I have been looking at microscopes and cannot figure out which one to buy for blood and plants, but am confused on what to choose, what magnification, darkfield or bright field with filters for dark field,oil no oil etc
I got one on Amazon for around $80 that does good. Goes to 4000x. Main problem I have, it doesn’t have an adjustable platform so you have to push the slide around. Very important if you use it alot, and you will. It’s very interesting to see what is in your blood. Also very scary, and it pisses me off big time. My scope holds my phone, so I have hundreds of pics of many, many scary things. Each drop of blood is a movie in itself. Little construction zones, pieces of plastic branch like things, big round circles with little dots running around moving things and building things. And the parasites, that never actually go away yet, after 5 months of hammering away at them with all I got. Yea, I’m pretty pissed. Thank God I found out I had all that or I might already be dead.
To have a really good dark field microscope you need a light source that can do 9 watt LED or 150 W halogen. You need a good dark field condenser. To get 4000x you calculate the objective eg 40x times the eye piece magnification eg 10x this gives you 400x. Then you get a camera that magnifies this for ex. 4x which will give you 1600. So for 4000x you need a 100x objective times 10x eyepiece times 4 camera
Check out neogenesis in South Africa and Haxon microscopes
Thank you for the info, but it's a bit above my knowledge on microscopes, can you point to me to some specific microscopes that would work for what I need? Or possibly let me know in simpler terms for a newbie. Less than $800 would be great.
My blood cell count has been consistently low for both red and white and one Naturopath said my labs show it going towards blood C, I won't say or the type the word as I feel I am not a diagnosis and can make changes to heal. The oncologist wanted to dig into my marrow and I refused.
I usually use water, but sometimes I also use Veggie Wash particularly for letters I buy in the store. It's a citrus based washing solution that is supposed to remove pesticides.
I am washing all greens, veggies and fruit in a bowl with water and baking soda (Sodium bicarbonate). Many more things can be removed in that way, than with water only. It removes glyphosate / pesticides.
To test fruits and vegetables I use a pendulum or do kinesiological testing. As long as the things are grown in a greenhouse, they are OK, both regular and organic ones. However when they are grown outside, the quality drops atrociously, thanks to the chemtrails etc.
Thanks for sharing 😊 …. The chemtrails aren’t helping… I keep thinking about tilling my yard but I know it’s just plowing the metal particles deeper into the soil
What Mike Adams looked at is not the tomatoes. Dr Jane Ruby has her tomatoes in one of those little houses, covered with plastic. The residue on the plastic is what Mike has looked at. And that he has put into an incubator, where very surprising things are now growing. He tested also the plastic cover, but could find nothing amiss with that.
I became convinced that we are in the final phases of the centuries-long World War.
Last Fall, several snow-white blobs appeared in someone's yard at an unknown time. They could only have come from the sky and were in a rough line close to and along an outside building wall. They are very hard and are like cemented-together sugar-like grains. Those blobs are also very difficult to remove from those fist-size landscape stones to which they were attached. That seems to indicate that they may have originated like soft hailstones consistency and sizes that hardened onto those blob stones. How do I attach or insert a photo here of one of those specimen?
Seeing white residue on tomato skins and findings in your blood may be visually striking, but resemblance isn’t evidence of causation. This risks both a false analogy and the fallacy of affirming the consequent—assuming that because a pattern appears (B), the suspected cause (A) must be true. Scientific conclusions require more than visual parallels; they demand controlled evidence and clear mechanisms.
It would be relatively easy to compare tomatoes grown in a green house with those grown outside, using the exact same materials and methods, the only difference being, exposure to the atmosphere in the case of those grown outside. If the white spots only appear on the latter, it would seem to be proof practical of causality that is, a cause/effect relationship (whereas, causation refers only to a temporal one).
Do you have any suggestions for how Dr. Baxas might further investigate the white spots on her tomatoes? Do you have access to a mass spec, micro-Raman spectroscopy or any other potentially useful modality such as infra-red spectroscopy? If so, you could offer to analyze a sample for her. Do you have an opinion about what the white spots might represent?
The claim that comparing greenhouse and outdoor tomatoes—with all else “equal”—would prove causality is both logically fallacious and scientifically unsound.
First, it commits the fallacy of affirming the consequent:
“If exposure to the atmosphere (A) causes white spots (B), and we observe B, then A caused it.”
This reasoning ignores other possible explanations for B and treats correlation as proof of causation.
Second, it’s a false simplification of experimental design. In natural environments, countless uncontrolled variables—UV exposure, microbial communities, soil chemistry, wind, pollinators, and more—can differ between outdoor and greenhouse conditions. To isolate one variable (e.g. “the atmosphere”) and assume it alone is responsible, without rigorous controls and replication, is methodologically flawed.
Lastly, the statement misrepresents causality: causation isn’t merely temporal (one thing following another)—it requires evidence of a mechanism, consistency across contexts, and the ability to rule out alternative explanations.
I find your comment to be fascinating and would like to respond to each of the three points you made above, in detail. This however, is not my substack platform. It is Dr. Baxas'. Until she indicates that further interaction is acceptable to her, I won't proceed.
I did not imply in any way that there is a causation between my "cold" and the tomato spots, but it is an interesting coincidence at least. You are jumping to conclusions here. I also did not claim what these spots are , but what they could be based on the difference of rain and RO water and what is known about the composition of the toxic spray dumped on us as the only difference between the two. I leave it open and clearly say further examination with Masspec or possibly a Raman spectroscope would be needed to determine the composition. I can't afford such devices, can you?
I really appreciate your curiosity and the way you’re thinking critically about environmental differences, But I do want to gently point out a key logical misstep in your comment.
You mention that you’re not claiming what the spots are, yet you strongly suggest they might be related to “the toxic spray dumped on us” as the only difference between the water sources. This is a subtle but important example of a begging the question fallacy—assuming as a premise the very thing that needs to be proven. Framing it as “the known toxic spray” presumes that such spraying is both occurring and toxic, without offering independent verification or clear evidence.
It also leans into a false cause fallacy: suggesting a link between the tomato spots and the presumed spray without demonstrating causation—just correlation based on timing and conditions. Without solid data (especially when the analysis hasn’t yet been done), these kinds of inferences can create a false sense of certainty. It also confuses people who are not scientifically-based.
And yes, MassSpec or Raman spectroscopy could help identify substances present, but even those results require interpretation within context and controls. They don’t automatically confirm where something came from or how it got there.
Questioning environmental quality is totally valid—and often necessary—but we have to be careful not to smuggle in conclusions under the guise of open-ended speculation.
White spots on tomato skin can be caused by stinkbugs, which inject a toxin into the fruit when they feed. This toxin can result in white spots under the skin of the tomato. It's important to monitor your plants for these pests and take appropriate measures to control them if they are detected.
How much baking soda do you use? and how long do you let the food remain in the water? thx I'm not certain I would trust any product bought off the shelf to clean food. I'm not even certain that we can trust store bought "organic food" especially food that has been "rinsed", with what?
Dr. Baxas, I'm in NC. In February, I started to have a runny nose. It started full blown, completely clear liquid and a lot of it. It was very strange. I started taking some of my remedies and the episode only lasted 2 days, thankfully. But it was not a "cold" as I've known in the past. My bil, however, at the same time, lives in the same area, age 74, relatively healthy, unjabbed, came down with what he referred to as "the cold of a lifetime". It took weeks for it co clear up.
I'm here in Oregon and am experiencing the same thing, a runny nose outside and its not normal for me at all, I don't get colds or flu's either. The Nasty Geo-engineering must be behind this. I just heard RFK Jr say they have someone now in HHS that will focus solely on who is poisoning our life giving air, RFK Jr said he thinks it's DARPA
I'm afraid, if possible, all home-grown food should be raised under cover.
I live in an area which gets very little rain. When it does rain, mounds of metal fragments remain on my back patio which slosh off the roof. My area has had horizon to horizon chemtrails and "fog tented skies" for decades...so I'm very curious that many people have only recently had their areas so inundated. I do detox from heavy metals.
Since the Covid injections and depopulationists revealed their true intent, I don't trust anything. I first wash organic produce with the traditional veggie wash spray, and then I spray with food grade hydrogen peroxide. I spray everything including melons and pineapples. The hydrogen peroxide has the notable feature of fizzing up white to indicate bad hombres including a lot of fungus. Sometimes, I cut out those areas.
I've learned from Dr Kalcker that using chlorine dioxide to clean veggies and keep them fresher longer, you make it and let is gas off in the refrigerator, making a rinse would be quite easy as well and it takes care of all pathogens. I'm going to use SNOOT spray to get rid of this runny nose too.
I looked at one EDTA and it had hydrogels in it. I checked vit c and glutathione and Plaquex too. They are clear. I’m waiting to get an ozempic sample from a nurse practitioner I know but it’s taking a long time. I don’t have a US license and thus can’t order it myself. I haven’t checked D5W which is the glucose used in iv bags in the US. I need a licensed professional to provide me with one or an RX for one.
Interesting. Thank you for the presentation. There are organic tomatoes from especially Spain, of lately, (could be from before the "power-outage") with spots that resemble the spots on your tomatoes, but they were more like dents, and then something black developed inside the circle.
Perhaps the combination of chemtrails, solar panels, low frequent wind turbines and the low orbiting satellites together create an atmospheric change that is "too much" for plant growth to cope with. After all; the solar panels must have another function than usurping solar power, when they at the same time are trying to block sunlight.
I have been looking at microscopes and cannot figure out which one to buy for blood and plants, but am confused on what to choose, what magnification, darkfield or bright field with filters for dark field,oil no oil etc
I got one on Amazon for around $80 that does good. Goes to 4000x. Main problem I have, it doesn’t have an adjustable platform so you have to push the slide around. Very important if you use it alot, and you will. It’s very interesting to see what is in your blood. Also very scary, and it pisses me off big time. My scope holds my phone, so I have hundreds of pics of many, many scary things. Each drop of blood is a movie in itself. Little construction zones, pieces of plastic branch like things, big round circles with little dots running around moving things and building things. And the parasites, that never actually go away yet, after 5 months of hammering away at them with all I got. Yea, I’m pretty pissed. Thank God I found out I had all that or I might already be dead.
To have a really good dark field microscope you need a light source that can do 9 watt LED or 150 W halogen. You need a good dark field condenser. To get 4000x you calculate the objective eg 40x times the eye piece magnification eg 10x this gives you 400x. Then you get a camera that magnifies this for ex. 4x which will give you 1600. So for 4000x you need a 100x objective times 10x eyepiece times 4 camera
Check out neogenesis in South Africa and Haxon microscopes
Thank you for the info, but it's a bit above my knowledge on microscopes, can you point to me to some specific microscopes that would work for what I need? Or possibly let me know in simpler terms for a newbie. Less than $800 would be great.
Less than 2k will not get you a good enough microscope to check for what you’re looking for.
Wow, I have some blood cell issues and would like to see what they look like under certain circumstances, like EMFs and more
Check out https://haxon.es/es/microscopios-campo-oscuro/2708-microscope-haxon-aquiles-ii-configured-for-ria-hayes-course-on-the-study-of-blood-plasma-in-dark-field-microscopy-2001520000660.html
My blood cell count has been consistently low for both red and white and one Naturopath said my labs show it going towards blood C, I won't say or the type the word as I feel I am not a diagnosis and can make changes to heal. The oncologist wanted to dig into my marrow and I refused.
I usually wash mine with water. Do you use soap or anything else?
I usually use water, but sometimes I also use Veggie Wash particularly for letters I buy in the store. It's a citrus based washing solution that is supposed to remove pesticides.
Thank you. As a guy, I’m not exactly in the know on the best methods
I am washing all greens, veggies and fruit in a bowl with water and baking soda (Sodium bicarbonate). Many more things can be removed in that way, than with water only. It removes glyphosate / pesticides.
To test fruits and vegetables I use a pendulum or do kinesiological testing. As long as the things are grown in a greenhouse, they are OK, both regular and organic ones. However when they are grown outside, the quality drops atrociously, thanks to the chemtrails etc.
Thanks for sharing 😊 …. The chemtrails aren’t helping… I keep thinking about tilling my yard but I know it’s just plowing the metal particles deeper into the soil
What Mike Adams looked at is not the tomatoes. Dr Jane Ruby has her tomatoes in one of those little houses, covered with plastic. The residue on the plastic is what Mike has looked at. And that he has put into an incubator, where very surprising things are now growing. He tested also the plastic cover, but could find nothing amiss with that.
I realize he looked at greenhouse plastic covering the tomatoes. But both that plastic and my tomatoes were exposed to the environment including rain.
I became convinced that we are in the final phases of the centuries-long World War.
Last Fall, several snow-white blobs appeared in someone's yard at an unknown time. They could only have come from the sky and were in a rough line close to and along an outside building wall. They are very hard and are like cemented-together sugar-like grains. Those blobs are also very difficult to remove from those fist-size landscape stones to which they were attached. That seems to indicate that they may have originated like soft hailstones consistency and sizes that hardened onto those blob stones. How do I attach or insert a photo here of one of those specimen?
Seeing white residue on tomato skins and findings in your blood may be visually striking, but resemblance isn’t evidence of causation. This risks both a false analogy and the fallacy of affirming the consequent—assuming that because a pattern appears (B), the suspected cause (A) must be true. Scientific conclusions require more than visual parallels; they demand controlled evidence and clear mechanisms.
Interesting.
Food for thought:
It would be relatively easy to compare tomatoes grown in a green house with those grown outside, using the exact same materials and methods, the only difference being, exposure to the atmosphere in the case of those grown outside. If the white spots only appear on the latter, it would seem to be proof practical of causality that is, a cause/effect relationship (whereas, causation refers only to a temporal one).
Do you have any suggestions for how Dr. Baxas might further investigate the white spots on her tomatoes? Do you have access to a mass spec, micro-Raman spectroscopy or any other potentially useful modality such as infra-red spectroscopy? If so, you could offer to analyze a sample for her. Do you have an opinion about what the white spots might represent?
The claim that comparing greenhouse and outdoor tomatoes—with all else “equal”—would prove causality is both logically fallacious and scientifically unsound.
First, it commits the fallacy of affirming the consequent:
“If exposure to the atmosphere (A) causes white spots (B), and we observe B, then A caused it.”
This reasoning ignores other possible explanations for B and treats correlation as proof of causation.
Second, it’s a false simplification of experimental design. In natural environments, countless uncontrolled variables—UV exposure, microbial communities, soil chemistry, wind, pollinators, and more—can differ between outdoor and greenhouse conditions. To isolate one variable (e.g. “the atmosphere”) and assume it alone is responsible, without rigorous controls and replication, is methodologically flawed.
Lastly, the statement misrepresents causality: causation isn’t merely temporal (one thing following another)—it requires evidence of a mechanism, consistency across contexts, and the ability to rule out alternative explanations.
I find your comment to be fascinating and would like to respond to each of the three points you made above, in detail. This however, is not my substack platform. It is Dr. Baxas'. Until she indicates that further interaction is acceptable to her, I won't proceed.
👍
HAVE AT IT.
I did not imply in any way that there is a causation between my "cold" and the tomato spots, but it is an interesting coincidence at least. You are jumping to conclusions here. I also did not claim what these spots are , but what they could be based on the difference of rain and RO water and what is known about the composition of the toxic spray dumped on us as the only difference between the two. I leave it open and clearly say further examination with Masspec or possibly a Raman spectroscope would be needed to determine the composition. I can't afford such devices, can you?
I really appreciate your curiosity and the way you’re thinking critically about environmental differences, But I do want to gently point out a key logical misstep in your comment.
You mention that you’re not claiming what the spots are, yet you strongly suggest they might be related to “the toxic spray dumped on us” as the only difference between the water sources. This is a subtle but important example of a begging the question fallacy—assuming as a premise the very thing that needs to be proven. Framing it as “the known toxic spray” presumes that such spraying is both occurring and toxic, without offering independent verification or clear evidence.
It also leans into a false cause fallacy: suggesting a link between the tomato spots and the presumed spray without demonstrating causation—just correlation based on timing and conditions. Without solid data (especially when the analysis hasn’t yet been done), these kinds of inferences can create a false sense of certainty. It also confuses people who are not scientifically-based.
And yes, MassSpec or Raman spectroscopy could help identify substances present, but even those results require interpretation within context and controls. They don’t automatically confirm where something came from or how it got there.
Questioning environmental quality is totally valid—and often necessary—but we have to be careful not to smuggle in conclusions under the guise of open-ended speculation.
White spots on tomato skin can be caused by stinkbugs, which inject a toxin into the fruit when they feed. This toxin can result in white spots under the skin of the tomato. It's important to monitor your plants for these pests and take appropriate measures to control them if they are detected.
How much baking soda do you use? and how long do you let the food remain in the water? thx I'm not certain I would trust any product bought off the shelf to clean food. I'm not even certain that we can trust store bought "organic food" especially food that has been "rinsed", with what?
Dr. Baxas, I'm in NC. In February, I started to have a runny nose. It started full blown, completely clear liquid and a lot of it. It was very strange. I started taking some of my remedies and the episode only lasted 2 days, thankfully. But it was not a "cold" as I've known in the past. My bil, however, at the same time, lives in the same area, age 74, relatively healthy, unjabbed, came down with what he referred to as "the cold of a lifetime". It took weeks for it co clear up.
I'm here in Oregon and am experiencing the same thing, a runny nose outside and its not normal for me at all, I don't get colds or flu's either. The Nasty Geo-engineering must be behind this. I just heard RFK Jr say they have someone now in HHS that will focus solely on who is poisoning our life giving air, RFK Jr said he thinks it's DARPA
I'm afraid, if possible, all home-grown food should be raised under cover.
I live in an area which gets very little rain. When it does rain, mounds of metal fragments remain on my back patio which slosh off the roof. My area has had horizon to horizon chemtrails and "fog tented skies" for decades...so I'm very curious that many people have only recently had their areas so inundated. I do detox from heavy metals.
Since the Covid injections and depopulationists revealed their true intent, I don't trust anything. I first wash organic produce with the traditional veggie wash spray, and then I spray with food grade hydrogen peroxide. I spray everything including melons and pineapples. The hydrogen peroxide has the notable feature of fizzing up white to indicate bad hombres including a lot of fungus. Sometimes, I cut out those areas.
I've learned from Dr Kalcker that using chlorine dioxide to clean veggies and keep them fresher longer, you make it and let is gas off in the refrigerator, making a rinse would be quite easy as well and it takes care of all pathogens. I'm going to use SNOOT spray to get rid of this runny nose too.
Could it be sunburn? Is the sun hot enough yet?
They do everything with the complicity of governments. And no one says anything.
Looks like graphene oxide to me.
Freaky, indeed. Poison skies, poison foods. You must have no conscious to be a murder pilot spraying toxic crap all over everything.
Have you looked at nanotech in ozempic? How about infusions of glutathione or even EDTA, vitamin C, glucose??
I’m leery of ALL injections.
I looked at one EDTA and it had hydrogels in it. I checked vit c and glutathione and Plaquex too. They are clear. I’m waiting to get an ozempic sample from a nurse practitioner I know but it’s taking a long time. I don’t have a US license and thus can’t order it myself. I haven’t checked D5W which is the glucose used in iv bags in the US. I need a licensed professional to provide me with one or an RX for one.
Thank you. I have Hashimotos and my functional doctor is recommending glutathione infusions. I’m leery of ANY injection.
I have so many friends on injectable GLP-1 like Ozempic.. I can’t imagine the demons would miss this opportunity. Same with Botox and filler.
You are literally my hero. We can pretend this is not happening, but the reality is staggering.
Interesting. Thank you for the presentation. There are organic tomatoes from especially Spain, of lately, (could be from before the "power-outage") with spots that resemble the spots on your tomatoes, but they were more like dents, and then something black developed inside the circle.
Perhaps the combination of chemtrails, solar panels, low frequent wind turbines and the low orbiting satellites together create an atmospheric change that is "too much" for plant growth to cope with. After all; the solar panels must have another function than usurping solar power, when they at the same time are trying to block sunlight.
CHEERs, and keep digging. :)