Information
About Antibiotics
Antibiotics Kill Both Good Bacteria and Bad Bacteria
Though the use of antibiotics is practical and helpful, what doctors don't tell you is that the bacteria killers run through the body and do not discriminate between the bacteria that is harming your body and the bacterial that is helping your body.
Did you know that antibiotics do not help the flu?
It's true. The same applies to most bacterial caused diseases. However, most patients that visit the doctor are very dissatisfied when the doctor tells them to go home without giving them a pill or liquid.
We did say that the human body is a symbiotic life form, did we not?
Well then, that would mean that each one of these bacteria cells has a brain of its own. It may not look like yours or mine, but it also thinks and desires greatly to live, just the same way we desire greatly to live within our own planet. In essence, we are the cells of the planet, like our cells are to our bodies. That should give you a clear picture.
Keep in mind that every bacteria in your body has intelligence. Just like you, it becomes very aggravated when someone tries to kill it. This applies to the good and bad bacteria. That means that a high adaptability rate from bacteria cell generation to bacteria cell generation causes a mutation, whereby bacteria becomes immune to antibiotics.
Hence, the long term effects of antibiotics on future generations is an increase in vulnerability against newer, stronger bacteria and viruses.


