Robert Kearney Profile picture
🇮🇹 🤌 🇵🇱 🇮🇪 I'm a freelance writer and truth-seeker, who covers politics, history, traditional cultures, and ancient mysteries. Proud Ellis🗽Island roots

Apr 8, 2021, 9 tweets

Elites and those in the know have been doing this for thousands of years by consuming menstrual blood collected from young, healthy girls. They've always known that menstrual blood has medicinal value (it's chocked full of stem cells that fight disease and slow down aging).

These secrets go back to the days of ancient Sumer and the dawn of our current civilization (and before that as well). 👇👇👇

This concept isn't exactly vampirism because the blood is (usually) collected voluntarily and not by parasitic means.
Not sure how these new scientific technics will work but the underlying principles are probably the same as what I've described above.

Blood 💉 has stem cells.

It stands to reason that ONLY the blood of the young and healthy must be consumed, NOT the old and sick (if this is the case then the results will have the reverse effect, making a person rapidly age and grow ill).

This menstrual blood ritual also has a connection to the legends of the Holy Grail (which itself predates Christianity).

The cup that gives everlasting life is a metaphor for the mixing bowl that this blood was prepared for human consumption in (a secret preserved by elite 💉)

This secret has been shrouded in mystery and allegory for long ages.

Now science is finally catching up (or perhaps has been given the green light to reveal it to the masses).

Instead of being so quick to condemn what we may not fully understand, let's instead be grateful.

Btw, such rituals are also where legends about vampires originate. Those who, to maintain life (youth) must drink the blood of young women, usually virgins.

Article on the ancient practice of consuming menstrual blood (referred to as "Starfire"). This ritual and knowledge of its effects are said to go back to the royalty of Sumeria (6000 - 5000 BC) and even well before that time.

halexandria.org/dward481.htm

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