Kindly consider the following query/inquiry hold in my
hand the bottle of hand sanitizer I applied before I started typing
this letter to the editor. The label says “kills 99.9% of germs”. Really?!
I hate to burst the bubble and rain on the parade of the millions of
people using hand sanitizers in this sad season of the corona virus
but you have to know a secret. NOBODY HAS EVER KILLED THE
CORONA VIRUS OR ANY OTHER VIRUS. EVER. If by killing you mean
irrevocably taking away life so the entity never comes back. When
we use insecticides on insects they die and never come back. When
a pet dog is run over by a truck and dies it never comes back. We
never hear it bark or see it bite again. When a soldier is shot on the
battlefield and dies, his life is over. His family and friends will never
see him again. Is this what we do to the corona virus when we use
hand sanitizers? No way. No way Jose! When we use hand sanitizers
we attack germs but do not kill them. We merely immobilize,
denature and disable them-converting them from dangerous germs
to innocuous cellular dust (microzymas). The germs will be back
sooner or later. We kill viruses if we “kill” ice when we put salt on
it, melting it to water. We “kill” viruses if we “kill” water when we
boil it and turn it to vapour. It can still condense sooner or later.
Viruses “die” if an egg “dies” when the chick steps out of it, later to
lay another egg! The technical term for what happens to the germs
when we attack them with antiseptics and antibiotics is known as
“pleomorphism” [1,2].
If I manufactured hand sanitizers I would instruct my technical
writers to inscribe “this product attacks and temporarily disables/
denatures germs for your safety and good health” on the label. That
would be an ethical, accurate and more realistic description of what
hand sanitizers do. So now you better understand how we battle
the corona virus when we use hand sanitizers. Even mainstream
scientists that deny the existence of the microzymas (cellular dust)
and adhere to the germ theory will admit this much- “the question
is often posed, ‘are viruses living?’. If to be living demands a cellular
structure then the answer is that they are not” – Page 19, Biological
Science 3rd Edition, edited by R. soper, Cambridge University press.
But then, if viruses are not alive, how can we purport to kill them?
Yours Sincerely
Mister SEUN AYOADE, BSc (Hons) PHYSIOLOGY
+2348060221764
Independent Researcher. Alumnus, College of Medicine
University of Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria. SeunAyoade@protonmail.
com. Winner, 2004 NIIT Scholarship (Grade A++)