it didn’t kill my hope in nicotine as a strong health remedy.
Nicotine is known to have some exciting health benefits. Among other things, it reduces inflammation, fights Alzheimer’s and Depression, improves mental clarity, fights ADHD, promotes tissue healing, and contributes to a lower incidence of a number of conditions and diseases, including: Fatal Heart Attacks, Thrombosis, and Parkinson’s. Some of these benefits, and a host of others, are described in: “12 Unexpected Nicotine Health Benefits,” posted on: New Health Advisor at https://www.newhealthadvisor.org/positive-effects-of-nicotine.html
Recently, while suffering from Dengue Fever, and what one doctor called: Pneumonia, I was forced to stop smoking, because my lungs simple couldn’t handle it. Although, smoking was out of the question, I felt like it would be a good idea to get some Nicotine into my system for it’s anti-inflammatory effects. A friend delivered a few tobacco leaves she had left from an organic plant on her property and I brewed it into a tea. I immediately noticed an improvement in my lung capacity, energy level and mental clarity. That was exciting!
I didn’t start smoking until 2021. I took it up due to a general feeling of depression and malaise that hit me in the midst of the Plandemic. It wasn’t until a couple of years ago that I gave any serious thought to quitting my new smoking habit. At first, I thought it would be just a simple matter of getting ahold of some Nicotine patches, but then I thought again.
Hum… patches. Hum… Wait… Hang on! Weren’t they toying with the idea of creating Covid-19 vaccines that could be administered by microneedles on a patch? Which companies manufacture Nicotine patches anyway? Do I have any reason to trust them? One could say that full scale paranoia had set in. But, then again, being suspicious these days is a good idea.
When I looked into nicotine patches and gum, it seemed like a lot of them were being put out by large pharmaceutical companies, companies I didn’t think I could trust. Later, the plot thickened even further.
As I mentioned in an earlier post, entitled: NANOTECH IN FRUITS AND VEGETABLES PART 1, a Bill was introduced in Tennessee in the Spring of 2024 requiring foods containing vaccines to be labelled. What prompted the bill, which later passed, was research conducted in California that resulted in finding a way to add vaccines to tomatoes, lettuce and tobacco, as a means of administering them to the public. Fact checkers online will assure you that there are no vaccines in food. But, I’m going to have say: “I don’t know...,” with a high degree of suspicion, to that one.
Interestingly, Philip Morris International, the producer of Marlboro Cigarettes, did almost get into the vaccine business, when they started collaborating with a Canadian company, to produce a plant-based Covid-19 vaccine in 2022. Philip Morris pulled out of the deal before the vaccine came to fruition, ostensibly because the WHO wouldn’t lend it’s support to the endeavor. Lam, Peggy. “Big Tobacco’s divestment from Quebec’s Medicago ‘a step in the right direction’ for its COVID vaccine” CBC, posted Dec. 29, 2022 www.cbc.ca/news/health/philips-morris-divestment-medicago-1.6700103 (Accessed 12/14/2024). It’s hard to know what to make of a tobacco company’s interest in a plant-based vaccine, but I’ve had enough of the tobacco/vaccine link to be suspicious for a lifetime.
There has been a worldwide effort on the part of governments to limit access to tobacco sources for decades, while nicotine replacement products, which are now on the WHO’s list of Essential Medications, are being promoted. Looking inside of various nicotine products seemed like I good idea.
Please find photos and videos posted below with images from tobacco brands, nicotine gum, a nicotine patch, and a vape canister. Of course a lot more work would need to be done to identify exactly what the pictures and videos below really show, and the degree to which each product may or may not present a danger to human health. I hope my images will interest researchers who are better equipped to seek the answers we all need.
CIGARETTES
SILVER ELEPHANT CIGARETTES
Video #1 - Silver Elephant Cigarette Tobacco in Water.
I apologize for the traffic noise and video quality above. This is among the strangest things I’ve ever seen under a microscope, but it could have a simple explanation. It looks like something is glowing and then dying back down. If anyone has any idea what could be producing this effect, please comment down below.
I’ve seen these cigarettes in a number of different countries. They are typically less expensive than other cigarettes and, as a result, are a favorite among many low-income people. The company that produces these cigarettes, (which contain tobacco, sugar, and unspecified vegetable extracts and flavorings), is China Tobacco Hunan Industrial Co., China.
LARK CIGARETTES
Video #2: Tobacco from a Lark Cigarette in Water.
Lark tobacco had a lot of movement in it, but much of it looked like it could be at least partly biological. I’m well aware of the importance of not assuming that all brightly moving particles seen in darkfield are nanobots. Particles that are dark in brightfield can appear bright in darkfield, and particle movement in a liquid can result from tiny adjustments made to the position of a slide. Some types of bacteria visible through an optical microscope in darkfield are bright and seem to move purposefully. A final thing I keep in mind when I’m looking at moving lights in sample, is that halos around particles can appear when a microscope is slightly out of focus.
Not being able to verify exactly what I’m seeing with the equipment I have leads me to use other visual information to inform any guesses I make. One of the questions I ask myself is whether I’m seeing any other evidence of technological involvement in the sample. As far as I’m concerned, Liposomes count, because they are made intentionally and carry nanoparticles. They are used in commercial and medical products to temporarily house nutrients, chemicals and other substances that might otherwise be destroyed by the environment, or the human body, earlier than desired. This doesn’t mean they are dangerous for our health, but they can be. I’ll be producing an in-depth article on this shortly.
There were several spherical shapes in the Lark cigarette tobacco that looked like liposomes to me.
Video 3 - Tobacco from a Lark Cigarette in Water
This looks like it could be moving bacteria surrounding a liposome. Very strange to say the least. I wonder what is causing them to clump together? Are the properties of the possible liposome attracting the particles to it, or is it being attacked?
Video #4 - Lark Cigarette Tobacco in Water.
This shows a lineup of particles. Some lineups seem to precede self-assembly processes, but this doesn’t always seem to be the case. The moving bright object above the line could be natural or technological.
LIDER CIGARETTES
Picture #1 - Lider Cigarette Tobacco and Water - Looks like a liposome to me.
Picture #2 - Lider Cigarette Tobacco and Water. (I’ll call this one: ‘Liposome Graveyard.’)
MARLBORO CIGARETTES - (Disappointingly Ordinary)
I’m not going to lie. I assumed I’d find more suspected nanotechnology in Marlboro Cigarettes than in any other brand. Maybe it was Marlboro’s popularity. Maybe it was the fact that were more expensive, better advertised, and seemingly available all over the world. Marlboro was the Coca-Cola of cigarettes, I reasoned. It had to bad. Well, maybe I just didn’t see the kind of activity I expected. There could be tiny structures in there far too small for an optical microscope to see. Still, it was a letdown. Not exciting at all - at least not from what I can tell. Marlboro Cigarettes seem to have a lot of particles in them that move in water, but the movements don’t seem mechanical at all - at least not to me.
Video #5 - Marlboro Cigarette Tobacco in Water (Darkfield)
NICOTINE REPLACEMENT PRODUCTS
AVEVA NICOTINE PATCH
This was quite challenging to test. At first I put the sticky side down on a clean slide and removed it from the glass. I ended up with some adhesive-like shapes, but couldn’t really see what was in the patch itself.
Next, I took one end of the patch and a sharp lab knife and tried scraping off as much adhesive as possible to place on the slide. That proved to be lousy idea and didn’t yield anything other than a few grains of adhesive particles.
Finally, I cut a small square out of the patch and placed it face up on the slide, stabilizing part, but not all, of it with a coverslip. The face up experiment yield a number of colored ribbons; numerous blue ones and a couple of violet-colored ones.
Picture #3 - AVEVA Nicotine Patch - with Blue Ribbon.
These blue ribbons are now commonly seen in a variety of consumer products and have turned up in human blood and semen.
Picture #4 - AVEVA Nicotine Patch - Blue Ribbon connected to crystal-like shapes at both end.
VAPE SAMPLE
NOVOBAR ROOTBEER VAPE
The way I obtained the sample for the following pictures will almost certainly make you laugh. You see, I know nothing about vaping. I’ve never done it. When I arrived at the Vape shop, I blindly assumed they’d sell liquid that would be easy to put on a slide. Not so. The woman behind the counter kept insisting that there was no other way to get to the product I wanted to look at, other than inhaling it. I didn’t think she could possibly be right about that, so I leaned over the counter and said. “I’ll do it. I’ll find a way.” Well… I did find ‘A WAY’, but it wasn’t a proper way, or one likely to be in anyway free of contamination. So, I have to come clean about it, so… Oh here goes… A friend helped me bore into the canister with a power drill, which likely contaminated the sample. I did find some interesting particle lineups in the golden colored sludge I was able to obtain.
Picture #5 - NOVO BAR ROOT BEER VAPE Canister contents.
Picture #6 - NOVO BAR ROOT BEER VAPE Canister contents
NICOTINE GUM
Video #6 - Nicorette Nicotine Gum with Water Added
I find the particle movement seen above highly suspicious. I appears mechanical to me. These could be nanobots, but there’s no way to verify that, so at this point it’s just a feeling. If you have an idea of what these could be, please comment down below.
Substack is telling me I’m at my ‘email length limit’ so I’ll have to end this here.
Some of you might be aware that there are a number of foods that contain Nicotine. The foods with the highest Nicotine content include: Eggplant, Tomatoes and Potatoes. Carefully grown food sources and tobacco leaves that could be made into a tea might be the answer to nicotine supplementation.
As always, thanks for your support!
Thank you for diving into this. I follow Karl C & Dr Ana (as well as trying to keep up with Dr Ardis), and my mind is in a whirl of confusion regarding Nanobots/nicotine. Everything seems to be conjecture, currently.
I am so glad you, someone anyone has covered this. Maybe Dr Ardis like many others had not fully looked into Tobacco, but it along with Lettuce and Tomatoes have been ones to watch since 2018, maybe earlier.