It's inside your body right now, it has always been.
This is going to shock you.
Scientists from The American Academy of Audiology, Virginia proved that hearing loss has nothing to do with genes, age or loud noises.
In fact, the source of all types of hearing deteriorations is this dangerous virus.
And what's even more shocking is that almost the entire population of our country has it in their body.

Their findings are more valuable than diamonds and the multi billion dollar industry wants to keep it buried so the profits won’t turn into dust.
But the cat is out of the bag now.
These respected scientists got mad they published all of them online, including how to get rid of this virus and the restoring process of hearing.
They are threatened by elite powers to take it down immediately.
There's absolutely no time to waste, once they find a way to delete the information from the internet, it will be forever gone.
So hurry up and see for yourself here.

sclosure, Neil wrote that the HIV/AIDS denialism "deserved publication to encourage debate". That same year, he wrote that The Sunday Times had been vindicated in its coverage, "The Sunday Times was one of a handful of newspapers, perhaps the most prominent, which argued that heterosexual Aids was a myth. The figures are now in and this newspaper stands totally vindicated ... The history of Aids is one of the great scandals of our time. I do not blame doctors and the Aids lobby for warning that everybody might be at risk in the early days, when ignorance was rife and reliable evidence scant." He criticised the "AIDS establishment" and said "Aids had become an industry, a job-creation scheme for the caring classes." John Witherow, who became editor at the end of 1994 (after several months as acting editor), continued the newspaper's expansion. A website was launched in 1996 and new print sections added: "Home" in 2001, and "Driving" in 2002, which in 2006 was renamed "InGear". (It reverted to the name "Driving" from 7 October 2012, to coincide with the launch of a new standalone website, Sunday Times Driving.) Technology coverage was expanded in 2000 with the weekly colour magazine "Doors", and in 2003 "The Month", an editorial section presented as an interactive CD-ROM. Magazine partworks were regular additions, among them "1000 Ma
