I have not found a single study that shows that a virus is contagious
- Nancy janssens

- Sep 10
- 2 min read

Dr. Kaufman: In his book "The Invisible Rainbow," Arthur Firstenberg describes what happened during the Spanish flu (1918), which claimed 50 million lives. That's far more deaths than during the coronavirus pandemic. His book also explains that a pandemic often occurs when a fundamentally new electrical technology is introduced.
The American Public Health Association wanted to know how this disease could spread so much. They really wanted to investigate this. If another pandemic were to occur in the future, they would know how to handle the situation.
They conducted three types of human studies, as well as some additional animal studies. For the human studies, they selected 100 healthy people and a few sick people who had the flu.
Research 1:
In the first study, sick people were asked to cough as much as possible to expel as much debris as possible. They then rubbed cotton swabs in their noses and around their eyes, collecting mucus and phlegm. They collected as many particles as possible, which they suspected might be infectious.
In this study, they then injected the secretions (snot and mucus) into the mouths, eyes, and throats of healthy participants. None of the 100 healthy participants got the flu. Then they thought: we need to step up our efforts and devised a second study.

Research 2:
In the second study, they again collected secretions from the sick participants. This time, they injected that secretion (snot and mucus) into healthy individuals via a vaccination. And again, no one got sick.
Research 3:
Then they devised a more natural study. With more physical contact, so the disease could be transmitted. The sick and healthy participants had to sit very close together, so close it was uncomfortable. They had to talk for about ten minutes. I don't remember exactly how long.
I've tried very hard to find research showing that infection actually exists. I haven't found a single study that proves it.
Dr. Andrew discusses a study they did in 1918, which showed that contagion does not exist.
This is another interview where Dr. Andrew also talks about the Spanish Flu.

Dr. Andrew Kaufman (America)

Medical doctor, naturopath, forensic psychiatrist, molecular biology major, qualified as an expert witness in local, state, and federal courts. Has held leadership positions in academic medicine and professional organizations. A sought-after speaker.



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