I’m going to cut and paste pieces from an article - with editorial comment - that I’ve read recently about our new “pandemic” called the H1N1 Swine Flu. Supposedly, according to the CDC, there are 141 confirmed cases in the United States - with one death. There are 365 confirmed cases worldwide, with 10 deaths.
The story so far is that an out of season influenza epidemic allegedly made its debut in Mexico and then proceeded to sweep the globe.
Judging from its actions, the Mexican government seems particularly alarmed, ordering the suspension of school in Mexico City for all levels - from kindergarten to university - asking the population to avoid crowded places, canceling all public events until further notice, closing restaurants and suspending non-essential work altogether for a few days. Those are serious measures in a city of 20 million people with obvious economic repercussions.
There are several interesting details to consider for starters:
Why has this virus only killed Mexicans when people from other nations and ethnic backgrounds are infected? Is it a consequence of deficient health services, or are we looking at an ethnic specific weapon here?
While the Mexican government is claiming about 200 deaths (or less than 20, as it appears to change its mind regularly), this figure needs to be taken with a grain of salt given the confusion that surrounds it. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention claim that every year 36,000 people are killed by the normal “human flu” in the U.S. alone, which as it turns out, is an estimate with little scientific basis according to their own standards which require lab tests to count each death. The reason that the figure in Mexico jumps up and down every second day is the use of a double standard; suspected cases are ten times higher than proven cases.
This is a tough call for a metropolis that big. 20 million people pretty much shut down for a while will take its toll economically, especially during these tough times. Plus, if you’re going to publish statistics, please publish only the confirmed statistics, instead of beefing them up with suspected and causing a panic. Which is something I suspect is being deliberately done. Read on.
This new virus - which is suspected of infecting dozens of people in California, Texas, New York and other countries in Europe and Asia already - includes strains from different types of flu:
‘This is the first time that we’ve seen an avian strain, two swine strains and a human strain,’ said [Dave Daigle, spokesman from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention], adding that the virus had influenza strains from European and Asian swine, but not from North American swine.
So it’s a Frankenstein mutant virus from around the globe, then. If we were conspiratorially minded we would be tempted to suspect it has been created in a lab.
This is how Frankenflu ‘accidentally’ appeared. Interestingly, just last month Sanofi-aventis, the world’s largest vaccine manufacturer, announced the signing of an agreement with the Mexican authorities to build a 100 million euro facility to manufacture influenza vaccine in Mexico.
Coincidence? After all, relative to the entire human population, the demand for vaccines is very low. With a worldwide pandemic however, millions would likely be scared into accepting vaccination.
Also, this virus has turned out to be lethal mainly to the strongest among the population - 25 to 45 year olds. This is what happened in previous catastrophic scenarios such as the so called “Spanish flu” (more about that further down), which killed more than 20 million people worldwide at the end of World War I. No wonder the WHO chief warned of a “pandemic potential”. But does he know something we don’t? Undoubtedly!
I’m not 100 percent sure about how viruses mutate. I have a feeling that they don’t mutate into one with several different strains combined. Plus if the beginning of the sickness was found in Mexico, then why is there no indication of a North American origin? And why target the strongest of the population? To me, there’s more than meets the eye. I’ve always suspected that people in power want population control. The best way to control the population is to kill off lots of people. Concentration camps are deplorable (but I think those are even in the minds of some governments around the world, including ours), but a quickly spreading disease would be easier to deal with morally, because unlike me and my family, most people would never think there’s something fishy going on.
A few more interesting coincidences to consider:
- Scotland was preparing for a rehearsal of a flu pandemic scenario, but has decided to cancel it because of… the flu pandemic scenario.
- U.S. Army criminal investigators are looking into the possibility that disease samples are missing from biolabs at Fort Detrick. Apparently, the missing vials are of Venezuelan Equine Encephalitis, not flu. Or that is at least what we have been told. We do know from experience that there is such a thing as ‘cover stories’. Consider that the previous swine flu outbreak originated at the U.S. Army base of Fort Dix, New Jersey; and that two years ago scientists had already created bird flu and swine flu strain hybrids.
- Felipe Solis, a distinguished archaeologist who showed Barack Obama around Mexico City’s anthropology museum during his visit earlier this month, died the next day from “flu-like symptoms”. He met Obama at a gala dinner which was held at the museum on 16 April, before the U.S. president traveled on to the Americas summit in Trinidad and Tobago. The nation’s Health Minister confirmed that Mr Solis had died of pneumonia - but that it was not thought he had contracted swine flu. Apart from being a totally bizarre coincidence, can anybody explain how you can go to have dinner with the president and die of pneumonia on the very next day?
- Last but not least, as Mexico City is gripped by panic, it gets struck by the usual Mexican panic-bringer: an earthquake. Not strong enough to kill anyone, but still! Add to that that a month before the outbreak of the flu, somebody took a video of one of the strangest UFOs we have ever seen.
I’m leaving the last list item alone, but the B&E at Fort Detrick needs to be looked into. Felipe Solis dying of pneumonia that quickly is suspect to me. I’ve known people who’ve had pneumonia, and never knew anyone who died from it to have died that quickly.
Just for some eye-openers, I’ve included some links to a couple of stories:
Swine Flu Container Explodes on Train from Spiegel Online
Indonesian minister says swine flu could be man-made from ABS CBN News
They are from the article I’m quoting. I just wanted to get people who read this blog to open their eyes - squeegee their third eye - and be skeptical of what you see and read in the mainstream media. Don’t always believe everything you read and hear, even this one. Like Horatio Caine said on an episode in CSI: Miami, “Trust, but verify.”
Source:
Connecting the Dots: A Pandemic Distracts as the World Government Picks a Fight from Sott.net
Article by Ford (with a wink to 4chan’s /b/)
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