A New Disease Carrying Tick Species Has Been Discovered
In Brief
- The Facts:For the first time in 50 years, a new tick species has been identified in the US. The longhorned tick is prolific and can lay as many as 2,000 eggs at a time. It has health implications.
- Reflect On:Not long ago, the US government was accused of manufactured disease via ticks, to be used as bioweapons. More on that within the article.
So
many problems are created by powerful people, and then these same
powerful people like to offer us the solutions. A great example would be
false flag terrorism, like lying and staging chemical gas attacks in
Syria, and then using them as an excuse to infiltrate, invade and bring
‘democracy’ to that country in order to protect its people. You can read
more about that specific example here. This
is known to some, as Robert F. Kennedy Jr. recently expressed in a
Facebook post regarding global warming, as “disaster capitalism,” the
science of how corporations and tyrants profit from the crisis they
create, regardless of whether that crisis is staged or real.
When it comes to ticks, it’s hard not to
ponder if we’re seeing the same thing play out here. Will the rise in
ticks and new tick species suddenly result in the development of more
vaccines, ones that are specifically designed to combat the diseases
these ticks are carrying?
There are a number of subjects that were
once considered ‘conspiracy theories’ that are now no longer in that
realm. ‘Conspiracy theories’ usually, in my opinion, arise from credible
evidence. The implications, however, are so grand and so mind-altering
that many may experience some sort of cognitive dissonance as a result.
One of the topics often deemed a ‘conspiracy theory’ is weaponized
diseases, and the latest example comes from an approved amendment that
was proposed by a Republican congressman from New Jersey. His name is
Chris Smith, and he instructed the Department of Defence’s Inspector
General to conduct a review on whether or not the US “experimented with
ticks and insects regarding use as a biological weapon between the years
of 1950 and 1975” and “whether any ticks or insects used in such
experiment were released outside of any laboratory by accident or
experiment design.”
The fact that the amendment was approved by a vote in the House speaks volumes. Smith said that the amendment was inspired by “a
number of books and articles suggesting that significant research had
been done at US government facilities including Fort Detrick, Maryland,
and Plum Island, New York, to turn ticks and insects into bioweapons.”
Now, for the first time in 50 years, a
new tick species has been identified in the US. The longhorned tick is
prolific and can lay as many as 2,000 eggs at a time. “In Asia, it
causes a devastating disease called “SFTS” — severe fever and
thrombocytopenia syndrome. About 15% of those people have died. It has
not happened in the U.S. yet, but epidemiologists are watching closely.”
(source)
When it comes to Lyme disease in particular, the Guardian points out that:
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Could this new tick be some sort of weaponized one? Who really knows.A new book published in May by a Stanford University science writer and former Lyme sufferer, Kris Newby, has raised questions about the origins of the disease, which affects 400,000 Americans each year.Bitten: The Secret History of Lyme Disease and Biological Weapons, cites the Swiss-born discoverer of the Lyme pathogen, Willy Burgdorfer, as saying that the Lyme epidemic was a military experiment that had gone wrong.Burgdorfer, who died in 2014, worked as a bioweapons researcher for the US military and said he was tasked with breeding fleas, ticks, mosquitoes and other blood-sucking insects, and infecting them with pathogens that cause human diseases.According to the book, there were programs to drop “weaponised” ticks and other bugs from the air, and that uninfected bugs were released in residential areas in the US to trace how they spread. It suggests that such a scheme could have gone awry and led to the eruption of Lyme disease in the US in the 1960s.
The Takeaway
We are living in a world of extreme secrecy. Much of what was once deemed a conspiracy theory is no longer a conspiracy theory anymore. A lot of information is arising that’s really challenging people’s minds, and some of it is so unbelievable and hard to imagine that cognitive dissonance is a common reaction. In today’s day and age, it’s important to keep an open mind as new information that challenges collective belief systems continues to emerge.Guide: Make Your Home Safe From EMFs & 5G
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