I found this to be really weird. Yahoo popped up the following news story this morning:
If you look at the date of this Washington Post article, it came out yesterday, May 29, 2021. What stood out to me is that the story itself is from 2017 -- four years ago?!?
So, I looked up the name of the gentleman who died and found this article:
This article is dated Sept. 22, 2017. Note that it doesn't go into nearly the amount of detail that the Washington Post article does.
The question I have is, why is the Washington Post rehashing a 4-year-old story about ticks? The only think I could think of was comms. Maybe I'm overthinking this, but I thought it was odd. A lot of the references made me think of COVID-19:
"Most people infected with babesiosis are asymptomatic or have mild to moderate flu-like symptoms such as fatigue, chills, sweats, headache, body aches, nausea and loss of appetite, which can appear days or even months later."
This phrase sounded a little ominous to me, like it was a threat:
"Since Jeff’s death, Crissy and her kids have worked to raise awareness of babesiosis, hoping to prevent other families from experiencing the heartbreak of losing a loved one."
Philadelphia is in Bucks County, so I also thought of the 2020 election. Could this be related to the vote recount??
What are your thoughts?
I amazed you caught this, it does indeed appear to be comms.
Insect comms seem to mostly refer to a stereotypical behavior of a chosen insect being used as an analogy for a type of person's role in the symbolism system.
Cicadas= cycle of rebirth every 17 years= new recruits to the system emerging and beginning comms.
Hornets=violent hordes that sting= violent provocateurs who incite riots.
Ticks? Ticks latch onto to a person, often unnoticed, and gorge on their blood. They are known to carry fatal and mysterious diseases. Are there people like that?
I think you are right that this is a threat. I think the 2017 article is likely tied to the 2018 midterms which also saw fraud in PA.
Perhaps it's going to be used as the "bat" of the second wave when people start getting ill and dying en-mass from the jab?
I’ll buy a round for my fren here???
That's an interesting thought. Ticks would be a good choice.
We know they tried with ticks before here off the coast of Connecticut on plum island which is very close to Lyme and old Lyme CT where the disease gets its name
I think the lead researcher on plum island was a German scientist brought here after Ww2.
"I think the lead researcher on plum island was a German scientist brought here after Ww2"
Why does that not surprise me?