While President Biden was recently praising
his government for trying to ensure that kids as young as 6-months-old get
injected with an experimental mRNA “vaccine” that doesn’t work and has proven
to be highly dangerous, he also flatly stated that “There’s going to be another
pandemic.” Maybe Democrats will get “lucky” and one will break out in the
weeks leading up to the November 8th election.
But, hey, many “experts” are
predicting an increase in outbreaks of pestilence and disease.
To wit: according to a recent
report on France 24, the World Health Organization’s (WHO) emergencies
director Michael Ryan said, "The number of times that these diseases cross
into humans is increasing. Then our ability to amplify that disease and move it
on within our communities is increasing."
Stated Greg Albery, a disease ecologist at
Georgetown University, "We
need improved surveillance both in urban and wild animals
so that we can identify when a pathogen has jumped from one species to another.”
Ah, more surveillance. Albery added, "And
if the receiving host is urban or in close proximity to humans, we should get
particularly concerned."
Dr. John Brownstein, an epidemiologist and chief
innovation officer at Boston Children's Hospital, noted a number of potential reasons for an increase in outbreaks. He declared:
"Several epidemiological drivers have been identified that make bacteria
and viruses from animal populations suitable to emerge in a susceptible
population. These drivers include climate change, industrial development,
ecosystem change and social inequality." Okay. Of course. Humans are bad,
humans are bad, humans are bad, and humans are bad. Especially those that
happen to be white, male, and American.
And I was under the
impression that plagues and diseases were much more prevalent in the past and
have been largely controlled or eliminated in recent decades due to advances in
knowledge, effective vaccines, and better sanitation.
So, what about Plagues in the
Middle Ages, such as the “Black Death,” which killed between 75 million and 200
million people from 1346 to 1353? Everything I have previously read attributes
that plague to fleas found on rodents, but perhaps it was really the fault of climate
change, industrial development, ecosystem change, or early MAGA Republicans.
The politicization of, well, everything,
and the hostile—and nearly complete-- takeover of medicine, academia, the
media, and other institutions by far-left ideologues is much more dangerous to America
than any possible future pandemic.
No comments:
Post a Comment