Search A Light In The Darkness

Wednesday 12 June 2024

Can foreign DNA in our bodies influence behaviour and diets – and even our souls?

 Recipients of organ transplants report inheriting their donor’s traits such as behaviours and diets. Some scientists argue that this is due to physiological and psychological imprinting. However, the hypothesis of microchimerism appears to be more compelling.

Microchimerism is the presence of cells (or DNA) from one person in another genetically distinct person. It can occur naturally, for example, during pregnancy, when foetal cells transfer to the mother’s bloodstream and vice versa. And it can occur artificially from organ/tissue transplantation or blood transfusion, where donor cells can persist in the recipient’s body for years.

According to Dr. Mathew Maavak, the experimental gene therapy injections known as “vaccines” allegedly cause microchimerism.

Because organ transplant recipients report inheriting traits from donors, possibly through microchimerism, Dr. Maavik asks the question: Can foreign DNA control your soul?

Can Biotechnology Control Human Behaviour? That was the title of a thought-provoking article penned by Guy Hatchard for the Brownstone Institute recently. The article was partly based on a paper published by the journal Transplantology which documented “the experiences of individuals who received a range of donated organs including hearts, kidneys, liver, and lungs.” According to the Hatchard:

In all, 87% of subjects experienced marked unusual changes that challenged their behaviour, sense of identity, and personal preferences. First-person reports and evidence from donor families confirm that some of these effects involve the transfer of personality traits such as food or behavioural preferences from the donor to the organ recipient. For example, an avid meat eater might become a vegetarian who cannot face meat on their plate.

This is an unexpected result that challenges conventional ideas. This study points to the distributed location of memory throughout physiology and its close association with a variety of organ systems. It amply illustrates how little the life sciences understand about the interface between consciousness and matter. [Emphasis added]

But has this phenomenon been conclusively established, at least in terms of correlation? The Transplantology paper conducted a cross-sectional study among 47 participants (23 heart and 24 other organ recipients) which is an admittedly small sample but its observations have been echoed by other studies....<<<Read More>>>....