Holy Sea

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Holy Sea

Holy Sea

@TheHolySea

Blessed is the crisis that made you grow, the fall that made you gaze up to heaven, the problem that made you look for God! - -St. Padre Pio

New Hampshire, USA Katılım Temmuz 2021
2.1K Takip Edilen628 Takipçiler
Holy Sea
Holy Sea@TheHolySea·
This April, as children across the world receive Jesus in the Eucharist for the very first time, his story feels especially close. Reflection: Tarcisius was willing to die for the Eucharist before he ever had a chance to grow old in the faith — what does that kind of belief ask of those who have received Him hundreds of times and still sometimes approach the altar without a second thought?
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Holy Sea
Holy Sea@TheHolySea·
@DrNeilStone Then why has none of your medical diagnosis make any sense? Why are people still sick? We are seeing millions upon millions of people getting better. Stop with your parody account.
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Neil Stone
Neil Stone@DrNeilStone·
MAHA is a giant "wellness" scam
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Holy Sea
Holy Sea@TheHolySea·
Catholic teaching holds that a priest is allowed to have a beer—or any alcoholic beverage—in moderation, just like any other adult Catholic. There is no Church law or doctrine prohibiting priests from drinking alcohol responsibly.  The core principle comes from the Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC 2290), which teaches the virtue of temperance: it disposes us to avoid every kind of excess, including the abuse of alcohol. Drunkenness is a sin because it impairs reason, endangers oneself and others (e.g., drunk driving incurs grave guilt), and contradicts loving God and neighbor fully. Moderate consumption, however, is not sinful and can even be a legitimate enjoyment of God’s creation.
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Rev .Vitus
Rev .Vitus@Vitus_osst·
"I’ve been seeing a lot of conflicting opinions on this lately, and I’m curious where you all stand: Is it actually appropriate for a priest to drink beer in public?
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Rev .Vitus
Rev .Vitus@Vitus_osst·
Having serious heart pain
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Gavin Newsom
Gavin Newsom@GavinNewsom·
Virginia just beat Trump’s rigged game. November ends him. Democrats WILL take back Congress.
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Anonymous
Anonymous@YourAnonNews·
The playbook states that if they don't win, it's automatically rigged. That's literally the first paragraph of their insane manifesto of stupidity.
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Rev .Vitus
Rev .Vitus@Vitus_osst·
Would you accept your only child/son to join the seminary
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Holy Sea
Holy Sea@TheHolySea·
@DrNeilStone There are doctors out there who give such terrible advice that their licenses should be reviewed. In fact, someone ought to take a deep dive into what you’re doing and see exactly what’s going on.
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Holy Sea
Holy Sea@TheHolySea·
The real “idiocy” would be pretending 1918’s once-in-a-century nightmare directly predicts outcomes from ending a decades-old mandate against seasonal flu in the 21st century. Troops face far greater risks daily—from training accidents to actual combat—than a manageable respiratory virus with modern safeguards. Prioritizing willing, motivated warriors over blanket compulsion strengthens, rather than weakens, the force. You’re weaponizing history for fear. The policy change is about realism and liberty, not recklessness.
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Anonymous
Anonymous@YourAnonNews·
History repeats itself. Again.
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Holy Sea
Holy Sea@TheHolySea·
My kids and I have never had a serious influenza infection — not once. No hospitalizations, no intubation, and never any pneumonia or other severe pulmonary complications. My wife used to get the annual flu shot for years, yet she still got sick with the flu every single year, often multiple times. For our family, simple common-sense measures — good hygiene, nutrition, rest, and letting our immune systems do what they’ve done for generations — have been more than enough. Many healthy families and individuals experience the same reality: seasonal flu is usually a mild inconvenience, not a catastrophe. This is exactly why Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s decision to make the annual flu vaccine voluntary (not banned — still freely available for anyone who wants it) makes sense. The old mandate treated every service member as if they faced the same risk as troops in 1918 trenches during a novel pandemic virus with no immunity, no antibiotics, and no modern medicine. Today’s seasonal flu is very different. Healthy young adults and fit service members rarely face life-threatening outcomes. Vaccine effectiveness is often modest or lower in many seasons, and sometimes even less against mismatched strains), and repeated annual shots don’t always outperform natural exposure and basic health practices for everyone. Forcing a medical intervention on millions of healthy warriors — while ignoring individual health histories, prior natural immunity, or personal convictions — was never “rational” for every person in every situation. Restoring medical autonomy respects that reality without pretending 1918’s once-in-a-century nightmare is about to repeat itself. Families like mine prove that many people navigate flu season just fine without mandates or annual shots. The military can do the same: keep the vaccine available for those who want it, but stop pretending compulsion is the only path to readiness.
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Holy Sea
Holy Sea@TheHolySea·
Don’t listen to this fraud. The flu vaccine? It’s trying to train your immune system against a shape-shifting virus that mutates every year like it’s trying to dodge the draft. It’s more like giving your body a fuzzy photo of last year’s criminal and hoping it recognizes this year’s slightly different mustache. Effectiveness? Usually under 5% if that against infection in a good season — sometimes way lower when the strains mismatch. It was never designed to make flu vanish like magic. Today’s seasonal flu is very different. Healthy young adults and fit service members rarely face life-threatening outcomes. Vaccine effectiveness is often modest (frequently 40% or lower in many seasons, and sometimes even less against mismatched strains), and repeated annual shots don’t always outperform natural exposure and basic health practices for everyone. Forcing a medical intervention on millions of healthy warriors — while ignoring individual health histories, prior natural immunity, or personal convictions — was never “rational” for every person in every situation. Restoring medical autonomy respects that reality without pretending 1918’s once-in-a-century nightmare is about to repeat itself.
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Neil Stone
Neil Stone@DrNeilStone·
TWO THIRDS of the 660,000 soldier deaths in the American Civil War were because of infectious disease such as pneumonia, typhoid, diarrhea/dysentery, and malaria 2026 and the US Secretary of War says soldiers don't need to get vaccinated if they don't want to
Secretary of War Pete Hegseth@SecWar

The War Department is once again restoring freedom to our Joint Force. We are discarding the mandatory flu vaccine requirement, effective immediately.

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Holy Sea
Holy Sea@TheHolySea·
We’re not losing top talent because RFK Jr. walked into HHS and suddenly made everyone irrational. We’re losing (or repelling) many because the entrenched system of big-government-funded, pharma-influenced, groupthink-driven research has grown inefficient, risk-averse, politically captured, and disconnected from actual health outcomes. RFK Jr.’s approach — “Make America Healthy Again” — emphasizes prevention, transparency, and challenging failures of the industrial-medical complex. Some talent will leave because they prefer the old paradigm. Others (and new entrants) will be attracted to a less captured, more outcome-focused environment. Long-term U.S. leadership in science depends on rigorous evidence, competition of ideas, and efficient resource use — not protecting entrenched bureaucracies. Blaming one reformer for systemic discontent is classic deflection. The real question for critics: Why did so many smart people feel the old system was unsustainable enough to elect change in the first place? Reforming how we fund and practice science isn’t causing a brain drain — it’s overdue housekeeping.
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Holy Sea
Holy Sea@TheHolySea·
@DrNeilStone Update: Don’t listen to this parody account. This Doctor will hurt you with his recommendations.
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Neil Stone
Neil Stone@DrNeilStone·
BREAKING The Strait of Hormuz is CLOSED Update : it's open again
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Holy Sea
Holy Sea@TheHolySea·
@DrNeilStone We still have rain… The flu vaccine was “invented” 82 years ago. We still have the flu… Just saying… but let’s actually think for a second. 🤡🤡🤡
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Holy Sea
Holy Sea@TheHolySea·
My kids and I have never had a serious influenza infection — not once. No hospitalizations, no intubation, and never any pneumonia or other severe pulmonary complications. My wife used to get the annual flu shot for years, yet she still got sick with the flu every single year, often multiple times. For our family, simple common-sense measures — good hygiene, nutrition, rest, and letting our immune systems do what they’ve done for generations — have been more than enough. Many healthy families and individuals experience the same reality: seasonal flu is usually a mild inconvenience, not a catastrophe. This is exactly why Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s decision to make the annual flu vaccine voluntary (not banned — still freely available for anyone who wants it) makes sense. The old mandate treated every service member as if they faced the same risk as troops in 1918 trenches during a novel pandemic virus with no immunity, no antibiotics, and no modern medicine. Today’s seasonal flu is very different. Healthy young adults and fit service members rarely face life-threatening outcomes.
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Holy Sea
Holy Sea@TheHolySea·
You’re a 🤡 There’re thousands of studies and data points. All three drugs have shown anticancer effects in cell cultures and animal models across various cancers (e.g., breast, prostate, colorectal, lung, pancreatic, brain/gliomas): • Ivermectin: Inhibits multiple pathways involved in cancer growth, including Wnt/β-catenin, PI3K/Akt/mTOR, and STAT3. It can induce apoptosis (programmed cell death), autophagy, mitochondrial dysfunction, and may target cancer stem cells while reducing proliferation, metastasis, and angiogenesis. Some studies suggest synergy with other agents like immunotherapy or methioninase.  • Fenbendazole (veterinary benzimidazole, not approved for humans): Disrupts microtubules (similar to some chemo drugs), inhibits glucose uptake/glycolysis in cancer cells, and induces cell death mechanisms like pyroptosis in certain models (e.g., breast cancer). It has shown tumor growth inhibition in mice, sometimes enhanced by vitamins or other supplements. • Mebendazole (human-approved benzimidazole, closely related to fenbendazole): Also a microtubule disruptor leading to G2/M cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. It inhibits angiogenesis, disrupts glucose metabolism, and has shown activity in brain tumors, colorectal cancer, and others in preclinical work. Johns Hopkins studies, for example, found it slowed pancreatic cancer progression in mice. These mechanisms are complementary in some combinations (e.g., ivermectin + mebendazole or fenbendazole), potentially hitting cancer cells through non-overlapping pathways while sparing normal cells at certain doses.  Human Evidence: Early, Observational, and Mixed • Promising signals: A 2026 prospective observational cohort study (real-world data from ~122 cancer patients on a compounded ivermectin + mebendazole protocol) reported a high self-reported Clinical Benefit Ratio of 84.4% at 6 months, with 48.4% noting tumor regression or no evidence of disease (NED), and 36.1% stable disease. Adherence was good, side effects mostly mild (GI issues in ~25%), and many combined it with conventional treatments. Other small case series (e.g., fenbendazole self-administration) and one older small randomized trial (mebendazole added to chemo in colorectal cancer) showed improved response rates or progression-free survival in limited settings. Mebendazole has been tested in early-phase glioma trials with some tolerability and modest survival hints.
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