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.