Could It All Be Worms Making The Decisions For The Left?

“You can’t have both of the parasites.” – Fight Club

A tapeworm showed up to a party and got kicked out.  I guess the guy was a terrible host.

When I think about parasites, I start with thinking about the GloboLeft.  Somebody like George Soros has been sucking at the economy, producing no value, and trying his best to control its brain.

Like Toxoplasmosis gondii.

Toxoplasmosis gondii (T. gondii from here on out) is, like a gender-studies major, a parasite.  It has an interesting life cycle, in that it often occurs in cats.  In reality, it can infest any warm blooded animal (and birds as well) but most people are aware from due to its association with cats, and not the Broadway musical, but the fuzzy felines.

I want to write a Broadway show titled Vocabulary.  It’ll be a play on words. 

T. gondii likes to infest cats. Since it occurs as cysts in animals, T. gondii has developed the ability to change the behavior of mice and rats. Specifically, T. gondii changes the brain and behavior patterns of rodents to make them less worried about being dinner.

Of things that rodents don’t like, “being eaten alive” is pretty near the top of the list.  Uninfected rodents really hate the smell of cat pee and avoid it, since cat pee often occurs near where cats are, and cats like to eat rodents alive, just for sport.

However, give a rodent an infection of T. gondii and it either loses it’s aversion to cat pee or becomes attracted to it.  It also reduces the behaviors associated with avoiding predators and makes the mice more bold and less worried about predators.  It also makes them hyperactive, increases the distances they travel, and makes the reckless when they show up at a new area.

Yes.  T. gondii turns mice into little mobile food trucks for cats.  This is on purpose, so the cats eat the mice, and then get infected, and then poop, and then spread T. gondii everywhere.

Mary Poppins Food Truck Review:  “Super cauliflower-cheese but the lobster was atrocious.”

Well, there’s a horrifying thought!  A parasite that changes the behavior of creatures!  Thankfully humans don’t get it, and it doesn’t impact human behavior?

Well, nazzo fast, Guido.

It turns out that T. gondii just loves to hitch a ride into humans.  And just like it changes the behavior of rats and cats and mice, studies have shown that it also impacts humans as well.  How?

T. gondii has shown to have some of these effects in people:

  • Increases impulsive behaviors,
  • Increased car accidents,
  • Increased road rage, and
  • Increased mental illness (like schizophrenia and bipolar disorder).

Yeah, T. gondii is a disaster for people since if you look at the list above, it appears to turn them into GloboLeftists.  It also messes with human immune systems so it doesn’t get eaten, makes healthy cells die, increases inflammation, and may even encourage other parasites to join the party by downregulating the parts of the human immune system that keep them out.

Staying up all weekend is fun – after all, sleep is for the week.

Thankfully it’s rare, right?

Nope.  In women of childbearing age, infection rates are:

  • 50%-80% in Latin Americans,
  • 20%-60% in Eastern Europeans,
  • 30%-50% in the Middle Easterners,
  • 20%-60% in Southeast Asians,
  • 20%-55% in Africans, and
  • 7% in the United States natives (2004 data) but 28.1% in foreign-born.

Billions of people have this parasite, T. gondii.  But that’s just one parasite.

I had that parasite.  Didn’t care for it.

Let’s take this a step further.

There are large numbers of parasites beyond T. gondii that infect and impact humanity.  I looked it up and came to two conclusions:

  1. Parasites are really gross and repulsive.
  2. There are hundreds of different types of parasites out there.

How likely is it, of all of the different types of parasites that impact humanity that the only one that impacts behavior is T. gondii?  If I were a betting man, I’d lay money that there are certainly more parasites than not impact behavior.  And since many of these parasites require exposure to blood or poop to increase the number of hosts, well, might the behaviors that the parasite “encourages” be tied to more exposure to those things?

It’s a thought.

Once again, when looking at the religious themes of chastity, heterosexuality, monogamy, and modesty, it occurs to me that all of those virtuous behaviors – every single one of them – reduces exposure to parasites and disease that may take over our minds.

Is it just a coincidence that as adherence to chastity, heterosexuality, monogamy, and modesty are tossed away as old, outmoded thinking that we find ourselves in a world surrounded by triggered adherents of Clown World?  Perhaps the warnings we’ve seen in the past of those possessed by demons was, at least in part, based on parasites.  It seems like all the behavior that leads to the fall of civilizations tends to increase the likelihood that people will catch parasites.

Where do Viking clowns go?  Val-ha-ha.

Maybe, maybe it’s only the GloboLeft, but the GloboLeft is actively encouraging behaviors that result in the perpetuation of parasites.  Today.  Ever wonder why the GloboLeft reacted so harshly to ivermectin being a potential cure to COVID?  It kills parasites.

What would have happened if GloboLeftists had taken it and found out that their lives are a lie and their predilection to certain sexual practices was actually parasite mind control?

Are the GloboLeftists, in addition to being parasites, are also being consumed and controlled by parasites?

You be the judge.

Author: John

Nobel-Prize Winning, MacArthur Genius Grant Near Recipient writing to you regularly about Fitness, Wealth, and Wisdom - How to be happy and how to be healthy. Oh, and rich.

47 thoughts on “Could It All Be Worms Making The Decisions For The Left?”

      1. The link mentions parasites controlling human behavior. I wonder if we’ve seen this, but haven’t diagnosed it correctly. Not just liberalism/ faggotry, but the 1/5 to 1/3 of the population that do not have any sort of internal monologue. Literal NPCs.

        “A study in 2011 gave beepers to 30 participants, and when the beeper went off, participants had to write down what was going on inside their head.

        After several weeks of this, the researchers discovered that some participants experienced inner speech almost all of the time, some experienced it occasionally and others never experienced it at all.

        Several other studies have asked participants to complete a questionnaire on their experience of inner speech. Even though the vast majority of respondents claim to have some form of inner speech, a minority do not.”

        https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-02-07/inner-monologue-mental-health-not-everyone-talks-to-themself/11931410

  1. So if you give a crazy cat lady ivermectin (or some similar anthelmintic), will that make them normal again?

    If so, how does the boxed wine fit into the puzzle ? Cat ladies love their boxed wine, and it seems like it would help numb and/or kill the parasite and help remove it from the digestive track. Surprised the parasite doesn’t turn them into teetotalers instead (unless maybe the parasite likes the wine??).

    1. Perhaps alcohol suppresses parasite resistance, as it can suppress disease resistance. Back in my foolish youth about the only time I’d get an illness was after a bender.

      1. Some (very uneducated) reading of mine indicates maybe it makes it easier to get through the blood-brain barrier.

  2. Ivermectin as treatment for Crazy Cat Lady Syndrome?

    Jeez, what CAN’T that horse dewormer do! Kinda like kratom.

  3. The number one parasite in America is unfortunately walking on two legs. You don’t need a microscope to see Them but you aren’t allowed to notice Them either.

    1. that’s interesting who is them?

      freudian picture of fictional serial rapist with one eye in make up is that them?

  4. Two feline thoughts…

    Was downtown yesterday afternoon, and wanted to drive home west on Wentworth. Couldn’t. A small, silver SUV headed south on Meeting had crashed into the corner building there, deploying all airbags. Ouch.

    My first thought? 25ish SWF texting. Hey, 2-3 blocks north there’s a wine lounge named “Pounce”. For $10, you get a glass of iced White Zin & can pet the cats/kittens up for adoption. Coincidence? Yup.

    As for “Cats”, there was a great episode on the old Fox cartoon show “The Criitic” where a horse float’s rear end caught on fire and veered into the theatre in NYC where it was playing. Jon Lovitz’ comment was “Nothing of value was destroyed.”

    PFAS, microplastics, chemtrails, mRNA, T.gondii, et al. Their list to exterminate us never ends. And expands whenever te opportunity arises.

  5. Careful there with the anti-Sorotism, bub. That’s hate speech. Besides, even IF your vile allegations were true (which they aren’t), he’d be an outlier. An aberration. Most such investors are wise and great men who have touched the lives of millions, thereby improving the world. As just a couple of examples, consider Larry Fink. And Paul Singer. Great men of lofty vision who cast long shadows. I’m sure you can easily find others. “Educate yourself. You need to do better, Senator!”

  6. THEY have been pumping sewage into crops as “fertilizer” for a long time.
    I had no idea how insidious the damage that could come from it could be. Sure,Hep C, TurboDiarrhea, but something that affects Who We Are? That is a worrisome point. Considering how crazy society has become, and how Crazy Cat Lady is as much of a statement of reality as was

    Crazy as a Hatter
    was, back in the days of mercury sodden work the hatters did.

    Evil exists.

  7. Parasites controlling human behavior? Now, that explains a lot of things. It also ties in to your recent post about “Why Haven’t Aliens Visited?”. Maybe they have been here for a long time. Maybe they are parasites, not little green men. Hmmmm….

  8. THEY have been pumping sewage into crops as “fertilizer” for a long time.
    I had no idea how insidious the damage that could come from it could be. Sure,Hep C, TurboDiarrhea, but something that affects Who We Are? That is a worrisome point. Considering how crazy society has become, and how Crazy Cat Lady is as much of a statement of reality as was

    Crazy as a Hatter
    was, back in the days of mercury sodden work the hatters did.

    Evil exists.

  9. You know, that quoted remark about there being an evolutionary reason to be afraid of something that looks human strikes me as not going far enough.

    To have a survival advantage might mean that mating with it is a dead end and doesn’t produce viable children, but it also might mean that getting close enough to it to mate would kill the person, or would render them incapable of mating ever again. Something that ends the family tree right then and there. Really sharp pruning shears, if you get my drift. Say really sharp claws, teeth, or something in a place that wouldn’t be expected to be that disabling.

    T. gondii sounds pleasant by comparison.

    1. Or uncanny-face humans are mutants, inbreeds, or have birth defects, none of which are good odds for children?

      Humans in the first world mostly don’t need deworming, because they a) wear shoes which mostly prevents skin contact with parasites in the dirt, and b) cook much of their food, which kills parasites?

  10. Well, I’m thinking we should dissect the brains of every globalist to determine if your theory has any merit.

  11. Tangentially related perhaps, but Japan is reporting heightened levels of streptococcal toxic shock syndrome, caused by the Strep A bacteria: https://archive.is/Q8uYG

    One would think – in general – in an age where antibiotics are being managed due to the risk of resistant stains developing, there would be a lot of interest in any and all alternative (and medically safe) methods.

    1. Yeoch! But I recall reading that we’d have made most diseases antibiotic resistant by now . . . (2020 in 1990-ish).

    2. FWIW, there is a very helpful series of books by Richard Buhner that covers herbal antibiotics and antivirals that is probably the best treatise on effective alternatives to traditional antibiotics. I picked up copies at Tractor Supply of all places when daughter was going through a bout with MRSA, as the book provides excellent, well researched details on a number of plant extracts and how they work on different parts of the body. The author is sort of like John with the twisted humor, but in more of a sarcastic ,hippie-doctor sort of way. It isn’t your typical kumbaya herbal book and instead is very detailed with a good breakdown of how each plant works within the body.

      The author really impressed me back during the early days of COVID as he predicted all of the body system failures that would happen due to COVID, before mainstream knew because he had been so involved in developing treatment for SARS. He was also one of the first to predict clotting issues and recommending prophylactically taking the enzyme lumbrokinase to offset the clotting. Ironically, I knew he was on to something when the FDA forced many of the herbal suppliers to quit selling his COVID protocol because of “misinformation”.

  12. The have got to watch the TV series “BrainDead”. Right on the money with your analysis about parasites. And a real hoot as well.

The food fight is ON! Comments are OPEN! Sometimes the site auto-moderates (I don't know why) so if your comment doesn't immediately show up - I'll get it approved unless it's spam or drops inappropriate language (think more than PG-13).