Dr Andrew Kaufman: Viruses are Exosomes
...little units produced by our own cells, that perform important functions in our body.
In this interview Dr Andrew Kaufman presents evidence against the existence of viruses. He explains that what is seen under the microscope when we are told we have a viral load is not bits of infectious material which have replicated inside our cells to make us ill, but exosomes - little units produced by our own cells that perform important functions in our body.
Here is an extract from the transcript. The link at the end shows the full transcript.
Exosomes are something that is naturally occurring in the body. I have this diagram here, and if you look at the top right of the diagram, you'll see that this is a normal cell outlined. Inside the cell, you have these vesicles. Inside of our cells, there are a number of different little organs - they call them organelles - and they're generally contained by a membrane…
…This is a specific type of vesicle that will end up merging with the cell membrane at the surface under certain conditions and release these exosomes out into the extracellular fluid…
…There are many things that can induce this process and accelerate it and increase the number of exosomes that are released outside of the cell. These exosomes leave the cell, and you see they have these little squares on them. These little squares are like a lock, and what they do is they go around the body through the circulation, and they're looking for the right key to fit their lock. That's called the target cell. Depending on what kind of cell releases them, they might have different keys and different locks, so they're targeted to different parts of the body. These are mostly thought to involve communication - communication between one cell and another cell, between one part of the body and another part of the body - and they can have many functions in this communication.
Visual Comparison: Exosomes vs. COVID-19 Virus
Here on the left, this is an electron micrograph (a picture from an electron microscope) of exosomes. You can see here an exosome budding out of the cell, and it's essentially spherical or circular. This is a cross-section, so this is like a slice of the tissue where on the periphery there are these kind of globular densities or little dots or circles…
…Now we have a picture on the right which allegedly shows this COVID-19 virus, and you can see that there are these vesicles budding out of the cell in a circular shape with these globular dots on the periphery. So essentially, it's the same thing…
…Now we have a series of two comparison photographs under electron microscope of the virus and an exosome outside the cell, and a virus and an MVE inside the cell, and you can see that they are identical in appearance…
Virology Literature on Exosomes
I happened to be looking in the virology literature, and actually they also think exosomes and viruses are possibly the same thing. This is James - Dr. James Hildreth, a very prominent researcher and academic physician in the field of virology and HIV research. He's currently the president and CEO of Meharry Medical College, but he was a full professor at Johns Hopkins. He wrote this paper with two of his colleagues there, and what he said - and I quote - is: "The virus is fully an exosome in every sense of the word."
This was just a great confirmation for what I was already thinking, and I was kind of blown away when I read this in the paper because this was one of the last papers I looked at after I had already come to the same conclusion. It really helped validate my opinion.
What Causes Exosome Production
So what is it that causes us to make more of these exosomes and throw them out into our circulation? It turns out that almost every type of insult to the body would actually cause this process to occur.
Toxic substances - I found several papers looking at this. Some of them looked at environmental toxins such as heavy metals like arsenic and organic chemical toxins. I also found evidence about bacterial toxins, and I have a slide that I'll show you in a minute. So there's clearly a role in communication or possibly removal of toxic substances that damage our cells.
Interestingly, psychological stress, including fear - which many, many people around the world are experiencing in a very intense way right now - also causes release of exosomes. You can see how this may cause false positive tests.
Cancer - as I mentioned before, lung cancer has many exosomes. Ionizing radiation, infection, injury - in fact, any type of immune response, so whether it be to injury, infection, or another disease. Asthma. Many papers just said that exosomes are induced by disease and they didn't mention anything specific, and they seem to be implying that virtually any type of disease can cause this process.
Click here for the full transcript.