Look into Lyme disease and Montauk, NY. We've been using insects as a vector for a long time.
Edit: And the Plum Island accident, where the deadly foot-and-mouth disease was accidentally released into cattle pens, which were oddly close to a biolab.
If you take a deep dive on polio, there is compelling evidence that it was used as a scapegoat for a toxic insecticide. The insecticide, DDT, was popular and sprayed everywhere. Its use coincided heavily with the rise of polio.
The US banned DDT in the 50s. Numbers of polio cases dwindled thereafter.
Of course, we had the "wonder vaccine" to credit, right?
Also, the CDC has been covering up the Lyme and CO-INFECTIONS epidemic for decades (there are like 20 other bacteria and parasites!)
Bartonella is a horrible infection, and it is rampant. Half the house cats in the US have it. You can get it from spider bites and mosquitos too, not just ticks.
Lyme is 4x more common than breast cancer, but there is a lot of $$$ to be made by Big Pharma if doctors misdiagnose it as an autoimmune disease or "chronic fatigue" or literally anything else.
I have Lyme and Bartonella and I was misdiagnosed with "Multiple Sclerosis." By 4 neurologists.
As Q has written, save everything offline. I saw things coming and going right from the start of the web in 1995. So if I see something interesting that I might want later, I print it out or save it. In the early days, storage was expensive and saving pages was hard, so I printed out reams of website pages. Now I can save web pages and, in some cases, entire websites.
You know how there's a new variant of lime disease where you become allergic to meat after getting bit by a tick? I'm wondering if that was an intentional experiment.
Look into Lyme disease and Montauk, NY. We've been using insects as a vector for a long time.
Edit: And the Plum Island accident, where the deadly foot-and-mouth disease was accidentally released into cattle pens, which were oddly close to a biolab.
Lime has over 500 new genomes. 5k years ago in was less then 30 the only way thats possible was human manipulation.
If you take a deep dive on polio, there is compelling evidence that it was used as a scapegoat for a toxic insecticide. The insecticide, DDT, was popular and sprayed everywhere. Its use coincided heavily with the rise of polio.
The US banned DDT in the 50s. Numbers of polio cases dwindled thereafter. Of course, we had the "wonder vaccine" to credit, right?
Whoa i need to hear more about this
Lymerix in the 90s, not the 80s
Also, the CDC has been covering up the Lyme and CO-INFECTIONS epidemic for decades (there are like 20 other bacteria and parasites!)
Bartonella is a horrible infection, and it is rampant. Half the house cats in the US have it. You can get it from spider bites and mosquitos too, not just ticks.
Lyme is 4x more common than breast cancer, but there is a lot of $$$ to be made by Big Pharma if doctors misdiagnose it as an autoimmune disease or "chronic fatigue" or literally anything else.
I have Lyme and Bartonella and I was misdiagnosed with "Multiple Sclerosis." By 4 neurologists.
This is new to me… need to know moar!
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/385041.Lab_257?from_search=true&from_srp=true&qid=jPwx2xnLJG&rank=7
As Q has written, save everything offline. I saw things coming and going right from the start of the web in 1995. So if I see something interesting that I might want later, I print it out or save it. In the early days, storage was expensive and saving pages was hard, so I printed out reams of website pages. Now I can save web pages and, in some cases, entire websites.
You know how there's a new variant of lime disease where you become allergic to meat after getting bit by a tick? I'm wondering if that was an intentional experiment.