by Ted Twietmeyer
2008
from
Data4Science Website
If you have ever had a baby and were still a virgin, I’ll warn you
now that some of the facts revealed in this report may be
unsettling. However, data provided within may also be useful if you
are suffering from some types of unexplained medical problems.
If you are an adult female, let your imagine run free for a minute.
Imagine being a virgin female and your
menstruation did not begin as it should. Since you have not had
sexual relations with man yet in your life, you suspect something is
physically wrong. You make an appointment with your Gynecologist for
an examination. During the examination the doctor develops a
perplexed bewildered look upon his face. Then after he gets over
what he sees, he delivers the impossible news – even though he can
tell that you’re still a virgin, he tells you that you’re pregnant.
After you get over the complete shock of suddenly being a mother,
you begin to wonder how this could even be possible.
Slowly your realize the numerous
concerns that will now be a part of your life – your increase in
stomach size, the questions, looks and remarks from friends, family
and coworkers who know you’re pregnant but single, OB-GYN doctor
appointments, less physical exertion in the near future, concerns
about birth defects and what you’ll do if these occur - all this
worry and expense for a baby that you shouldn’t be carrying in the
first place.
And if you’re a model, you have an even
bigger problem to deal with.
In this age of promiscuity, no one will believe that you became
pregnant without intercourse. Even worse, your baby won’t have a
father. And if you have a boyfriend now, you probably won’t see much
more of him when he finds out. He’ll never believe you became
pregnant without intercourse. Suddenly, you are flying solo in life
and discover just how cruel this world is that we live in.
Yet as a virgin, to believe you’re pregnant still seems impossible.
You have had a real-life immaculate conception, something considered
impossible and supposedly only in the Bible.
Is all this fiction?
In reality, this horrific thing has
happened to untold numbers of women.
And after a virgin mother
carries her baby for a few months enduring all the difficulties of
pregnancy, one morning she wakes up and experiences yet another
shock - her baby is gone. She quickly returns to her doctor, who is
now totally perplexed after confirming the news.
Nothing in medical school ever prepared him for this. No delivery,
no miscarriage, just gone. Now he too, is on his own just like you
were. If he tells anyone in the medical profession about what he has
seen he’d be laughed right out of town.
Such is the suffering and experience of countless women worldwide,
and it has probably been taking place for centuries, if not
millennia. Imagine the agony of the mother in the past… such as in
Victorian or Quaker times. It would be a sure ticket to be run out
of town or shunned, for no one would ever believe the mother.
But science knows that biological issues with pregnancy do not stop
after the baby is miscarried or delivered. The mother can carry
fetal cells within her body for a very long time after delivery. In
a recent Scientific American article research pertaining to
the discovery of retaining fetal cells was presented.
[1]
First, it is important
to note that the text did NOT cover the migration of fetal cells
from an alien baby insemination. I take sole responsibility for my
theory here, based on the logic of what can take place based on
current research.
For women who carry a different RH factor than the fetus has, they
must receive an injection after a delivery or miscarriage. This
prevents serious complications in the mother from mixing blood of
two different blood types.
What takes place during pregnancy is something known as fetal or
maternal microchimerism. This does not refer to red blood
cell, but tissue cells. The placenta is not a barrier to cell
transfer as once thought. Maternal microchimerism occurs when
the mother’s cells enter the fetus and remain there.
With fetal microchimerism, cells from the fetus move through
the placenta into the mother. Blood circulates freely in both the
mother and the fetus through the placenta, and some of the fetal
cells take up residence in various tissues of the mother. Today,
this is receiving considerable research since it suggests it could
contribute to both disease and health problems in the mother.
Research discovering this takes place dates back some sixty years.
Other research dates back to 1893, when a German researcher found
signs of such a transfer in the lungs of women who died from a
hypertensive disorder of pregnancy. In 1979, L. Herzenberg of
Stanford University found male cells in the blood of women who were
pregnant with boys.
In the 1990s it was discovered,
“Small numbers of foreign cells
survive indefinitely in healthy individuals.”
Note the word “foreign” used here, which
could mean almost any type of cells.
Cells acquired by the mother can last for decades and can become
part of the mother’s organs. It is currently believed that in some
cases this can result in an autoimmune attack, but may also cause
healing in other cases. Though not specifically stated in the
article, this might be one of the causes of MS and other autoimmune
disorders.
Microchimerism can also work the other way, when cells from
the mother are present in the fetus. This is not the same as the
fact that a baby grows in a mother’s womb, as these cells acquired
by the fetus are different.
J. Lee Nelson who wrote the article states that colleagues
found maternal cells in adults who had a normal immune system,
including a person aged 46 (page 74.):
"Although most cells that transfer
live for a limited time and die, stem cells are an exception.
Stem cells can divide create a number of specialized cell types,
such those constituting the immune system or the tissue of an
organ. Long term cells were found to be stem cells or related
descendants of stem cells in test subjects."
Current research shows the mother
carries these cells in all the organs, except the brain which has
not yet been confirmed. (I believe the presence of these cells in
the brain and other organs in the head including the eye will be
confirmed in the future. Blood circulates freely from the fetus
there as well.)
Besides organs, fetal cells have also been found in
skin, bone marrow, cervix, thyroid and even the salivary glands of
mothers.
You probably have already made the connection between possible fetal
microchimerism and alien inseminated pregnancy. For many
women who have been inseminated (not all that different form the way
farmers inseminate cattle) it doesn’t stop with one pregnancy. This
nightmare can happen many times to the same woman, over and over
again.
It’s so horrific for a single woman to go through this, that to the
best of my knowledge no one has ever made a movie about how this can
happen in real life. However, some years ago some of the victims of
alien insemination appeared on a rare television documentary.
Some woman in the documentary said they considered suicide, and the
documentary stated at least one actually did commit suicide after
repeated pregnancies. Many women have moved thousands of miles in an
attempt to stop the abductions which accomplished nothing to stop
the problem. Many women are inseminated again after the current baby
is taken from them during the night.
Clearly, there are beings on Earth and visiting Earth who
have absolutely NO regard for human life as we do. Indeed, we are
cattle to them.
The knowledge of this could be used to an advantage. For example, if
alien cells could be collected a DNA test might be run on them. Such
a test might actually show just what the alien baby could look like,
telling us how much they do or do not look like us.
Another use for this knowledge of alien DNA is that it might be
helpful to fight diseases of unknown origin. Often researchers
simply need to know where to look to begin their work of isolating a
pathogen or other problem. Samples of eradicated diseases are
commonly kept in laboratories for study just for that purpose, to
provide researchers with sufficient quantities of the pathogen for
research.
From the Scientific American article we have learned that foreign
cells present in mothers are easily collected for research. On that
basis, a DNA test could also be run which might determine whether or
not the cells are human…or alien.
The detailed work described by Dr. Nelson shows us this is a very
complex issue still undergoing research.
This research is also
drawing intense scrutiny from medical researchers. I know a world
renowned vision scientist and have asked him if whether some eye
diseases could be related to microchimerism in females. No
answer on this has been received as of the date of this writing.
In an essay written by Dalya Rosner (a Cambridge University
PhD student in 2004,) she makes a case for autoimmune disease
problems associated with foreign cells in the body (see below
insert):
“A number of studies have found a
correlation between the presence of these cellular trespassers
and a group of conditions known as autoimmune diseases in which
the immune system appears to turn upon the bodies' own tissues.
Usually one particular organ or tissue is targeted leading to
diseases such as diabetes, which is caused by the destruction of
insulin-producing cells in the pancreas, or rheumatoid
arthritis, in which the immune system attacks our joints.”
She also describes the implications of
foreign cells in the body:
“Under normal circumstances the
immune system is programmed to live peacefully with cells from
its own body and to destroy only foreign invaders such as germs
or cells with the wrong DNA. Cells containing different DNA can
arise through mutation, the mechanism which produces cancer,
through organ transplantation, including bone marrow
transplantation, or through microchimerism.
Such cells express a slightly altered pattern of chemical
markers on their surfaces, helping the immune system to identify
them as foreign and leading to the mounting of an immune attack
which destroys them. “
The Microchimera Mixture
Autoimmune disease and chimeric cells
by Dalya Rosner
June 2004
from
TheNakedScientist
Website
There are some very odd things that happen occasionally
and are contrary to what we humans would like to believe
is the natural order of things. One of the strangest
notions I have come across in the biological world is
the formation of microchimeras (pronounced 'micro-ky-meras'),
meaning quite literally 'an animal with parts made from
many animals'.
During pregnancy, cells can roam between bodies. Fetal
cells can transplant themselves into the mother,
maternal cells can be found in the fetus, and cells from
twins can swap places with each other. This doesn't
happen all the time, but it seems to happen sufficiently
often to warrant investigation into the clinical
significance of this very bizarre, "Frankenstein-ish"
phenomenon.
So, is microchimerism a good thing or a bad thing?
Microchimeras
and autoimmune diseases
Bad news first.
A number of studies have found a
correlation between the presence of these cellular
trespassers and a group of conditions known as
autoimmune diseases in which the immune system appears
to turn upon the bodies' own tissues. Usually one
particular organ or tissue is targeted leading to
diseases such as diabetes, which is caused by the
destruction of insulin-producing cells in the pancreas,
or rheumatoid arthritis, in which the immune system
attacks our joints.
Under normal circumstances the immune system is
programmed to live peacefully with cells from its own
body and to destroy only foreign invaders such as germs
or cells with the wrong DNA.
Cells containing different DNA can arise through
mutation, the mechanism which produces cancer, through
organ transplantation, including bone marrow
transplantation, or through microchimerism. Such cells
express a slightly altered pattern of chemical markers
on their surfaces, helping the immune system to identify
them as foreign and leading to the mounting of an immune
attack which destroys them.
For reasons which we don't fully understand,
occasionally the immune system mistakes our own healthy
tissue for that of an invader and unleashes the full
power of our defenses against our own body producing an
autoimmune disease.
But recently scientists
announced that they have found microchimeric cells in
the diseased tissues of women with some types of
autoimmunity, leading them to speculate that the immune
system is actually working just as it should. Indeed,
perhaps cells from a woman's child(ren), which have
become lodged in the affected tissues, are the ones that
are attacked rather than the mother's own cells,
creating, in effect, cases of transplant rejection.
In the ensuing battle, our
own healthy tissue, surrounding the trespassing cells,
becomes damaged by 'friendly fire'.
The evidence is very
tenuous at this point and is only one of many possible
explanations for the etiology of certain types of
autoimmune diseases, but it does offer one explanation
for the observation that some of these diseases are
commoner in women than men, and are related to
pregnancy.
Potential
benefits of microchimerism
Luckily it's not all bad news because there can be
positive aspects to microchimerism too. Many maternal
immune systems are quite happy to tolerate their
offsprings' cells (practice perhaps for tolerating their
whining?).
In cases of a
microchimeric mother requiring a transplant from a child
that wouldn't otherwise be a good match, there is
evidence for improved transplant acceptance rates.
Perhaps the immune system has been tricked through years
of harboring the child's cells (containing alien DNA)
into thinking that the new organ is a naturally-occurring
part of the body ?
From this we learn that microchimerism can be good or
bad, though perhaps most times it won't make any
difference at all.
However, it brings us to an important
consideration of what we are made of. Our environment
has long been known to play a significant part in our
development as people. Perhaps more crucial is the
interaction between our genes and the environment in
which we live. Whether that be how close we live to a
pylon, or how dysfunctional our families are, the net
result impacts greatly upon our future health.
At one time scientists believed that two people with the
same DNA (e.g. identical twins) possessed the same
genetic potential, even if they were living in different
environments. Microchimerism, however, casts doubt on
these traditional views.
Despite everything we
learned in A level biology, it seems that not every cell
in our body must arise from that crucial moment of
conception and that one part of our body may have a
genetic inheritance arising, at least in part, from
another human being. If many of us are chimeras, it puts
a new twist on the cloning issue - copying DNA from one
cell would not yield a replica of the cloned individual
even if they were somehow nurtured in identical
environments.
Humans, and the intrigues
of the biological world, are much more complex than
that. |
Here’s a simple translation of the
above:
Normally, the only cells in the body
attacked by the immune system are those that shouldn’t be
present. But normal cells can be misidentified by the immune
system and attacked due to the presence of foreign cells, which
can lead to autoimmune disorders. Arthritis, MS and other
autoimmune diseases are in this category.
Dalya Rosner continues:
“At one time scientists believed
that two people with the same DNA (e.g. identical twins)
possessed the same genetic potential, even if they were living
in different environments. Microchimerism however, casts
doubt on these traditional views.”
In conclusion, there exists sufficient
evidence from today’s biological research which shows the negative
effect of foreign cells in the body. Foreign cells in mothers that
have originated from the fetus could logically have earthly or alien
origin.
Naturally not every mother will experience negative effects from the
presence foreign cells, but clearly some do. Negative effects from
foreign DNA may take years to appear, and it isn’t clearly
understood at this time.
It is probably the health of the
mother’s immune system and her genetics that determines whether or
not autoimmune problems will develop sooner or later in life.
References
[1] – Scientific American magazine,
print version February 2008
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