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1. DNA does not exist. Early years

By Robbin Koefoed Jakobsen


This is the first article in a series of six that expose DNA as a non-existing object.

Illuminati members in this and the following articles where they appear has been checked from sources such as freimaurer-wiki's puplic available revised and supplemented version of Hermann Schüttlers research on the members of the illuminati.

We are told that illuminati was dissolved, however professor at the University of Edinburgh John Robison explains in his 1798 book Proofs of a Conspiracy

"... the Order of Illuminati, founded, in 1775, by Dr. Adam Weishaupt, professor of Canon law in the university of Ingolstadt, and abolished in 1786 by the Elector of Bavaria, but revived immediately after, under another name, and in a different form, all over Germany. It was again detected, and seemingly broken up; but it had by this time taken so deep root that it still subsists without being detected, and has spread into all the countries of Europe."

We begin with Christian Carl André, who in sometime of his lifetime became a member of illuminati [unable to find data in which exact year he became a member] and Imre Festetics who was going to hold the title as grandfather of genetics.

Genetics is a scientific discipline under the branch of biology that deals with heredity and genes in particular.

Illuminati and Imre Festetics

According to Péter Poczai, Botany Unit, Finnish Museum of Natural History, University of Helsinki. Jorge A. Santiago-Blay, Department of Paleobiology, National Museum of Natural History, Washington, DC. Jiří Sekerák, Department of the History of Biological Science, Mendelinaum, The Moravian Museum, Brno. Attila T. Szabó, BioDatLab, Balatonfüred, Hungary.

“In 1798, André received an invitation from [Illuminati member from 1783] Victor Heinrich Riecke (1759–1830) to become a teacher in Brno …”

According to Péter Poczai, Botany Unit, Finnish Museum of Natural History, University of Helsinki. Jorge A. Santiago-Blay, Department of Paleobiology, National Museum of Natural History, Washington, DC. Jiří Sekerák, Department of the History of Biological Science, Mendelinaum, The Moravian Museum, Brno. Attila T. Szabó, BioDatLab, Balatonfüred, Hungary.

“He [Christian Carl André] took part in the organization and foundation of several private learned societies with [Illuminati member from 1783] Riecke and other prominent figures. These figures included, [illuminati member from 1783] Ignaz Mehoffer (1747–1807), [freemason] Count Johann Nepomuk Mittrovský (1757–1799), and [freemason] Heindrich Friedrich Hopf (1754–1825) …”

Christian Carl André stated the following “Without science it is impossible to achieve any progress ... it may take centuries for works to emerge from our circle that are capable of earning the astonishment of the cultural world, and its gratitude for their public value.”

According to Péter Poczai, Department of Biosciences, University of Helsinki. Neil Bell, Department of Biosciences, University of Helsinki and Jaakko Hyvönen, Department of Biosciences, University of Helsinki.

Christian Carl André “… asked Festetics to summarize his points in a paper … This resulted in a series of papers published in 1819”. In this work Imre Festetics created his own emperical laws of heredity.

In other words by Charles Auffray, European Institute for Systems Biology and Medicine, Vourles, France and Denis Noble, Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics, University of Oxford

”… it is in Brno, as early as 1819, that the first empirical laws of genetics were published. They were formulated by Count Festetics at the request of the naturalist Christian Carl André …” 

Imre Festetics was the first to use the word genetic. He did so with the words "die genetischen Gesetze der Natur" in english the genetic laws of nature.

According to Péter Poczai, Botany Unit, Finnish Museum of Natural History, University of Helsinki. Jorge A. Santiago-Blay, Department of Paleobiology, National Museum of Natural History, Washington, DC. Jiří Sekerák, Department of the History of Biological Science, Mendelinaum, The Moravian Museum, Brno. Attila T. Szabó, BioDatLab, Balatonfüred, Hungary.

“… empirical laws [proposed by Imre Festetics] stated that the same hereditary laws apply to all living beings, and were carefully derived from his experiences and observations …”

Imre Festetics stated himself “I believe that in breeding science a new era is about to emerge, starting with the fine measurement of wool traits that can be evaluated with mathematical accuracy.”



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