Tourette's syndrome

Condition
Tourette's syndrome is caused by mercury deposits in the brain disrupting electrical impulses. When an electrical impulse hits a mercury deposit, it can be deflected — short-circuiting (shutdown), backing up and repeating (OCD variant), or crossing over to unintended neural pathways (tics and twitches). The size of the tunnel between neurons and the amount of toxic heavy metal surrounding the synapse determines severity. It is not genetic — accumulated mercury is passed through family lines creating mercury sensitivity, not a genetic trait. When an electrical impulse travels across synapses, if toxic heavy metal surrounds that tunnel inside the brain, the metals narrow the channel creating a bottleneck. The electrical impulse gets hung up, then another impulse hits it and propels it forward.
  • Copper: Copper makes severe Tourette's worse
  • Mercury: Mercury deposits in the brain interfere with electrical impulses and neurotransmitter function. Mercury causes Tourette's, spasms, and tics by impeding electrical impulses in the brain, often in combination with copper and traces of lead.
  • Inherited mercury sensitivity: Mercury that goes back hundreds of years from mercury tonics given by doctors in the 1800s, passed down through family lines (not genetic but actual mercury accumulation). Tourette's is not genetic — the false genetic theory causes unnecessary relationship harm. The actual cause is mercury sensitivity passed through family lines from generations of mercury accumulation, with mercury being what is passed on, not a gene.
  • Heavy metals: Toxic heavy metals affect neurological function and cause Tourette's syndrome.

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