Microcephaly = babies born with small heads and brain impairment.
In previous articles, I established that the Zika virus uproar is a hoax. There was
no reason to assume the number of Brazilian cases of microcephaly was extraordinary. There is
no reason to assume the Zika virus has anything to do with microcephaly.
My previous quote:
"Now we have a January 27 Associated Press story out of Rio,
published in SFGate: '270 of 4,180 suspected microcephaly cases
confirmed.' That's called a clue, in case you're wondering. Of the
previously touted 4,180 cases of microcephaly in Brazil, the actual
number of confirmed cases so far is, well, only 270. Bang. But wait,
there's more. AP: 'Brazilian officials said the babies with the defect
[microcephaly] and their mothers are being tested to see if they had
been infected. Six of the 270 confirmed microcephaly cases were found to
have the [Zika] virus.' Bang, bang, bang. Out of all the microcephaly
cases re-examined in Brazil, only six have the Zika virus. That
constitutes zero proof that Zika has anything to do with microcephaly."
But of course, The Machine is rolling and it will move forward. Also, a
number of independent investigators are behind the curve. They are
still assuming there is proof of a Zika-microcephaly "epidemic." If
there is proof, it is nowhere to be found yet.
Here are five things that will happen next.
One: Health agencies and reporters will mention cases
of microcephaly in other countries, and they will automatically connect
them to the Zika virus, or they will suggest there could be a
connection. This baseless claim is part of the operation to build up
the story and spread fear. Microcephaly can be caused by
any insult to the brain during fetal development.
Two: There will be more stories about the rush to develop a vaccine against Zika, the virus that hasn't been proved to cause
anything serious.
Three: Some independent researchers will continue to
insist that Zika is actually a weaponized biowar virus. They will
ignore the fact that, as yet, Zika hasn't been shown to cause
microcephaly. Or they will point to genetically engineered mosquitoes
and the Tdap vaccine as the cause of the Zika epidemic---when there is
no proof the epidemic exists.
Yes, the vaccine and the mosquitoes are quite dangerous to health, but there is no reason to tout a Zika/microcephaly epidemic when proof isn't there.
Four: The truth here is: absence of evidence. On the
one hand, the CDC and the World Health Organization will grudgingly
admit it would be useful to assemble more hard evidence connecting Zika
to microcephaly. On the other hand, they will press forward with
emergency warnings to pregnant mothers; travel advisories; and they will
emphasize the need to come up with a vaccine.
Then, they'll forget all about the need for more evidence.
Five: Investigators and researchers will ignore the
fact that there is a very real health crisis in Brazil, and it has
existed for a long time. The rampant use of toxic pesticides, grinding
poverty, contaminated water, lack of basic sanitation, overcrowding, the
takeover of farm land by major corporations, prior toxic vaccine
campaigns---these are all factors that cause massive illness, suffering,
and death in Brazil.
Again, I emphasize: The release of genetically
engineered mosquitoes in Brazil, based on no health studies, is a crime,
to say the least. But there is no need to claim these insects are
causing an epidemic of microcephaly---since there is no evidence of an
epidemic. There
is every reason to oppose this GE mosquito campaign.
For the past 30 years, I've been analyzing and taking apart phony
epidemics. There are two things you must do, among others. Demand
proof that the touted cause is really the cause. And discover whether
the number of ill people is being accurately reported.
So far, re microcephaly, there is no proof the touted cause is the
cause. And the recent revision of evidence indicates there are far, far
fewer cases of microcephaly in Brazil than initially trumpeted.
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