Dead in the Water (Literally. You Will Not Believe This)
On "water cremation" and how the recently liquefied deceased end up back in our water supply.
Prepare to be horrified.
Alkaline hydrolysis AKA “water cremation” liquefies dead human beings and flushes their remains into the sewer where they go to water treatment facilities and from there are discharged straight into local rivers and lakes.
From where they can easily end up back in the municipal water supply.
But even worse some states allow the direct injection of treated waste water right back into municipal drinking water.
Even though the liquefied remains are treated the resulting “purified” water still retains many contaminants, worst of all prions, tiny malformed proteins which cause rapid onset irreversible neurodegenerative diseases like CJD.
There has been speculation on the clinical effect of prion-like domains found in the COVID-19 spike protein that may be contributing to the neurodegenerative diseases many experience soon after receiving the mRNA shot.
I was just contacted for advice by someone with a relative diagnosed with ALS post shot. Though ALS isn’t considered infectious like typical prion diseases, there is evidence suggesting that within the body of the person affected by ALS misfolded proteins “infect” other proteins in a prion-like way to advance the disease.
Now you might think that water treatment would eliminate pesky contaminants like prions, but that’s not the case (prions have actually been detected in US wastewater). Water treatment also doesn’t eliminate heavy metals, pharmaceutical, hormones, etc.
And it certainly doesn’t eliminate the energetic signature of the water from the human beings in question, what some might term water’s “memory,” a phenomenon studied for decades with research published by no less than Nobel Laureate Luc Montagniere shortly before his recent untimely demise.
Water cremation is billed as a “green” alternative because it uses less energy than traditional cremation and doesn’t involve the burning of fossil fuels.
Setting aside the misguided assumptions behind the green movement, the reality of water cremation is that is represents an utterly disgusting, shameful, extremely disrespectful way of treating the recently departed.
It’s just one of countless ways modern society is flagrantly defying all decency and morality.
The divine blowback from everything human beings are doing to themselves, their neighbors and the world at large, is already unlike anything the world has ever seen with rates of chronic disease and societal dysfunction skyrocketing at increasing rates, and it will only continue to get worse as the 4 Horsemen of the Apocalypse continue their inexorable ride across our world.
Many wonder at the stories of divine retribution passed down by ancient religions, scoffing at descriptions of fire and brimstone, but in truth the consequences need not be in any way miraculous.
Breaking the laws of nature creates self correcting feedback loops that are inescapable, wiping the offenders clear off the face of the earth, and taking their compatriots with them.
In late stage societies like ours everyone is punished, good and bad alike, in a tragedy of the commons.
There are currently 28 states that allow the abomination of water cremation. It’s been legal in Minnesota since 2003. Other states where it’s currently legal include: Alabama, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Kansas, Maine, Maryland, Michigan (not regulated, but appears available nonetheless), Missouri (classified under general cremation), Nevada, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Washington, West Virginia, and Wyoming.
It was previously legal in New Hampshire but the law repealed and a newer bill failed to pass in 2013. A bill to legalize it failed in Virginia in 2023.
In the United States, several states have adopted wastewater recycling practices that allow treated waste water (from sewage and water cremated bodies) to go straight back into the drinking water:
California: Approved regulations in 2023 to allow direct potable reuse of treated wastewater.
Texas: Cities like El Paso are developing facilities to treat wastewater for direct reuse in the municipal water supply.
Colorado: Permits direct potable reuse.
Virginia: Fairfax County has utilized recycled water to support its drinking water reservoir for decades.
Iowa: The town of Osceola is exploring the use of treated wastewater as part of its drinking supply.
I travel to Florida often and boy am I glad that we buy bottled water when we’re there, but we occasionally purchase bottled water in airports and elsewhere, and I’ll be sure to check the sources from now on.
But what can you do if you live in a place where this is going on and can’t afford expensive bottled water?
The following is highly speculative and I’m certainly no expert on homeopathy or related water memory topics, but I don’t suppose any filter will do much to remove the energetic imprint of water, but a sufficiently good one should remove physical contaminants like pharmaceuticals and hormones. However from what I can tell removing prions requires reverse osmosis filtration.
If water memory depends on physical structures within water like silica, then filtration might work, but according to Montagniere’s work it appears to depend on some kind of electromagnetic effects stabilized by quantum coherence phenomenon, which means energy input would be required to clear it.
For example simple boiling would rapidly break hydrogen bonds between molecules which would reform in a random memory free arrangement on cooling.
Less practical certainly, but Nature’s own method should also work, i.e. vaporization followed by condensation, which also resets the hydrogen bonding networks. So the water cycle we all learned about in elementary school should also purify water of any residual memory.
Of course it's also possible that the dilution accomplished by being immersed in a large body of water like a lake or river will make additional “energetic cleansing” of any kind redundant.
Even so the fact liquefied human beings are being ejected into the water that eventually makes its way to my tap is so disturbing I will probably have to purposely block it out in order to even wash my hands or take a shower in a participating state like Florida.
Let people know about this and make some noise. If you live in one of the above states try to get the laws reversed (both the human liquefaction laws as well as the wastewater recycling laws).
Now please excuse me as I go vomit.
Updated to reflect that prions are likely only removed by reverse osmosis. If anyone knows any better let us know.
Dr. Haider, Thank you for explaining this to us. I appreciate your valuable information.This is so immoral and disgusting. Should we buy bottle water which is full of plastic.... however it is better than drinking the dead. I would assume that produce is also infected with the dead. Living in the Twilight Zone!