Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Fw: The dangerius vaccines.

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

-

Atle Johan Løvaas

undisclosed-recipients:

Tuesday, July 10, 2007 7:20 PM

The dangerius vaccines.

 

 

Hi my friends.

 

Here is an article about a patient of mine who was rewarded settlement from his

insurance company, and who also won in court, for having got a small pox

vaccination almost 20 earlier, which made him a heart diseased for the rest of

his life.

 

After this story was written, he was hospialised again a few days ago. He got

operated upon, a pacemaker was set in. At about a month ago I tested him, and

this time I found another virus coming from a vaccination, - now the

Hib-vaccine, hæmophilus influenza, which he got shortly before he came to me. I

asked him if he hadn't got enough of vaccines, whereupon he answered that it

didn't really struck his mind, it went so fast, the shot was given before he

really was able to think. He got slowly diseased again for the first time since

I treated him five years ago. I hope he's learned, and never ever let him be

vaccinated again. And hopefully the pacemaker will do its job now, pumping the

blood regularly, to compensate for a diseased heart, twice gotten attacked by

vaccinations.

 

The next time he comes to me in a few weeks, I'll probably still find the virus

at his heart.

 

Please read the full story, and please feel free to publish this story at any

website.

 

Kind regards

Atle.

 

 

HARALDS STORY

 

He set Precedent in Norwegian Court of Social Services, and was also awarded 2

million as settlement from Insurance Company.

 

 

 

In a recent decision handed down by the Norwegian Court of Social Services, a

patient's impaired heart was defined as an occupational disease. This is the

first case where an occupational disease had been declared comparable to

occupational injury, due to a compulsory small pox vaccination.

 

 

 

In addition to this victory, the patient filed a claim for damages with an

insurance company and, in an out-of-court settlement, was awarded 2, 000,000

Norwegian Kroner.

 

 

 

The patient's homeopath found smallpox virus on his heart. Was this a

significant factor?

 

 

 

Harald's story

 

Eighteen year old Harald, (his name has been changed for reason of anonymity),

signed on a Mowinckel tanker in 1974 on his first voyage with the Norwegian

merchant marine. Before joining the ship, Harald was subjected to the state

required smallpox vaccination. Twenty years later this healthy, athletic, a

former competitive swimmer, young man was afflicted with chronic heart disease.

How and why did this happen?

 

 

 

Harald at sea.

 

Harald should have had two week's quarantine, the incubation time of the

vaccine, before shipping out, but that did not happen. He was sent on board and

right into the machine room, where temperatures ranged from 40 to 50 degrees

Celsius. Two weeks later, when the ship was in the Golf of Mexico, Harald

became seriously ill. He lay in his berth, suffering from high fever and severe

chest pains. The ship made its way back to Europe. Harald refused

hospitalization in England, but was admitted to a hospital in Rotterdam. The

results of the three day examination were inconclusive, but the examining doctor

did mention to Harald: " You must have something wrong with your blood. "

 

 

 

One explanation for the failure to find a cause for Harald's problems, him being

a competitive swimmer, was that his athletic build provided room for his heart

to expand. This may, too, have helped to explain why his symptoms were mild.

 

 

 

Haukeland Hospital in Bergen, Norway

 

Harald was transferred to Haukeland Hospital in Bergen, where he was kept in

isolation for a month. A diagnosis for myocarditis was suggested. Dr. T.

Kalager wrote in Harald's journal:

 

" that he could not discount the possibility of myocarditis due to the smallpox

vaccine. "

 

 

 

Harald was released from the hospital in the middle of February of 1975 and

declared fit for work, but his already voluminous medical file continued to

grow. In a letter to Dr. Arvid Evjen, the doctor for seamen, Professor Dr. Johs

Bøe stated that: " we cannot exclude that there may be a myocarditis after the

smallpox vaccination. "

 

 

 

Disc surgery reveals heart problems

 

Harald signed on for a new two year tour at sea, but he later decided to return

to Norway and become a ship machinist. Harald then got a job on Ekkofisk, an oil

installation in the North Sea, and worked there until 2001. An unfortunate

accident on the rig led to a collapsed disc. During the course of preparations

for disc surgery, irregularities of the heart and a rapid decrease in blood

pressure caused great concern. Harald was once again sent to Haukeland Hospital

for a new round of tests. An echocardiograph showed a 6.7 centimeter dilation

of the left ventricle. A thalium scintigraphy indicated an EF of 38%. Harald

was diagnosed as suffering from dilated cardiomyopathy and was prescribed large

doses of heart medicine.

 

 

 

On sick leave for a year, Harald was often in very bad shape, and he was, on one

occasion, admitted for acute help at the emergency unit in Bergen, but once

again nothing conclusive was found. On another occasion Harald was admitted for

acute help at Haraldsplass Hospital in Bergen. The doctors discovered that his

heart was functioning at only twenty percent of full capacity. The patient was

given more medicine, but he did not feel that it relieved his suffering.

 

 

 

Harald is sacked

 

Now the inevitable happened. A letter from his employer informed him that his

services were not longer desired. Harald was now nearly destitute. He had his

disability pay, but because his chances of recovery were extremely slim, he was,

against his own will, pronounced " Disabled. "

 

 

 

Harald contacts a homeopath

 

Though disillusioned and half way beaten, Harald did not give up. He felt he

had to do something in order to find out what was wrong. In March 2002 he got

in touch with Mr. Atle Johan Løvaas, a homeopath, who, through the use of Dr.

Voll's testing methods, could identify microbes in the body's organs. Løvaas

electronically tested a number of acupuncture points on Harald's hands and feet.

All the acupuncture test points on Harald's hands indicated that the patient's

heart was infected on both sides, and the low numbers revealed that Harald's

heart ailment was of an extremely serious character.

 

 

 

Homeopath finds smallpox virus

 

Using homeopathic nosodes from virus and bacteria, Løvaas then took tests to

determine which micro-organisms were causing the problem. After two hours of

testing, the homeopath concluded that every ventricle in Harald's heart, as well

as his heart muscle on both sides was infected with smallpox virus (variolinum).

 

 

 

Upon hearing of Løvaas' findings, Harald then informed the homeopath for the

first time of the smallpox vaccination to which he had been submitted to when he

was only a teenager.

 

 

 

" Can my heart ailment be related to the vaccine I got in 1974? " Harald asked

Løvaas.

 

" Of course, " replied Løvaas, " where else could you have picked up smallpox

virus? The virus has been there all the time, but it is first in later years

that it has really started attacking your heart. "

 

 

 

Harald strikes back

 

This blunt statement by the homeopath reawakened Harald's competitive nature.

Harald

 

decided that he would sue the government. It was, after all, they who had

induced the smallpox virus into his system at the very beginning of his

vocational life. It was they, too, who had put him, at the age of forty, on the

disability list. Using homeopathic medicine, self made by Løvaas, the smallpox

virus and other microbes that had infested Harald's heart were successfully

treated. His health improved gradually over the course of the next few months,

and the frequent seizures which he had previously experienced, decreased

dramatically. It must be mentioned, however, that Harald never stopped taking

the medicine which the doctors had prescribed and strongly advised him to take.

 

Social Services Office

 

During a meeting in October 2002 with his consultant at the social services

office in Åsane, a suburb of Bergen, Harald told her of the improvement in his

health after having been treated by Løvaas. The consultant told him to get a

declaration from Løvaas. She wrote on the 23rd of October 2002: " The member

was encouraged to ask the homeopath to write a statement regarding his

findings. "

 

 

 

Homeopath writes a report

 

Mr. Løvaas was more than willing to report on his findings, and on October 29th

2002 he wrote:

 

 

 

" At the request of my patient, Harald, I have been asked to explain in detail

the results of my medical tests.

 

 

 

In brief, the method is an electronic test of approximately 120 acupuncture

points. I can, through these, register the state of all the organs in the body,

and I can determine which micro-organisms, virus or bacteria, are the cause of

an infection. In addition, I can identify which organ, indeed, which part of

the organ, is infected. This method is reliable nearly ninety percent of the

time.

 

 

 

When Harald had his first appointment with me in March of this year, I was able

to state categorically that his heart was in extremely poor condition. His

entire heart was infected. All eight of the points of the heart which I

measured were bad. I was able to conclude that he had smallpox virus,

variolinum, on the mitral valve, tricuspid valve, pulmonary valve and the aortic

valve. It came, therefore, as no surprise to me that the patient had been

diagnosed with

 

heart failure and murmur.

 

 

 

I assume that vaccine is the means through which Harald has been infected with

smallpox virus.

 

 

 

The improvement which the patient has experienced is through treatment with

homeopathic nosodes, which can, in contrast to the allopathic medicine, drive

the virus out of the patient's system.

 

 

 

For thirty years I have felt that I have been treated as a scabby alley cat by

the health authorities in Norway. Now, however, after having been asked by the

public health authorities to report on my form of treatment, I feel as if I have

been invited in from the dark and the cold. I normally deal with County

Doctors, and then usually in connection with a complaint that I am a charlatan,

a quack. What a pleasure it would be if this were to be the beginning to a more

fruitful relationship.

 

 

 

If I can be of any further assistance, please feel free to contact me. "

 

 

 

How naive

 

How naïve could a homeopath be? Two years later Løvaas was arrested while in

his own office, jailed and taken to court three times for his " Crimes against

Humanity. " His participation in Harald's fight for justice was obviously one of

these " crimes. "

 

 

 

 

 

Medical expertise outraged over statement

 

When Harald reported on his improvement to the doctors at Haukeland Hospital and

showed them the declaration from Løvaas, they reacted with anger and sarcasm.

Head of the coronary department, Dr. Kjell Breivik, revealed quite clearly his

sentiments on Løvaas' work when he, in a statement written to the Social

Services Office in Odda on January 20th 2003, added a final nasty comment:

 

 

 

" PS: Included in the case documents is a so called declaration from Homeopath

Løvaas. It is my opinion that it should have no bearing on the outcome of this

case. "

 

 

 

It was quite obvious that Dr. Kjell Breivik wanted no interference from

charlatans such as Løvaas. But, in spite of this impudent comment, Dr. Breivik

went on to state the following:

 

 

 

" The patient has a dilated cardiomyopathy that had its debut in connection with

an acute myocarditis when the patient was at sea in 1974. The etiology is

uncertain, but it is probably due to the smallpox vaccination. The sickness

broke while he as employed and he had to be sent home. It is, therefore, my

opinion that he meets the requirements in §13-4, sentence A to D. "

 

 

 

Case sent to Odda

 

Harald decided to sue the Norwegian social insurance system for damages. The

documents in his case were sent to Odda, the office there being the head office

for West Norway and the one responsible for the handling of such cases. From

there the case was sent to the Oslo office. A doctor from Lillehammer, an expert

loyal to the authorities, Dr. Einar Gløesen, specialist in internal medicine

and respiratory diseases, produced a declaration compatible with the view held

by the social service people:

 

 

 

" based upon advice received from experts in the field of infectious and

cardiological diseases, I have not been able to conclude that there is a clear

connection with the myocarditis established in 1974 and the cardiomyopathy

proven in 2001. There is also considerable uncertainty regarding the

constellation smallpox virus and myocarditis.

 

In view of the above, I cannot see how this can be regarded as an occupational

disease. "

 

 

 

More specialist statement

 

Other specialists were drawn into the picture. It appears as if Dr. Nils Heine

Walde arrived at the same conclusion September 2003 as Dr. Kjell Breivik had

arrived at in January of that same year.

 

 

 

Departmental head Dr. Arne Westheim also wrote a declaration on the matter in

March of 2004. On the basis of the information available, Dr. Westheim concluded

that there could be:

 

 

 

" a probable connection between the weak muscular tissues of Harald's heart and

his earlier struggle with myocarditis caused by smallpox vaccine. "

 

 

 

County Social Services Office in Oslo denies claim

 

The County Social Services Office in Oslo arrived at a decision on August 5th

2003. It concluded that the impairment in the tissues of Harald's heart was not

to be classified as an occupational disease.

 

 

 

Harald appeals

 

Harald fought on. His already voluminous file increased in size as letters from

lawyers, the social services offices and pronouncements from specialists were

added to it. It was clear at an early stage that the appeal would be argued on

the premise that:

 

 

 

" the muscular impairment of the tissues of his heart should be recognized as an

occupational disability. The justification for this claim is that evidence

shows there is causality between the vaccination and the resulting heart

ailment. "

 

 

 

Wins in the Court for Social Services

 

And it was this premise that was the deciding factor when the court arrived at a

conclusion, that there really was a connection between cause and effect (Quote

from the judgement):

 

 

 

" It is the opinion of the court that the patient's heart impairment is related

to occupation, and the general sentiment of the court is to recognize this

hardship as an occupational disease and place it on an equal footing with

occupational disability. "

 

 

 

The Court's decision

 

" The resolution handed down by the County Social Services Office in Oslo is

hereby reversed, and muscular impairment of the heart is recognized as an

occupational disease on level with occupational disability. "

 

 

 

Occupational disease=occupational disability

 

As a result of the court's findings, Harald received compensation for

occupational disease, equivalent to the compensation received for occupational

disability. His monthly payments

 

were now much higher, much better than the pay out for disability insurance..

In addition, Harald was now entitled to free medicine, although not homeopathy.

 

 

 

Harald sues Insurance Company

 

But Harald was still not finished with the case. Being a union member, Harald

was covered in a group life insurance policy through his trade association.

Having been just recently declared as unable to pursue an occupation, Harald

surely would have a good chance of collecting a sizable sum of money from the

insurance company.

 

 

 

Very capable lawyer

 

Lawyer Lars Olav Skårberg, the trade association's lawyer, pleaded both cases at

the expense of the trade association. It proved to be struggle requiring years

of hard work; a struggle requiring declarations produced by experts and

considerable correspondence between the contending parts. The two contenders

were scheduled to meet in Asker and Bærum County Court in September 2006. And,

then, in a final effort to put an end to the evasive tactics of the insurance

company, Skårberg made the brilliant move of getting in touch with the very

pinnacle of medical authority in Norway.

 

 

 

Dr. Stig Frøland

 

He requested aid from Professor Dr. Med. Stig Frøland, head doctor for the

Section on Clinical Immunology and Infectious Diseases in the medical department

at Federal Hospital's University Clinic. He is the top Norwegian expert.

 

 

 

 

 

Seven page report

 

Dr. Frøland's comprehensive report was delivered on the 30th of August 2006.

Through seven pages, Dr. Frøland commented on animal research and clinical

research done on humans. He wrote:

 

 

 

" The consensus today is that much of the acute myocarditis is probably caused by

virus, even though this on some patients cannot be proven with today's methods

for verification of virus. "

 

 

 

Ignores Dr. Voll

 

Dr. Frøland made no mention of Dr. Reinhold Voll's discovery in the sixties of a

simple method for determining the presence of virus and bacteria. And where,

one, in addition, can do something about them. Experts tend to raise themselves

above such heresy, continuing instead with methods which are often less

effective.

 

 

 

Dr. Frøland continued: " As mentioned above, recent research reveals that there

have been a number of cases of acute myocarditis after smallpox vaccination.

Since dilated cardiomyopathy is a recognized late complication to acute

myocarditis , this implies that there might very well be a connection between

Harald's acute myopericarditis after the smallpox vaccination in 1974 and his

dilated cardiomyopathy of today. "

 

 

 

Dr. Frøland's conclusion

 

" I regard it as very probable that the smallpox vaccination that the patient was

given in 1974 was the cause of his myopericarditis. Furthermore, in my

estimation it is highly likely that his chronic heart ailment (ideopathic

dilated cardiomyopathy) is a late reaction to the acute myopericarditis in 1974,

originally a consequence of the smallpox vaccination. It is, however,

impossible to deduce a definite level of probability for this causality.

Sickness caused by this smallpox vaccination, in this case, the patient's

ideopathical cardiomyopathy, will be found in 'Regulations on Occupational

Diseases etc' from the Norwegian Social-Health Ministry. "

 

 

 

If-Insurance throws in the towel

 

Dr. Frøland's report appeared on the scene a short time before the combatants

were to meet in court. If-Insurance, the gigantic Norwegian insurance company,

anxious now to avoid a loss in a court of law, thereby creating a precedent for

future claims, threw in the towel only three days before the court was to

convene. The plaintiff, Harald, was promptly paid two million Norwegian Kroner

(approximately 300,000 Dollars) - a small price to pay for the insurance

company, and an effective way of keeping others from doing what Harald did.

 

 

 

Did homeopath's statement help?

 

Upon being asked of the importance the report from homeopath Atle Johan Løvaas

had in the case, Harald answered as follows:

 

 

 

Had been dead

 

" First of all, I am convinced that I would gradually have wilted away and died

if Løvaas had not taken me in under his care. "

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Very significant statement

 

Harald continued: " The report from Mr. Løvaas was the deciding factor in the

case. It was only then, when his statement became a part of the debate, that

attention was directed to the connection between the smallpox vaccination and

the complications I had as an adult. It was only too bad that Dr. Kjell Breivik

was visibly embarrassed with the bluntness of this claim. "

 

 

 

Blunt warning about smallpox virus

 

" Løvaas was the first, and the only one, who plainly stated that smallpox virus

was the cause. Before Løvaas, all medical opinion was always vague and

diffuse. "

 

 

 

" We have registered Dr. Breivik's eruption on 'the so-called statement from

homeopath Løvaas.' In your opinion, even though the statement from Løvaas never

once was referred to by either the doctors or the judges, did it play a vital

part in your case?

 

 

 

" Ye!. Absolutely! It had been a part of the case documents all the time,

lying, as a matter of fact, at the very top of the pile. "

 

 

 

 

 

Mr. Børge Eliassen,

 

Leader of Fritt Helsevalg.

 

(Free Health Choise).

 

www.fritthelsevalg.org

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...