Part Two, in a Series that will support my interpretation of Q Post # 3599.
3599
Nov 16, 2019 1:13:56 PM EST
Q !!mG7VJxZNCI ID: 000000 No. 7356265
The Harvest [crop] has been prepared and soon will be delivered to the public for consumption.
>>A Higher Loyalty [Y].<<
Hunters become the Hunted.
Treason.
Sedition.
How do you remove a liability?
Six o' clock can be dangerous.
Family proud?
Q
The Miracle of the Rabbit’s Ear
In one noted Belgian study published in 1946, clinicians were able to use a perfusion of aqueous adrenochrome to bring an intentionally frostbitten rabbit’s ear back to life with only a few exposures, allowing doctors to restore vascularity and nerve stimulus response to previously necrotized tissue. After rendering the rabbit’s ears nerve damaged and deadened intentionally four weeks prior to experimentation, doctors then proved a hypothesis that the application of oxidized adrenaline or Adrenochrome had the capacity of restoring nervous response to stimulus in the rabbit’s damaged skin. The findings spurred the practice of applying subcutaneous adrenaline to incision sites of surgical patients in order to hasten nerve regeneration and healing.
In a 1939 study, perfusion of adrenochrome was found to regenerate and restart a frog’s heart, bringing the animal back to life and making adrenaline/epinephrine application in heart attack patients standard of care to this very moment.
Equal parts spa treatment and party drug, news of the regenerative powers of adrenochrome spread quickly among the world scientific community and the global elite, sparking massive demand for the recreational use of the substance, regardless of manner of extraction, by the rich, powerful and scandalously wealthy who remain perpetually obsessed with finding ways of extending lifespan and prolonging their grasp on earthly influence and pleasure.