Zika Virus; A Real Threat Or Are We Being Conned?
By James Donahue
The World Health Organization has added Zika, a new mosquito-borne disease to a growing list of threats moving from the tropics into the United States. Time was, when I was a young lad growing up in Michigan, that the mosquito bite was an itchy nuisance that we had to put up with but we never thought it might kill us.
Now people in the states are so leery of those pesky bugs that we don’t want to step outside before spraying ourselves with insect repellant, donning thick pants, long-sleeve shirts and high boots. And that is inconvenient in the summer months when we would be happier running around in shorts and a T-shirt.
In recent years we've had West Nile virus, Chikungunya and possibly Dengue Fever to worry about; especially if we lived in or visited the southern states or Central or South America. Travelers have even brought Yellow Fever, Malaria and a few other bug-carried diseases home with them from the southern regions.
As the climate warms, it is natural to believe these ugly viruses are working their way northward. The Aedes Aegypi and Aedes Albopictus breeds of mosquitoes that carry these diseases are already living among us in many parts of the nation. The Albopictus, or “Tiger Mosquito” is a primary carrier of Dengue Fever, Chikungunya and Zika viruses.
Health authorities are now sounding the alarm for Zika, a really ugly disease that may cause Guillain-Barre, and lead to paralysis. They say it especially attacks babies while they are still in the womb. For them Zika causes microcephaly, which is an unusually small head and brain, and lifelong learning disabilities.
What is odd about the Zika virus is that it is expressing a sudden appearance, is spreading unusually fast, and the WHO is warning women in the infected areas to avoid pregnancy for the next year or two. In the infected parts of the world there also has been a heavy release of a new genetically modified mosquito that cross-breeds with the Tiger mosquito and ironically produces sterile offspring.
Something smells wrong here. In this age of looking for conspiracies under every rock, we have to wonder if Aika is a real threat or something else.
According to web information, Zika was first discovered in the Zika Forest in Uganda, Africa, in 1947, and first found in an infected human in 1952. The disease rarely occurred until 2007 when a major epidemic happened in Yap Island, Micronesia. Since then there have been epidemics in Polynesia, Easter Island, the Cook Islands and New Caledonia in the South Pacific. It reached Brazil, South America in April, 2015, and has been spreading at epidemic speed throughout South and Central America ever since.
As of this date, the Centers for Disease Control says there have been 31 confirmed cases in 11 states and the District of Columbia in the United States. All of these cases are said to have been travel related.
Medical people say they are waiting, holding their breath, for Zika to make its first appearance via a Tiger mosquito in the United States. They warn that it is not if, but when the "epidemic" will occur.
Here is where we have problems with the story:
When it happens, the disease may actually be missed. That is because the symptoms are almost the same as Dengue Fever and Chikungunya. Also the United States has been slammed since 2011 with aerial radiation from the Fukushima disaster. Among the expected symptoms from radiation poisoning in newborn babies is deformities like small heads and other body irregularities.
The bombing of Iraq by U.S. forces using spent plutonium laced ammunition has been showing up in infant deformities that strangely resemble the effects of the Zika virus. Thousands of US veterans also were exposed during their tours in Iraq.
Is the Zika virus warning a planned cover up for mass radiation poisoning that is bound to be found in deformed infants before the adult cancer, lung disease and other radiation attacks begin making headlines? Or are we dealing with an even different kind of conspiracy here?
Investigative journalist Jon Rappoport, author of the series Power Outside the Matrix, is suggesting that the warnings for women to avoid having children because of the danger of a mosquito bite may be a form of depopulation. Also the warnings against travel may be a type of population control. And stories about the development of a new genetically modified mosquito that mates with and destroys the Tiger mosquito has all the earmarks of a major corporate scam designed to put big profits in the pockets of executives and stockholders at the Oxitec Company, which developed the killer mosquito.
In an article posted on line Rappoport wrote: "In examining the published literature on Zika, so far I see no reports of diseased-tissue removal from a human, followed by electron microscope photos revealing large amounts of Zika. As far as diagnostic tests on suspected human cases are concerned, I see, as usual, two major types of testing: antibody and PCR."
Rappoport then goes on to review what he called "egregious flaws" in the published tests.
He concludes with: Attributing very serious problems to Zika on a worldwide basis is insupportable and speculative. It isn't science. And to make the leap to claiming the virus is causing pregnant women to give birth to babies with very small heads and impaired brains is absurd."
He asks us to look and see who benefits from the warnings? "Certainly the people who are releasing genetically engineered mosquitoes as a form of disease-prevention. The big honcho is a company named Oxitec. So far, the GE mosquitos are being used to curtail dengue fever in Brazil, Malaysia and the Cayman Islands. Florida is next up on the agenda."
But rushing to release genetically engineered insects into the world could soon create another unforeseen threat that might be even worse than the partial destruction of Tiger mosquitoes. As it is turning out for Monsanto and the other GMO seed producers, it will only be a matter of time before new varieties of genetically altered insects will be released to save the planet from another artificially produced horror.
And once again . . . the bottom line to all of this appears to be money. Population control also seems to be part of the big picture.
By James Donahue
The World Health Organization has added Zika, a new mosquito-borne disease to a growing list of threats moving from the tropics into the United States. Time was, when I was a young lad growing up in Michigan, that the mosquito bite was an itchy nuisance that we had to put up with but we never thought it might kill us.
Now people in the states are so leery of those pesky bugs that we don’t want to step outside before spraying ourselves with insect repellant, donning thick pants, long-sleeve shirts and high boots. And that is inconvenient in the summer months when we would be happier running around in shorts and a T-shirt.
In recent years we've had West Nile virus, Chikungunya and possibly Dengue Fever to worry about; especially if we lived in or visited the southern states or Central or South America. Travelers have even brought Yellow Fever, Malaria and a few other bug-carried diseases home with them from the southern regions.
As the climate warms, it is natural to believe these ugly viruses are working their way northward. The Aedes Aegypi and Aedes Albopictus breeds of mosquitoes that carry these diseases are already living among us in many parts of the nation. The Albopictus, or “Tiger Mosquito” is a primary carrier of Dengue Fever, Chikungunya and Zika viruses.
Health authorities are now sounding the alarm for Zika, a really ugly disease that may cause Guillain-Barre, and lead to paralysis. They say it especially attacks babies while they are still in the womb. For them Zika causes microcephaly, which is an unusually small head and brain, and lifelong learning disabilities.
What is odd about the Zika virus is that it is expressing a sudden appearance, is spreading unusually fast, and the WHO is warning women in the infected areas to avoid pregnancy for the next year or two. In the infected parts of the world there also has been a heavy release of a new genetically modified mosquito that cross-breeds with the Tiger mosquito and ironically produces sterile offspring.
Something smells wrong here. In this age of looking for conspiracies under every rock, we have to wonder if Aika is a real threat or something else.
According to web information, Zika was first discovered in the Zika Forest in Uganda, Africa, in 1947, and first found in an infected human in 1952. The disease rarely occurred until 2007 when a major epidemic happened in Yap Island, Micronesia. Since then there have been epidemics in Polynesia, Easter Island, the Cook Islands and New Caledonia in the South Pacific. It reached Brazil, South America in April, 2015, and has been spreading at epidemic speed throughout South and Central America ever since.
As of this date, the Centers for Disease Control says there have been 31 confirmed cases in 11 states and the District of Columbia in the United States. All of these cases are said to have been travel related.
Medical people say they are waiting, holding their breath, for Zika to make its first appearance via a Tiger mosquito in the United States. They warn that it is not if, but when the "epidemic" will occur.
Here is where we have problems with the story:
When it happens, the disease may actually be missed. That is because the symptoms are almost the same as Dengue Fever and Chikungunya. Also the United States has been slammed since 2011 with aerial radiation from the Fukushima disaster. Among the expected symptoms from radiation poisoning in newborn babies is deformities like small heads and other body irregularities.
The bombing of Iraq by U.S. forces using spent plutonium laced ammunition has been showing up in infant deformities that strangely resemble the effects of the Zika virus. Thousands of US veterans also were exposed during their tours in Iraq.
Is the Zika virus warning a planned cover up for mass radiation poisoning that is bound to be found in deformed infants before the adult cancer, lung disease and other radiation attacks begin making headlines? Or are we dealing with an even different kind of conspiracy here?
Investigative journalist Jon Rappoport, author of the series Power Outside the Matrix, is suggesting that the warnings for women to avoid having children because of the danger of a mosquito bite may be a form of depopulation. Also the warnings against travel may be a type of population control. And stories about the development of a new genetically modified mosquito that mates with and destroys the Tiger mosquito has all the earmarks of a major corporate scam designed to put big profits in the pockets of executives and stockholders at the Oxitec Company, which developed the killer mosquito.
In an article posted on line Rappoport wrote: "In examining the published literature on Zika, so far I see no reports of diseased-tissue removal from a human, followed by electron microscope photos revealing large amounts of Zika. As far as diagnostic tests on suspected human cases are concerned, I see, as usual, two major types of testing: antibody and PCR."
Rappoport then goes on to review what he called "egregious flaws" in the published tests.
He concludes with: Attributing very serious problems to Zika on a worldwide basis is insupportable and speculative. It isn't science. And to make the leap to claiming the virus is causing pregnant women to give birth to babies with very small heads and impaired brains is absurd."
He asks us to look and see who benefits from the warnings? "Certainly the people who are releasing genetically engineered mosquitoes as a form of disease-prevention. The big honcho is a company named Oxitec. So far, the GE mosquitos are being used to curtail dengue fever in Brazil, Malaysia and the Cayman Islands. Florida is next up on the agenda."
But rushing to release genetically engineered insects into the world could soon create another unforeseen threat that might be even worse than the partial destruction of Tiger mosquitoes. As it is turning out for Monsanto and the other GMO seed producers, it will only be a matter of time before new varieties of genetically altered insects will be released to save the planet from another artificially produced horror.
And once again . . . the bottom line to all of this appears to be money. Population control also seems to be part of the big picture.