Ella Porta

Ella Porta

Synthetic Terrain Part II: Terrain Theory and the Question of Frequency-Induced Illness

Uncovering the Hidden Forces Behind Disease in Humans, Animals, and Ecosystems

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Ella Porta
Aug 18, 2025
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The Reported Outbreak

The article in the paper beside me reads…

“The horse industry is on high alert after the potentially devastating EHV-1 disease was detected in two separate Queensland locations about 1,300 kilometres apart. Biosecurity Queensland has confirmed equine herpesvirus type 1 (EHV-1) was detected in a horse with neurological signs in the Townsville region, as well as three horses with abortions on a property in the Toowoomba area. EHV-1 is a highly contagious viral disease that is easily spread by direct horse-to-horse contact or by contaminated equipment including feed, water buckets or tack. People are not at risk of EHV-1 infection. However, other diseases that are transmissible to people such as Hendra virus could present with similar clinical signs.”

On the surface, this appears to be a straightforward case of “viral contagion.” The language used in the report is familiar and follows a predictable formula — “a highly contagious disease,” “detected cases,” “horse owners are advised to review their biosecurity protocols,” and “consult their veterinarians about vaccination options.” It fits the well-worn narrative that when illness emerges, a pathogen is to blame, and all one must do is go to the nearest clinic to vaccinate. Yet when you pause and look closer, the details (or lack thereof) immediately raise questions that are not being asked, let alone answered.

The first and most obvious observation is that these horses have not shared paddocks, water sources, tack, handlers, or transport. They have apparently not been at the same equestrian events, moved through the same sales yards, or grazed the same pastures. In short, every conventional pathway of transmission that would normally be investigated to explain an outbreak of EHV-1 is absent. And just as glaringly absent is any acknowledgment of this in the article itself. Not only are the pathways missing — so is the question.

If EHV-1 is as contagious as claimed, spreading primarily through direct horse-to-horse contact or contaminated equipment, then the question practically leaps off the page: how did two entirely unrelated properties, with no overlap in movement, management, or resources, produce such cases simultaneously? The omission of this obvious line of inquiry reveals just how deeply the programming around how biology “works” has been embedded into the collective psyche — to the point where genuine curiosity or critical thinking is no longer even applied.

The second observation is geographical, and perhaps even more perplexing. These properties are not a short float ride apart — they are 1,300 kilometres apart, practically the entire length of Queensland. This is not a case of a virus quietly hitching rides along transport routes, slipping past the occasional gap in biosecurity, and surfacing at the other end. Instead, what we are seeing looks more like two independent eruptions of the same problem in regions with no obvious link (apart from both being densely populated areas with exceptionally high radiation levels — but we will come back to that). Yet the narrative we are handed asks us to accept, without hesitation, that a highly contagious horse-to-horse virus simply appeared in both places at the same time, as if by coincidence. That explanation should not just raise eyebrows; it should trigger urgent investigation into what, beyond the tidy framework of “germs,” could actually be shaping these outcomes.

And yet no such investigation is evident in the reporting. No one is asking what environmental factors, systemic stressors, or unseen influences might be at work. Instead, the familiar contagion story is wheeled out like a kind of reflex. The script is so well rehearsed that it shuts down critical thought before it can even begin. Once a story is framed as “a contagious outbreak,” the mind of the public is funnelled into only one direction — fear the pathogen, trust the authorities, comply with the measures (usually vaccination). The very questions that most need to be asked — questions about the terrain, about electromagnetic environments, about systemic imbalances in biology and ecology — are left unasked and, by extension, unanswered.

This is why I feel an urgency to complete this report, and also examine this situation in real time, rather than waiting for the official narrative to harden. Because once a story like this is cemented into mainstream reporting, and repeated often enough to sound like unquestionable fact, it becomes almost impossible to challenge. Later, when the headlines have been archived and the soundbites absorbed into collective memory, the contradictions will be forgotten. Only those who were paying attention at the start will remember that the pieces never added up. That is why those who see the cracks in the narrative must speak now, while the events are still unfolding in plain sight. Otherwise, the chance to raise deeper, more essential questions will be lost.


The Laws of Nature and the Principle of Terrain

My conviction, unchanged over years, is that the laws of nature remain the single most important framework for understanding health. Nature operates according to principles that are universal, consistent, and observable. When you understand and align with these principles, you not only cultivate resilience and vitality, but you also become far harder to deceive by institutions and corporations that depend on ignorance for their profit.

The tragedy of modern medicine is that what is presented as “truth” about biology and living systems is not truth at all, but a fragmented interpretation filtered through commercial interest and industrial logic. This false narrative has consequences. It does not merely mislead; it actively creates suffering for all. It breeds ill health, dependency, and confusion. And, perhaps most dangerously, it renders entire populations easy to control, regulate, and commodify. If you do not understand how your body actually functions, if you believe you are a fragile machine at the mercy of invisible invaders, then you will forever turn to external authorities for permission to live, for protection, and for survival.

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