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The real reason why so many die – Interview with undertaker Marlies Spuhler – Part 2
03.10.2024
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The real reason why so many die – Interview with undertaker Marlies Spuhler – Part 2
Is the death rate returning to normal after a dramatic increase in mortality with the start of corona injections? Undertaker Maries Spuhler reports on her current observations!
[weiterlesen]
Marlies Spuhler: 14 or 16 percent excess mortality compared to the last three years.
It's a good thing that they're doing this for once, because we already had a significant excess mortality last year, the year before last and the year before that. And now on top of that.
Our number one cause of death in our funeral home is still this turbo cancer. And then the death certificate just said "died with C". We didn't have "died of [C]". We had "from" once after the introduction and, as I said, the man was over 80 and it was 14 days after the booster. But we really only had that once.
At the beginning of 2022, we started with younger people who had turbo cancer. And there were very rapid progressions. The fastest we had was five weeks after diagnosis.
Sören Schumann: Died after five weeks, so to speak?
Marlies Spuhler: Yes, and a fellow undertaker just told me that two days after the deceased was told that she had cancer, she died.
Yes, they simply collapse. They are simply dead. It doesn't matter, they are sitting on the toilet or lying in bed. It's really strange. It's just becoming more common. I don't want to say that it didn't happen in the past, that someone had a heart attack while running or swimming. But actually not as often as now. It doesn't happen at all. People don't die normally anymore.
So very, very few people say to me: "I don't notice anything, I don't have anything." But the majority of the people I talk to, those who have had gene therapy, all have some kind of damage, they are no longer well. It doesn't matter whether it is neurological, some are shaking. And what really strikes me is that there are a lot of people who have gastrointestinal problems. And what I have noticed is that in many cases where this is the case, their pets have it too.
Sören Schumann: Welcome to today's interview. My name is Sören Schumann and today I am interviewing Marlies Spuler. And today we are talking about what she has noticed as an undertaker in her daily work over the last few months, but also years. We have both recorded a video before.
I uploaded it twice because I had to take it down once and then I uploaded it again in a more censored version. And both videos together have had almost a million views, I think. Maybe even just over a million views. So the interest in your information or your point of view seems to be very, very high. And I am curious to see what has happened since our last conversation. It has been a few months now. And yes, you are an undertaker. You have followed this relatively critically from the beginning, this event that has been going on since 2019, 2020. And yes, what else should people know about you before we get into the topic?
Marlies Spuhler: About me? You've actually said everything and I think most people already know me. I get a lot of fan mail by email. I get calls, it's crazy, it's great. Actually, no critical voices at all. So everyone is positive and the others are slowly coming out of their shells and talking openly about the whole thing. Often people who have suffered from it.
Sören Schumann: They then turn to you, so to speak.
Marlies Spuhler: Yes, exactly. They've somehow noticed that we have contacts, including with doctors and so on. And they then speak to me directly, depending on what kind of ailments they have, what can be done, whether I know anyone. And I always put them in touch with alternative practitioners and so on, yes.
Sören Schumann: Okay, great. It is now, at the time of recording, the end of August 2024. How would you summarize the last few years? Perhaps you can go year by year or with special events in those years? How would you summarize it briefly? What were the most important stages and changes in your work for you, i.e. your workload and how much you were stressed?
Marlies Spuhler: I'd be happy to say something about that. I'll give a very brief review so that you can put it together again. So in 2020 we had no abnormalities at all, really none. We even had less to do, yes. And for us it really started with the introduction of the "therapy". It's just like that. And at the beginning it was only the older people who died more often. And it really became noticeable when it was the turn of those with pre-existing conditions, when they had their appointment [for the Covid vaccination]. Because then these sudden, unexpected deaths started. Increasingly! And.it just kept on winding its way through. We only had the entry “died with C” until the therapy was introduced. After that, it suddenly stopped. Then it was no longer on the death certificates. Maybe once or twice more. We haven’t had it at all this year. So apparently nobody is dying from it anymore.
Sören Schumann: OK, can you just say something briefly.
Marlies Spuhler: Because it’s very encouraging.
Sören Schumann: Can you just say something briefly about “died of C and with C”? There were some debates at the beginning, it felt like: you have a car accident, die from it, but you test positive for C with a test that isn’t really meaningful and then you died “of C” or “with C”. Maybe you can say that again briefly.
Marlies Spuhler: Yes, we really only had that in the hospitals, not at all at home. So it was really only there.
Sören Schumann: Yes.
Marlies Spuhler: And at the beginning, I don't know why, they had included the reports. And they had the patient's course of events on them. How old, male, female and so on. And then it said why he was admitted to hospital, what they did there and what he ultimately died of. And then it always said in a sentence, quite casually, that the deceased had tested positive for C. And then the death certificate said "died with C". We didn't have "died of [C]" at all. We had "from" once after the introduction. And as I said, the man was over 80 and it was 14 days after the booster.
Sören Schumann: Okay.
Marlies Spuhler: He died "from". But we really only had that once. And then, as I said, after the introduction of the "therapy" it stopped. The entry was somehow no longer in the death certificates. It just disappeared. It only came from those who had not received treatment. Yes, "died with C". Exactly, that's what we noticed. Because we had to ask about it a bit at the beginning, because in the funeral halls there were still 2G rules.
Sören Schumann: Yes.
Marlies Spuhler: Exactly. And then I could always ask about it a bit, in conversation, what the status of the individual people was. Exactly. And then they told us and then we knew. Exactly. And then, as I said, came the pre-existing illnesses. Yes, I think that was in mid-2021, around May or June. And then there were more of them - they were people who collapsed while walking, fell off their bikes while cycling, or were lying dead in bed in the morning, having fallen asleep quite peacefully, yes.
Sören Schumann: That was basically a few months after the injections really started.
Marlies Spuhler: Ten days later.
Sören Schumann: Ten days?
Marlies Spuhler: Ten days. Yes, I can say pretty precisely. It was actually always ten days later.
Sören Schumann: Okay.
Marlies Spuhler: That was really amazing. Exactly. We actually just had to look to see when they were offering the next booster. And then we knew we would have work in two weeks.
Sören Schumann: And that wasn't, let's say, in this, what's it called, death report? What's this document called?
Marlies Spuhler: Yes, there was a patient extract there. I don't know either.
Sören Schumann: Yes, but there was probably nothing about that in there, right? That there could be a connection?
Marlies Spuhler: No, no, no, no. There was nothing like that in there.
Sören Schumann: Okay.
Marlies Spuhler: No. As I said, there were doctors, and there are still doctors, who tick the box "cause of death unknown" on the death certificate and write the cause of death as...
Sören Schumann: That syringe?
Marlies Spuhler: ...exactly, the drug there. And then it's confiscated [the body]. Yes, and at the beginning, right at the beginning, autopsies were still performed. But unfortunately these autopsies only ever showed cardiac arrest or thrombosis or stroke, whatever. But the connection was never investigated. And now, when we have a case like that - very few doctors dare to document it like that - it's usually waved through directly by the public prosecutor's office. There's no confiscation at all. The police speak briefly with the public prosecutor, or whatever, how it works there, and then it is simply waved through.
Sören Schumann: So you mean, for some time, for a few months, there has been no more uproar if that is what it says.
Marlies Spuhler: No, exactly.
Sören Schumann: But it was like that at the beginning, if that.
Marlies Spuhler: Yes, right at the beginning, but only if that was in there. Very few people wanted an autopsy. And if that is the case, the relativesen, you first had to find a place. And we also have burial deadlines that we have to stick to. Yes, it actually has to be buried or cremated within ten days. Yes, and it is difficult to arrange an autopsy within that time. And if one has not been (ordered) by the authorities, you as a relative - or we as undertakers on behalf of the relatives - then have to apply for an extension and so on. And that costs money too. It all costs money, yes. And then you need a place where the autopsy can be carried out. And then you want someone who can examine it critically. And yes, it is difficult to find a place. And with Arne Burkhardt, a lot of that has obviously been lost. And Dr. Ute Krüger, who supported him with the autopsies, is in Sweden and can't fly over every time there's an autopsy. Exactly. And that costs money, right? You can't always make people work and not pay them. That's it... Yes, they have flight costs, travel costs, accommodation costs. I mean, it should be covered to some extent.
Sören Schumann: So here in Germany there are few people who can do that well, so to speak, in this particular case?
Marlies Spuhler: Exactly, it's difficult. I know. Unfortunately, I don't have that many contacts there. The MWDFG was my point of contact the whole time, with Arne Burkhardt. But at the moment they don't have any doctors who can carry out the autopsies. And that's why it's just a bit stupid.
Sören Schumann: Yes, Arne Burkhardt was the one who did a lot of work there. So in the autopsy and then he died a short time later, right?
Marlies Spuhler: Exactly, yes. He drowned in a swimming accident, yes. When he tried to save his son, I think that happened.
Sören Schumann: Okay.
Marlies Spuhler: That's the story. Let's leave it at that...
Sören Schumann: Okay.
Marlies Spuhler: Yes.
Sören Schumann: Yes, it's partly mysterious. I haven't looked into the death, so I can't say anything about it now, but...
Marlies Spuhler: That was the only thing I read about it. The internet was full of it, but I have other work.
Sören Schumann: Yes. Okay. I think it was around mid-2021 or 2021...
Marlies Spuhler: Exactly.
Sören Schumann: ... shortly after the injections started. And what happened after that? What other exciting developments were there?
Marlies Spuhler: Then it was like this - I would say it was already 21, late 21, early 22 - then it started with us with the younger people who were suffering from turbo cancer. And there were very rapid progressions. The fastest we had was five weeks after diagnosis.
Sören Schumann: Died after five weeks, so to speak?
Marlies Spuhler: Yes, exactly. And a fellow undertaker just told me that two days after the deceased was told that she had cancer, she died. So two days. You just don't know how long it had been going on. You have to wait forever these days to get a doctor's appointment. Yes. We still see that. That's exactly what unfortunately still accompanies us. And what we have had several times this year is premature babies being delivered in the fourth month.
Sören Schumann: OK, but in previous years too? Or not?
Marlies Spuhler: Not so often. And most of the time it was actually children who were much further along, who were about to be born or who died during birth or shortly after birth. That always happened once a year or every two years, I would say.
Sören Schumann: OK.
Marlies Spuhler: Exactly, you talk to the other undertakers. I have to say that there are a few who see it as it is. And I am also the lateral thinker undertaker and they gossip behind my back. I hear about it. It's not that I don't hear about it. It's true that most people don't know which side people are on. And then they tell me openly if they know someone. But you don't know how well they know me. Yes, it's just like that. I actually get on well with all the undertakers in our area. Yes, it's like that. We have good relationships and I can just talk to them. Yes, and it's OK if someone sees it differently. I don't want to force my opinion on anyone. It's what we experience here. I can only speak for ourselves and theFeedback that I have received from other colleagues. Just to explain a little bit.
Well, in our crematorium, you see a small child's coffin standing there more and more often. Yes, and you know what's going on. They come in different sizes and they are usually fetal coffins. And with us, it's just that small children or babies/fetuses are only required to be buried if they weigh 500 grams or more. And anything before that, I don't know exactly what happens to it. Officially, they go to the "star kindergarten". It's a nice thought for the parents. But as I said, and that's why you don't hear about it so often when such small children get lost. Exactly. Most of the time, it's really young couples who have been looking forward to their child for ages. Most of the time, they've had bad luck before. And they just want to bury the ashes, they want a grave for the child. Yes, and we haven't had that two or three times in one year. That didn't happen. It used to happen every two or three years. And children were usually bigger, not so small.
Sören Schumann: And now, when did it start to occur more frequently?
Marlies Spuhler: This year is the first time we've had it. I already knew about it from fellow undertakers, they had it last year. But it only hit us this year.
Sören Schumann: OK. How did it continue in the other years? 2022, 2023 and now until the end of August 2024? Can you briefly summarize and classify that again?
Marlies Spuhler: Yes, I would say that we actually have this turbo cancer as the most common cause of death. And all sorts of things: breast cancer in women well over 80 years of age. Yes, we've spoken to doctors who say that shouldn't even exist. They have never had an old lady get breast cancer in their entire career. And they die within weeks. And we see that when we prepare the deceased, when we get them ready, we see what happened. Yes, we see the woman's breast. I have never seen anything like that before. So that's crazy.
And yes, many have colon cancer and whatnot. These types of cancer metastasize incredibly quickly. Yes, people - it often starts with carcinoma and yes, and then suddenly they have new lesions all over their body that are developing somewhere. Yes, so that's crazy.
Sören Schumann: And turbo cancer means that it goes much faster than normal cancer.
Marlies Spuhler: Exactly.
Sören Schumann: Some doctors and alternative practitioners warned about it, or said beforehand that it would happen and apparently that's what happened.
Marlies Spuhler: Yes, absolutely. We can confirm it and it doesn't stop at age. It doesn't matter to them. Yes. So it's more and more things like testicular cancer, prostate cancer. Yes, in women, as I said, there's a lot of breast cancer or colon cancer. We have a lot of colon cancer. Yes. So that's crazy. Exactly. And then every now and then we have someone who just dies here and now, right there and then.
Sören Schumann: You mean a normal death?
Marlies Spuhler: Yes, they just collapse. They're just dead. It doesn't matter, they're sitting on the toilet or lying in bed or, well, I don't know. It's really strange. It's just more and more common. Yes, I don't want to say that it didn't happen in the past that someone had a heart attack while running or swimming. But actually not as often as it does now. Yes, that doesn't happen at all. People don't die normally anymore.
To be honest, the families who haven't been "treated with gene therapy" are the ones who can look after their elderly people, their parents or whoever in a completely normal way. They die at home. There's nothing "palliative" about it or anything like that. Yes, they just look after them. They go to sleep and then everything is as it always was, like it used to be. You can pick them up, you can get them ready, you can lay them out for a full ten days. You don't need to worry that there's anything wrong with the decomposition, with the course of decomposition.
Which is unfortunately a little different with the "treated" people. We've made it more important that we pay attention to things like this - "skin slip" it's called. The skin comes off and so on. You have to handle it carefully. I don't want to go into the decomposition too deeply. But the discoloration is there. The deceased turn brown, green, black. That is not nice. You can no longer let the relatives go there. The fact is that the body is often laid out on the day of the funeral for people who travel from far away.But if there are seven days in between, it goes quickly. If someone dies on a Friday and I can't arrange a funeral for Monday or Tuesday, then it will be Wednesday, Thursday, the following week. And then it's soon no longer possible to say goodbye. We often have to say no, I'm sorry. Every now and then I take someone from the family with me who can cope with it - and they then say no, it's OK, we'll leave [the coffin] closed. I didn't have that so often in the past. Very, very rarely. The people had to have died really badly or after chemo. Or if they had been given a lot of cortisone or whatever it's called, then sometimes the decomposition started quickly. But now it's really crazy. And we have people who bleed a lot. I don't know exactly what that is. And we didn't have that in the past either. We used to have people bleeding from their throats if they had been intubated beforehand, for example. Then there were injuries to the throat from ventilation or something like that. That did happen before. But like now, with fluids running away everywhere, it's not so nice.
Sören Schumann: So, you definitely still see a big connection between the "gene therapy injection" and these changes that you notice in your work.
Marlies Spuhler: Yes, absolutely. I totally see that.
I'm really sorry about that too, because... it's a different kind of work for us too, of course. We have to deal with smells and other things. And the conditions... it's like this, when you pick someone up, they're completely normal and they look like they're sleeping in the coffin. It's different for us too, for processing afterwards, I'd say. It's not like all the deaths... - we're still human, we're not machines. And it's not like picking up rubbish or anything like that. It's all emotional. And we're always very proud of our work, for example when we've finished with a deceased person and they're lying peacefully sleeping in the coffin. And we always take photos for the family if they want them to. And we can just hand them over or show them with a clear conscience. We're always very proud of ourselves when we've finished our work.
Sören Schumann: And that's just much more difficult these days?
Marlies Spuhler: Yes, absolutely. We have to do a lot more to prevent bleeding and so on. So that's true, yes... And this level of decomposition, as I said, the deceased change much faster than they used to, yes. It's just not so nice. If you want to go back as a family - they see the changes too. Yes, we are not the only ones who see them.
Sören Schumann: Yes. I don't have any statistics right now on when, how often or when the most injections were given. But I would say 21, 22 were the most frequent, right? And then it leveled off. And currently still very little, right?
Marlies Spuhler: Well, I would say that most people I meet say that most have had three or four, I would say. Yes, and then they stopped. That's just the way it is. I hardly know anyone, very, very few, who say to me: "I don't notice anything, I don't have anything." They say that they had an immune reaction so soon afterwards, but that was it and they feel fine. That makes me incredibly happy. But the majority of the people I talk to who have had "gene therapy" all have some kind of damage. They are no longer well. Regardless of whether it is neurological, some are shaking. What really strikes me is that many people have problems with their gastrointestinal system. Gastritis or intestinal bleeding, whatever, really strange stuff. And what I've also noticed is that many of those who have this problem also have pets.
Sören Schumann: Interesting. Perhaps transmitted through shedding?
Marlies Spuhler: Probably. Well, that's the only way I can explain it. I heard an interesting talk from Dr. Sabine Stebel, and she talked about shedding. Several people have already confirmed it. And why shouldn't animals get it too?
Sören Schumann: Yes.
Marlies Spuhler: And it's just bad, because sometimes even homeopathy or herbal medicine doesn't work. It's really true, people struggle, wrestle with things, and are constantly in hospital because they get dehydrated. If someone has diarrhea every day and vomits their food - I mean, you must know - they are no longer absorbing nutrients. Those are the ones running around here, the ones who are so whitelike a cloud, like white-grey. It's very difficult to describe. Exactly.
Sören Schumann: But you said that at the beginning you particularly noticed that they died very quickly afterwards, especially the older ones who had also received several, and now it's probably the case that the last injection was a long time ago, but many are still dying from it.
Marlies Spuhler: Yes.
Sören Schumann: With a delay of a few months, or maybe even a few years, so to speak?
Marlies Spuhler: If you just take the "Destatis" [Federal Statistical Office] - they have week 25 in June this year, I'm not quite sure - you would have to look, they still have it open - you can look at the monthly report: 14 or 16 percent excess mortality compared to the last three years. It's good that they're doing this for once, because we already had a significant excess mortality last year, the year before last and the year before that. And now on top of that! Yes, June was really bad for us too, that's all I can say, and that was the case for all the undertakers I spoke to. Now in July it's a bit less. I think when the weather changes again, when it gets colder, it will pick up again. Then we'll get back into the cycle of spring and autumn.
Sören Schumann: Yes.
Marlies Spuhler: It's evened out again, so it's already there. But, as I said, our number one cause of death in our funeral home is still this turbo cancer.
Sören Schumann: After the injection.
Marlies Spuhler: Yes.
Sören Schumann: So you probably see very few cases of turbo cancer without injections.
Marlies Spuhler: Exactly, they don't actually have it.
Sören Schumann: And you just mentioned June.
Marlies Spuhler: I have to say something again. We have just heard of a few cases of people who were untreated. They also had cancer and they went to the right doctors or healers, I would say. And within eight weeks they were cured.
Sören Schumann: Yes, it seems possible.
Marlies Spuhler: Yes, it is possible.
Sören Schumann: Even without chemotherapy.
Marlies Spuhler: You just can't use the classic...
I don't want to attack them, but it's just the way it is that if you want to get healthy, you really have to resort to natural medicine.
Sören Schumann: It seems so, yes. You mentioned June and I think that was last year, when our health minister Karl Lauterbach was always warning about the big heatwave and heat deaths and so on. But I think you've heard of fewer cases of people dying just because of the temperature.
Marlies Spuhler: No, I don't actually know, nobody has ever told me that. Nobody has ever told me that. Nobody has ever told me that anyone froze to death. So those are the things that... - although I actually think it's more possible, like now [heat deaths].
I've also had sunstroke before. It's not pleasant, yes, with the headaches and the nausea and everything that follows, yes. That fever that you feel, no. It's not pleasant. You can definitely die from it. If someone isn't physically fit, but I haven't had it in 17 years. Definitely not.
Sören Schumann: So the big question now is. We are now in the middle of summer or the end of summer and it feels like the mood is relatively relaxed. At least that is how I would perceive it in relation to this health issue. But I could imagine, or rather, it is already being announced, hey, something else could happen. So either there are some people who are deeply involved in the matter, who have done a lot of research, such as Heiko Schöning, who more or less predicted everything a few months before the C story about how it would go. And he has now raised the alarm again that an attack on the microbiome is being prepared.
Others are talking about bird flu, I heard that once, and then, I think, monkeypox, or I'm not quite sure right now, but in any case the WHO has now declared a state of emergency. That means there could be a lot more to come. I think that when winter comes and people are more easily influenced because they are perhaps not feeling quite so well because their vitamin D levels have gone down a bit, the next scenario could be imminent. What do you think or what advice do you give people on how they should deal with this and how do you assess the situation?
Marlies Spuhler: So if you justLook, in the EMA database on August 27, 2022, almost exactly two years ago, 26,218 deaths from the "therapy" were already reported. If you compare it with the swine flu, which was there back then, the whole thing was stopped after 35 deaths!
So I really hope that people have a different awareness of the whole thing, that they are now a bit more cautious, more critical. I can't really imagine that those who are now suffering damage from this "therapy" are now undergoing a different therapy.
Sören Schumann: You suggest the motto, imagine there is a plandemic, but nobody goes.
Marlies Spuhler: I mean, I earn my money from it. As I said, I have really had good sales since then, I have to be honest. My deaths have doubled, despite lateral thinkers. I am the "lateral thinker undertaker" in town.
Sören Schumann: Why were the house searches?
Marlies Spuhler: The first house search was because of the Monday walk flyer, because there was no imprint on it. I find it all just ridiculous. Our lawyer also said that if you look at it in a relaxed way, then everything is fine, because they will definitely come again. He also says that it is just intimidation. I don't fly anymore so that my plane doesn't crash. So I do things consciously. My husband, for example, prefers it if I always have someone with me when I'm outside. Yes, that's how things have changed now. ...
Sören Schumann: I noticed that we unfortunately had to express ourselves very carefully. Because of the topic, or rather the terms that are needed to describe this topic. That's why I decided to make the entire video available elsewhere in full length, 100% uncensored and for free. And if you want to see the entire video, just click on the first link in the video description below. There's another quarter of an hour to come that you definitely shouldn't miss. And exactly, I'd say we'll see each other again in the full video. Until then, your Sören. Ciao
03.10.2024 | www.kla.tv/30656
Marlies Spuhler: 14 or 16 percent excess mortality compared to the last three years. It's a good thing that they're doing this for once, because we already had a significant excess mortality last year, the year before last and the year before that. And now on top of that. Our number one cause of death in our funeral home is still this turbo cancer. And then the death certificate just said "died with C". We didn't have "died of [C]". We had "from" once after the introduction and, as I said, the man was over 80 and it was 14 days after the booster. But we really only had that once. At the beginning of 2022, we started with younger people who had turbo cancer. And there were very rapid progressions. The fastest we had was five weeks after diagnosis. Sören Schumann: Died after five weeks, so to speak? Marlies Spuhler: Yes, and a fellow undertaker just told me that two days after the deceased was told that she had cancer, she died. Yes, they simply collapse. They are simply dead. It doesn't matter, they are sitting on the toilet or lying in bed. It's really strange. It's just becoming more common. I don't want to say that it didn't happen in the past, that someone had a heart attack while running or swimming. But actually not as often as now. It doesn't happen at all. People don't die normally anymore. So very, very few people say to me: "I don't notice anything, I don't have anything." But the majority of the people I talk to, those who have had gene therapy, all have some kind of damage, they are no longer well. It doesn't matter whether it is neurological, some are shaking. And what really strikes me is that there are a lot of people who have gastrointestinal problems. And what I have noticed is that in many cases where this is the case, their pets have it too. Sören Schumann: Welcome to today's interview. My name is Sören Schumann and today I am interviewing Marlies Spuler. And today we are talking about what she has noticed as an undertaker in her daily work over the last few months, but also years. We have both recorded a video before. I uploaded it twice because I had to take it down once and then I uploaded it again in a more censored version. And both videos together have had almost a million views, I think. Maybe even just over a million views. So the interest in your information or your point of view seems to be very, very high. And I am curious to see what has happened since our last conversation. It has been a few months now. And yes, you are an undertaker. You have followed this relatively critically from the beginning, this event that has been going on since 2019, 2020. And yes, what else should people know about you before we get into the topic? Marlies Spuhler: About me? You've actually said everything and I think most people already know me. I get a lot of fan mail by email. I get calls, it's crazy, it's great. Actually, no critical voices at all. So everyone is positive and the others are slowly coming out of their shells and talking openly about the whole thing. Often people who have suffered from it. Sören Schumann: They then turn to you, so to speak. Marlies Spuhler: Yes, exactly. They've somehow noticed that we have contacts, including with doctors and so on. And they then speak to me directly, depending on what kind of ailments they have, what can be done, whether I know anyone. And I always put them in touch with alternative practitioners and so on, yes. Sören Schumann: Okay, great. It is now, at the time of recording, the end of August 2024. How would you summarize the last few years? Perhaps you can go year by year or with special events in those years? How would you summarize it briefly? What were the most important stages and changes in your work for you, i.e. your workload and how much you were stressed? Marlies Spuhler: I'd be happy to say something about that. I'll give a very brief review so that you can put it together again. So in 2020 we had no abnormalities at all, really none. We even had less to do, yes. And for us it really started with the introduction of the "therapy". It's just like that. And at the beginning it was only the older people who died more often. And it really became noticeable when it was the turn of those with pre-existing conditions, when they had their appointment [for the Covid vaccination]. Because then these sudden, unexpected deaths started. Increasingly! And.it just kept on winding its way through. We only had the entry “died with C” until the therapy was introduced. After that, it suddenly stopped. Then it was no longer on the death certificates. Maybe once or twice more. We haven’t had it at all this year. So apparently nobody is dying from it anymore. Sören Schumann: OK, can you just say something briefly. Marlies Spuhler: Because it’s very encouraging. Sören Schumann: Can you just say something briefly about “died of C and with C”? There were some debates at the beginning, it felt like: you have a car accident, die from it, but you test positive for C with a test that isn’t really meaningful and then you died “of C” or “with C”. Maybe you can say that again briefly. Marlies Spuhler: Yes, we really only had that in the hospitals, not at all at home. So it was really only there. Sören Schumann: Yes. Marlies Spuhler: And at the beginning, I don't know why, they had included the reports. And they had the patient's course of events on them. How old, male, female and so on. And then it said why he was admitted to hospital, what they did there and what he ultimately died of. And then it always said in a sentence, quite casually, that the deceased had tested positive for C. And then the death certificate said "died with C". We didn't have "died of [C]" at all. We had "from" once after the introduction. And as I said, the man was over 80 and it was 14 days after the booster. Sören Schumann: Okay. Marlies Spuhler: He died "from". But we really only had that once. And then, as I said, after the introduction of the "therapy" it stopped. The entry was somehow no longer in the death certificates. It just disappeared. It only came from those who had not received treatment. Yes, "died with C". Exactly, that's what we noticed. Because we had to ask about it a bit at the beginning, because in the funeral halls there were still 2G rules. Sören Schumann: Yes. Marlies Spuhler: Exactly. And then I could always ask about it a bit, in conversation, what the status of the individual people was. Exactly. And then they told us and then we knew. Exactly. And then, as I said, came the pre-existing illnesses. Yes, I think that was in mid-2021, around May or June. And then there were more of them - they were people who collapsed while walking, fell off their bikes while cycling, or were lying dead in bed in the morning, having fallen asleep quite peacefully, yes. Sören Schumann: That was basically a few months after the injections really started. Marlies Spuhler: Ten days later. Sören Schumann: Ten days? Marlies Spuhler: Ten days. Yes, I can say pretty precisely. It was actually always ten days later. Sören Schumann: Okay. Marlies Spuhler: That was really amazing. Exactly. We actually just had to look to see when they were offering the next booster. And then we knew we would have work in two weeks. Sören Schumann: And that wasn't, let's say, in this, what's it called, death report? What's this document called? Marlies Spuhler: Yes, there was a patient extract there. I don't know either. Sören Schumann: Yes, but there was probably nothing about that in there, right? That there could be a connection? Marlies Spuhler: No, no, no, no. There was nothing like that in there. Sören Schumann: Okay. Marlies Spuhler: No. As I said, there were doctors, and there are still doctors, who tick the box "cause of death unknown" on the death certificate and write the cause of death as... Sören Schumann: That syringe? Marlies Spuhler: ...exactly, the drug there. And then it's confiscated [the body]. Yes, and at the beginning, right at the beginning, autopsies were still performed. But unfortunately these autopsies only ever showed cardiac arrest or thrombosis or stroke, whatever. But the connection was never investigated. And now, when we have a case like that - very few doctors dare to document it like that - it's usually waved through directly by the public prosecutor's office. There's no confiscation at all. The police speak briefly with the public prosecutor, or whatever, how it works there, and then it is simply waved through. Sören Schumann: So you mean, for some time, for a few months, there has been no more uproar if that is what it says. Marlies Spuhler: No, exactly. Sören Schumann: But it was like that at the beginning, if that. Marlies Spuhler: Yes, right at the beginning, but only if that was in there. Very few people wanted an autopsy. And if that is the case, the relativesen, you first had to find a place. And we also have burial deadlines that we have to stick to. Yes, it actually has to be buried or cremated within ten days. Yes, and it is difficult to arrange an autopsy within that time. And if one has not been (ordered) by the authorities, you as a relative - or we as undertakers on behalf of the relatives - then have to apply for an extension and so on. And that costs money too. It all costs money, yes. And then you need a place where the autopsy can be carried out. And then you want someone who can examine it critically. And yes, it is difficult to find a place. And with Arne Burkhardt, a lot of that has obviously been lost. And Dr. Ute Krüger, who supported him with the autopsies, is in Sweden and can't fly over every time there's an autopsy. Exactly. And that costs money, right? You can't always make people work and not pay them. That's it... Yes, they have flight costs, travel costs, accommodation costs. I mean, it should be covered to some extent. Sören Schumann: So here in Germany there are few people who can do that well, so to speak, in this particular case? Marlies Spuhler: Exactly, it's difficult. I know. Unfortunately, I don't have that many contacts there. The MWDFG was my point of contact the whole time, with Arne Burkhardt. But at the moment they don't have any doctors who can carry out the autopsies. And that's why it's just a bit stupid. Sören Schumann: Yes, Arne Burkhardt was the one who did a lot of work there. So in the autopsy and then he died a short time later, right? Marlies Spuhler: Exactly, yes. He drowned in a swimming accident, yes. When he tried to save his son, I think that happened. Sören Schumann: Okay. Marlies Spuhler: That's the story. Let's leave it at that... Sören Schumann: Okay. Marlies Spuhler: Yes. Sören Schumann: Yes, it's partly mysterious. I haven't looked into the death, so I can't say anything about it now, but... Marlies Spuhler: That was the only thing I read about it. The internet was full of it, but I have other work. Sören Schumann: Yes. Okay. I think it was around mid-2021 or 2021... Marlies Spuhler: Exactly. Sören Schumann: ... shortly after the injections started. And what happened after that? What other exciting developments were there? Marlies Spuhler: Then it was like this - I would say it was already 21, late 21, early 22 - then it started with us with the younger people who were suffering from turbo cancer. And there were very rapid progressions. The fastest we had was five weeks after diagnosis. Sören Schumann: Died after five weeks, so to speak? Marlies Spuhler: Yes, exactly. And a fellow undertaker just told me that two days after the deceased was told that she had cancer, she died. So two days. You just don't know how long it had been going on. You have to wait forever these days to get a doctor's appointment. Yes. We still see that. That's exactly what unfortunately still accompanies us. And what we have had several times this year is premature babies being delivered in the fourth month. Sören Schumann: OK, but in previous years too? Or not? Marlies Spuhler: Not so often. And most of the time it was actually children who were much further along, who were about to be born or who died during birth or shortly after birth. That always happened once a year or every two years, I would say. Sören Schumann: OK. Marlies Spuhler: Exactly, you talk to the other undertakers. I have to say that there are a few who see it as it is. And I am also the lateral thinker undertaker and they gossip behind my back. I hear about it. It's not that I don't hear about it. It's true that most people don't know which side people are on. And then they tell me openly if they know someone. But you don't know how well they know me. Yes, it's just like that. I actually get on well with all the undertakers in our area. Yes, it's like that. We have good relationships and I can just talk to them. Yes, and it's OK if someone sees it differently. I don't want to force my opinion on anyone. It's what we experience here. I can only speak for ourselves and theFeedback that I have received from other colleagues. Just to explain a little bit. Well, in our crematorium, you see a small child's coffin standing there more and more often. Yes, and you know what's going on. They come in different sizes and they are usually fetal coffins. And with us, it's just that small children or babies/fetuses are only required to be buried if they weigh 500 grams or more. And anything before that, I don't know exactly what happens to it. Officially, they go to the "star kindergarten". It's a nice thought for the parents. But as I said, and that's why you don't hear about it so often when such small children get lost. Exactly. Most of the time, it's really young couples who have been looking forward to their child for ages. Most of the time, they've had bad luck before. And they just want to bury the ashes, they want a grave for the child. Yes, and we haven't had that two or three times in one year. That didn't happen. It used to happen every two or three years. And children were usually bigger, not so small. Sören Schumann: And now, when did it start to occur more frequently? Marlies Spuhler: This year is the first time we've had it. I already knew about it from fellow undertakers, they had it last year. But it only hit us this year. Sören Schumann: OK. How did it continue in the other years? 2022, 2023 and now until the end of August 2024? Can you briefly summarize and classify that again? Marlies Spuhler: Yes, I would say that we actually have this turbo cancer as the most common cause of death. And all sorts of things: breast cancer in women well over 80 years of age. Yes, we've spoken to doctors who say that shouldn't even exist. They have never had an old lady get breast cancer in their entire career. And they die within weeks. And we see that when we prepare the deceased, when we get them ready, we see what happened. Yes, we see the woman's breast. I have never seen anything like that before. So that's crazy. And yes, many have colon cancer and whatnot. These types of cancer metastasize incredibly quickly. Yes, people - it often starts with carcinoma and yes, and then suddenly they have new lesions all over their body that are developing somewhere. Yes, so that's crazy. Sören Schumann: And turbo cancer means that it goes much faster than normal cancer. Marlies Spuhler: Exactly. Sören Schumann: Some doctors and alternative practitioners warned about it, or said beforehand that it would happen and apparently that's what happened. Marlies Spuhler: Yes, absolutely. We can confirm it and it doesn't stop at age. It doesn't matter to them. Yes. So it's more and more things like testicular cancer, prostate cancer. Yes, in women, as I said, there's a lot of breast cancer or colon cancer. We have a lot of colon cancer. Yes. So that's crazy. Exactly. And then every now and then we have someone who just dies here and now, right there and then. Sören Schumann: You mean a normal death? Marlies Spuhler: Yes, they just collapse. They're just dead. It doesn't matter, they're sitting on the toilet or lying in bed or, well, I don't know. It's really strange. It's just more and more common. Yes, I don't want to say that it didn't happen in the past that someone had a heart attack while running or swimming. But actually not as often as it does now. Yes, that doesn't happen at all. People don't die normally anymore. To be honest, the families who haven't been "treated with gene therapy" are the ones who can look after their elderly people, their parents or whoever in a completely normal way. They die at home. There's nothing "palliative" about it or anything like that. Yes, they just look after them. They go to sleep and then everything is as it always was, like it used to be. You can pick them up, you can get them ready, you can lay them out for a full ten days. You don't need to worry that there's anything wrong with the decomposition, with the course of decomposition. Which is unfortunately a little different with the "treated" people. We've made it more important that we pay attention to things like this - "skin slip" it's called. The skin comes off and so on. You have to handle it carefully. I don't want to go into the decomposition too deeply. But the discoloration is there. The deceased turn brown, green, black. That is not nice. You can no longer let the relatives go there. The fact is that the body is often laid out on the day of the funeral for people who travel from far away.But if there are seven days in between, it goes quickly. If someone dies on a Friday and I can't arrange a funeral for Monday or Tuesday, then it will be Wednesday, Thursday, the following week. And then it's soon no longer possible to say goodbye. We often have to say no, I'm sorry. Every now and then I take someone from the family with me who can cope with it - and they then say no, it's OK, we'll leave [the coffin] closed. I didn't have that so often in the past. Very, very rarely. The people had to have died really badly or after chemo. Or if they had been given a lot of cortisone or whatever it's called, then sometimes the decomposition started quickly. But now it's really crazy. And we have people who bleed a lot. I don't know exactly what that is. And we didn't have that in the past either. We used to have people bleeding from their throats if they had been intubated beforehand, for example. Then there were injuries to the throat from ventilation or something like that. That did happen before. But like now, with fluids running away everywhere, it's not so nice. Sören Schumann: So, you definitely still see a big connection between the "gene therapy injection" and these changes that you notice in your work. Marlies Spuhler: Yes, absolutely. I totally see that. I'm really sorry about that too, because... it's a different kind of work for us too, of course. We have to deal with smells and other things. And the conditions... it's like this, when you pick someone up, they're completely normal and they look like they're sleeping in the coffin. It's different for us too, for processing afterwards, I'd say. It's not like all the deaths... - we're still human, we're not machines. And it's not like picking up rubbish or anything like that. It's all emotional. And we're always very proud of our work, for example when we've finished with a deceased person and they're lying peacefully sleeping in the coffin. And we always take photos for the family if they want them to. And we can just hand them over or show them with a clear conscience. We're always very proud of ourselves when we've finished our work. Sören Schumann: And that's just much more difficult these days? Marlies Spuhler: Yes, absolutely. We have to do a lot more to prevent bleeding and so on. So that's true, yes... And this level of decomposition, as I said, the deceased change much faster than they used to, yes. It's just not so nice. If you want to go back as a family - they see the changes too. Yes, we are not the only ones who see them. Sören Schumann: Yes. I don't have any statistics right now on when, how often or when the most injections were given. But I would say 21, 22 were the most frequent, right? And then it leveled off. And currently still very little, right? Marlies Spuhler: Well, I would say that most people I meet say that most have had three or four, I would say. Yes, and then they stopped. That's just the way it is. I hardly know anyone, very, very few, who say to me: "I don't notice anything, I don't have anything." They say that they had an immune reaction so soon afterwards, but that was it and they feel fine. That makes me incredibly happy. But the majority of the people I talk to who have had "gene therapy" all have some kind of damage. They are no longer well. Regardless of whether it is neurological, some are shaking. What really strikes me is that many people have problems with their gastrointestinal system. Gastritis or intestinal bleeding, whatever, really strange stuff. And what I've also noticed is that many of those who have this problem also have pets. Sören Schumann: Interesting. Perhaps transmitted through shedding? Marlies Spuhler: Probably. Well, that's the only way I can explain it. I heard an interesting talk from Dr. Sabine Stebel, and she talked about shedding. Several people have already confirmed it. And why shouldn't animals get it too? Sören Schumann: Yes. Marlies Spuhler: And it's just bad, because sometimes even homeopathy or herbal medicine doesn't work. It's really true, people struggle, wrestle with things, and are constantly in hospital because they get dehydrated. If someone has diarrhea every day and vomits their food - I mean, you must know - they are no longer absorbing nutrients. Those are the ones running around here, the ones who are so whitelike a cloud, like white-grey. It's very difficult to describe. Exactly. Sören Schumann: But you said that at the beginning you particularly noticed that they died very quickly afterwards, especially the older ones who had also received several, and now it's probably the case that the last injection was a long time ago, but many are still dying from it. Marlies Spuhler: Yes. Sören Schumann: With a delay of a few months, or maybe even a few years, so to speak? Marlies Spuhler: If you just take the "Destatis" [Federal Statistical Office] - they have week 25 in June this year, I'm not quite sure - you would have to look, they still have it open - you can look at the monthly report: 14 or 16 percent excess mortality compared to the last three years. It's good that they're doing this for once, because we already had a significant excess mortality last year, the year before last and the year before that. And now on top of that! Yes, June was really bad for us too, that's all I can say, and that was the case for all the undertakers I spoke to. Now in July it's a bit less. I think when the weather changes again, when it gets colder, it will pick up again. Then we'll get back into the cycle of spring and autumn. Sören Schumann: Yes. Marlies Spuhler: It's evened out again, so it's already there. But, as I said, our number one cause of death in our funeral home is still this turbo cancer. Sören Schumann: After the injection. Marlies Spuhler: Yes. Sören Schumann: So you probably see very few cases of turbo cancer without injections. Marlies Spuhler: Exactly, they don't actually have it. Sören Schumann: And you just mentioned June. Marlies Spuhler: I have to say something again. We have just heard of a few cases of people who were untreated. They also had cancer and they went to the right doctors or healers, I would say. And within eight weeks they were cured. Sören Schumann: Yes, it seems possible. Marlies Spuhler: Yes, it is possible. Sören Schumann: Even without chemotherapy. Marlies Spuhler: You just can't use the classic... I don't want to attack them, but it's just the way it is that if you want to get healthy, you really have to resort to natural medicine. Sören Schumann: It seems so, yes. You mentioned June and I think that was last year, when our health minister Karl Lauterbach was always warning about the big heatwave and heat deaths and so on. But I think you've heard of fewer cases of people dying just because of the temperature. Marlies Spuhler: No, I don't actually know, nobody has ever told me that. Nobody has ever told me that. Nobody has ever told me that anyone froze to death. So those are the things that... - although I actually think it's more possible, like now [heat deaths]. I've also had sunstroke before. It's not pleasant, yes, with the headaches and the nausea and everything that follows, yes. That fever that you feel, no. It's not pleasant. You can definitely die from it. If someone isn't physically fit, but I haven't had it in 17 years. Definitely not. Sören Schumann: So the big question now is. We are now in the middle of summer or the end of summer and it feels like the mood is relatively relaxed. At least that is how I would perceive it in relation to this health issue. But I could imagine, or rather, it is already being announced, hey, something else could happen. So either there are some people who are deeply involved in the matter, who have done a lot of research, such as Heiko Schöning, who more or less predicted everything a few months before the C story about how it would go. And he has now raised the alarm again that an attack on the microbiome is being prepared. Others are talking about bird flu, I heard that once, and then, I think, monkeypox, or I'm not quite sure right now, but in any case the WHO has now declared a state of emergency. That means there could be a lot more to come. I think that when winter comes and people are more easily influenced because they are perhaps not feeling quite so well because their vitamin D levels have gone down a bit, the next scenario could be imminent. What do you think or what advice do you give people on how they should deal with this and how do you assess the situation? Marlies Spuhler: So if you justLook, in the EMA database on August 27, 2022, almost exactly two years ago, 26,218 deaths from the "therapy" were already reported. If you compare it with the swine flu, which was there back then, the whole thing was stopped after 35 deaths! So I really hope that people have a different awareness of the whole thing, that they are now a bit more cautious, more critical. I can't really imagine that those who are now suffering damage from this "therapy" are now undergoing a different therapy. Sören Schumann: You suggest the motto, imagine there is a plandemic, but nobody goes. Marlies Spuhler: I mean, I earn my money from it. As I said, I have really had good sales since then, I have to be honest. My deaths have doubled, despite lateral thinkers. I am the "lateral thinker undertaker" in town. Sören Schumann: Why were the house searches? Marlies Spuhler: The first house search was because of the Monday walk flyer, because there was no imprint on it. I find it all just ridiculous. Our lawyer also said that if you look at it in a relaxed way, then everything is fine, because they will definitely come again. He also says that it is just intimidation. I don't fly anymore so that my plane doesn't crash. So I do things consciously. My husband, for example, prefers it if I always have someone with me when I'm outside. Yes, that's how things have changed now. ... Sören Schumann: I noticed that we unfortunately had to express ourselves very carefully. Because of the topic, or rather the terms that are needed to describe this topic. That's why I decided to make the entire video available elsewhere in full length, 100% uncensored and for free. And if you want to see the entire video, just click on the first link in the video description below. There's another quarter of an hour to come that you definitely shouldn't miss. And exactly, I'd say we'll see each other again in the full video. Until then, your Sören. Ciao
from Ag.