Ep. #041 - Human Biosludge

Mar 13, 2022 · 23m 56s
Ep. #041 - Human Biosludge
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Don't Drink The Water! Good hydration is the key to life and health. Your body needs at least 1/2 your body weight in ounces every day. So why do I...

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Don't Drink The Water!

Good hydration is the key to life and health. Your body needs at least 1/2 your body weight in ounces every day. So why do I say “Don’t drink the water”?

Have you heard of Water Cremation or Alkaline Hydrolysis? Water cremation is also sometimes called aquamation, biocremation, flameless cremation, chemical cremation, liquid cremation, and others. Legally, states and regulators use the following terms for the method: cremation, dissolution, chemical disposition, and alkaline hydrolysis (AH).

20 states have laws that allow for dead bodies to be dissolved in a chemical bath, disposed of like sewage, and spread all over food crops as “biosludge.”

The practice known as “alkaline hydrolysis” essentially liquefies corpses through “water cremation” using a mixture of water, heat and chemical agents. The only thing left behind are the bones, reports indicate.

Cremationists typically use either potassium hydroxide (KOH) or sodium hydroxide (NaOH), or a combination of the two, as their alkaline agents. KOH is commonly used as drain cleaner and NaOH is also know a lye.

Many of us have seen crime shows where the criminal attempts to dissolve a body using these chemicals. It’s just gross. But here’s where the drinking water comes in.

Once liquefied, these human remains are then dumped into the sewer system or boiled off, while the bones are crushed and deposited into an urn. But we don’t drink sewer water, you say. Well not directly, but several drought ridden cities over the past 10 years have been recycling treated wastewater into the drinking supply, including our own city.

Now, I have no problem with recycling in general. God calls us to be resourceful with all He has given us to take care of, but recycling humans just goes to far!

Water cremation is legal in about half of the United States. Regulators have approved and accepted alkaline hydrolysis in the following states:

Alabama
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Florida
Georgia
Kansas
Idaho
Illinois
Maine
Maryland
Minnesota
Missouri
Nevada
North Carolina
Oregon
Utah
Vermont
Washington
Texas is also currently considering allowing alkaline hydrolysis as a legal form of cremation.

There have also been reports that the sludge left over from the treatment is converted into ‘fertilizer’ for our food crops, which means liquid human remains are now being spread all over food crops too.

On top of all the chemicals that are being introduced into our food and water supply, we now have technically forced the population into cannibalism. Talk about sickening!

“We must treat the remains of all human beings, no matter how long they lived or how they died, with dignity, charity, and respect,” the Texas Catholic Conference of Bishops stated in 2019 after numerous attempts were made to legalize alkaline hydrolysis in the Lone Star State.

“Chemical digestion of the human body fails to follow this simple principle.”

“If you’ve been paying attention, and connect the dots, it’s very likely states and the freemasons and Jesuits who rule our lives are expecting mass death,” wrote one LifeSiteNews commenter about this sudden push for legalized alkaline hydrolysis.

“It shouldn’t be surprising to anyone considering Doctors and scientists have been predicting mass death in the coming months and years. What a wonderful way to eradicate any evidence of humanity.”

To learn more about toxic biosludge and how it is spread over food crops, visit Biosludge.news.
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