Symptoms as Evidence
May 25th, 2008, search relatedRelated posts :: Symptoms as Evidence :: Symptoms as Evidence :: Symptoms as Evidence :: Symptoms as Evidence
In a message dated 18/05/2008 14:33:06 GMT Standard Time, jPolanik at nc.rr.com
writes:
toxoplasma gondii is an infectious parasite whose life cycle requires
infecting felines and being excreted back into the environment where the
parasite can then infect many other creatures — including humans. the
parasite selectively infects muscle and brain tissue.
Jud:
The above may explain an old mystery which has its origins in a newspaper
report (Freiburgs Nationaler Sozialist Abend-Lugner) that a women who was
sitting in the row of seats behind Heidegger and his (private) party at a
production of Der fliegende Holländer reported that she and her husband saw what
looked like little worms or yellowish grubs wriggling out of Heideggers ears.
They disgorged from his ears onto the shoulders of his evening jacket, and
disappeared into the loosely sewn, badly-fitting seams of his coat (all the
Jewish tailors had left Freiburg by that time.) She reported that at the time
it happened (her account was written 40 years later in 1976) she was too
embarrassed to mention it to him, and when her husband saw them too, they quietly
left their seats and moved to another part of the opera house.
That would certainly explain Heideggers obviously infected brain tissue, but
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease is another possibility, that is, if he was as fond
of cows as young girls?
Hope this helps?
Jud.