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Writer's pictureZoo Knudsen

The Health Patrol with Mitch Rangler: Lazy Ribosome Syndrome


Mitch Rangler, fully apprenticed (in Europe) nutritionologist, president and CEO of The Health Patrol

What is lazy ribosome syndrome?


Lazy ribosome syndrome, also known as LRS, is a collection of various signs and symptoms that results when ribosome function falls below what is necessary for the signs and symptoms not to occur. Most commonly associated with intense or prolonged protein synthesis, it can also arise before, during, or after acute or chronic illness. 


Do you suffer from signs and/or symptoms?


As the name suggests, LRS occurs when ribosomes are unwilling to work as designed by our Lord and Savior. LRS then presents as signs or symptoms that are not relieved by conventional medicine and are not caused by a clearly identifiable ailment such as scrofula or plectal derangement. You may look and act relatively normal despite having lazy ribosomes, and you may not have any obvious signs of physical illness like runny nose or a prehensile tail, yet you stumble through life with a general sense of ennui. LRS sufferers often have to use coffee and other stimulants just to get through their dull and seemingly pointless lives.


A defiant young woman with crossed arms and an expression that belies the rage welling up inside of her.

LRS is not scrofula!!!


Lazy ribosome syndrome has been known by many other names throughout the past century, such as Pappy's lament, The Downtown Shakedown, Cribbage Brain, and Reverse AIDS. And although it affects billions of people in the U.S., Puerto Roco, and America 2, which was formally known as Canada, conventional medical doctors will laugh and literally spit in your face before sending you home to eventually die at some point in the next ten to eighty years. That's if the armed guards will even let you through the clinic door.


What are all those doctors hiding?


LRS can ruin your life. In the more serious cases, the ribosomes are so lazy that you may have difficulty getting out of bed after a night out with your friends or going more than several hours without feeling hungry. Changes begin to occur in your body's ability to maintain homeostasis, equilibrium, and synergy of backwards overflow. But that's just the beginning!


Many other alterations take place at the chemical, cellular, and bioquantum levels in an attempt to compensate for the decrease in ribosomal function. With each quartile of reduction in ribosome activity, your friends and family will come to despise you more and more. Your body will eventually dry out, becoming a fragile husk that will ultimately crumble into a fine powder and blow away in a gust of wind.


What causes lazy ribosome syndrome?


Lazy ribosome syndrome occurs when your ribosomes are unable to meet the protein synthesis demands of your active and rewarding lifestyle. Ribosomes produce new proteins by combining amino acids, but don't be scared by the name. They aren't actually made of acid and can't disfigure your face or melt down the dismembered body of your neighbor's dog. We need new proteins whenever our bodies are exposed to oxygen, take in nutrition, or sleep. If protein synthesis is inadequate, it's only a matter of time before signs and symptoms set in.


That dog was asking for it!


During an LRS crisis, your ribosomes still function but are too lazy to maintain optimal protein synthesis because they have had it up to here with your exposure to any number of toxins, glutens, and ribosome disruptors produced in the bowels of Monsanto's secret laboratory on Skull island. It might occur with just one really horrible exposure, such as eating a genetically modified sandwich or standing next to Anthony Fauci on the subway. Or it can be caused by chronic or repeated insults to your root chakra that have a cumulative effect.


Who gets lazy ribosome syndrome?


Anyone can experience lazy ribosome syndrome at some time in their life. An illness, being alone in your house and hearing a loud noise in the other room and thinking for even just a moment that someone has broken in but then you realize that you forgot to turn the TV off before going to bed, or an ongoing exposure to people who let their kids run around a restaurant unsupervised. These difficult situations can make the ribosomes of even the most important celebrity as lazy as those in non-celebrities.


Celebrities really are better than most people!


There are factors that can increase your risk, however. These include certain lifestyles (unnatural diet, drug (illicit or prescribed) use, poor sleep, shopping at Target, chronic illness or repeated infections such as scrofula, feeling trapped or helpless when stuck in a toxic relationship, stressful job, jail, or overnight in a Mattress Firm because you fell asleep trying one out and the 19-year-old manager thought it would be hilarious. It wasn't because my cat had diarrhea.


There was cat shit everywhere!


How common is lazy ribosome syndrome? Although statistics have been supressed by the Medical-Industrial Complex, Dr. Bohannes Jonnanon, an expert who specializes in LRS, said in 1969 on the street outside a taping of the Dick Cavett show that he estimated that approximately 99.6% of the public could be classified as having the condition. And this was three decades before 9/11. 


How do I know if I have lazy ribosomes?


You may be experiencing LRS if you regularly notice one or more of the following:


  1. You feel tired for no reason that you can think of or accept as reasonable

  2. You have trouble getting up in the morning, even when the Reverend has forgotten to tighten your leg shackles 

  3. You are feeling rundown or overwhelmed by the most recent episodes of Emily in Paris

  4. You have difficulty bouncing back from stress or illness.

  5. You crave salty or sweet snacks.

  6. You feel more awake, alert and energetic at night than you do all day at the job you hate



Why do I keep watching Emily in Paris???

How can I learn more?


In my upcoming The Health Patrol newsletter, I'll discuss treatments of LRS and cutting-edge research into the condition that is giving hope to billions of sufferers. Want a copy? Send me a self-addressed stamped envelope and $5. I'll get your copy in the mail as soon as our mimeograph machine in the basement is fixed!

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Sid Schwab
Sid Schwab
a day ago

This is an excellent review of a dangerous and under-recognized disease/syndrome/whatchacallit. Fortunately, as a medical school graduate and top 50% intellect, I identified and culled my lazy ribosomes years ago. It's made all the difference. Far as I can tell.

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Zoo Knudsen
Zoo Knudsen
9 hours ago
Replying to

I've always thought that you were in the top 50% of brains, even with the worm.

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