Bird Flu Looks Like Being the Globalists’ Choice, By Brian Simpson
The road to the New World Order was not exactly predicted by early US writers, at least regarding the use that would be made of pandemic disease. Analysis was primarily in terms of economics and politics, rather than bio-politics. However, we have seen since the Covid business, that much more can be achieved in terms of eroding once-protective civil and political liberties through pandemic disease panic, than through the slower processes, even involving climate change, which is not to discount that threat as well. The lockdowns and associated mandates were extraordinary in so far as so much was undermined so quickly, using fear of infection as the political weapon.
While there is a high degree of cynicism now, especially after even the normies finding that they still got Covid after multiple jabs, and the failure of the lockdowns to prevent transmission of an airborne virus, this could change with bird flu, H5N1. This virus seems to have mutated at a suspicious, totally unnatural, record speed, marching ever-closer to becoming highly infectious to humans. That has not happened yet, and the people who have so far been infected were through special circumstances. Yet reports, such as the one below from the mainstream media are indicating that the virus is close to becoming infectious to the general population.
One can just feel that this will happen just in time to rollout mail-in voting fraud once more in the US election. My hypothesis is that Covid-19, a joint project between the US and communist China, through its Wuhan Institute of Virology, was created, and released mainly to allow the mail-in voting fraud, needed to finish off President Trump, and of course, to further the globalist agendas through breaking down liberal democratic traditions, which it did. And, the globalists will try it one more. Hence, get ready for bird flu, the next plandemic. I will bet on it.
"H5N1 virus in latest human case has mutated, officials sayThe slight evolution in the virus is associated with 'adaptation to mammalian hosts', according to the Centre for Disease Control
Testing of the latest human case of bird flu has revealed a "notable" mutation in the virus, officials have said.
The case, which was identified this month in a dairy worker in Michigan, marks the second human infection linked to the multi-state H5N1 outbreak among US cattle.
Genomic sequencing has now found a change in the virus compared to an earlier infection in a dairy worker in Texas, raising concerns that the virus is evolving to better infect humans.
The slight change in the virus's genetic makeup is "associated with viral adaptation to mammalian hosts," the Centre for Disease Control said in a statement published on Friday.
This change has also been identified as resulting in enhancement of virus replication and disease severity in mice during studies with avian influenza viruses, the agency added.
"This is exactly why I've been trying to call attention to deep sequencing of each virus from cows, cats, and people infected with H5N1, which is needed for a rapid and effective global response on vaccine and antiviral development," said Dr Rick Bright, an immunologist and influenza expert, on X (formerly Twitter).
Despite the virus's evolution, the CDC stressed the strain is still closely related to the clade of H5N1 circulating in US dairy cattle, and closely matches the two candidate vaccines currently available to manufacturers, should they be needed.
Experts think it likely that we will begin to see more human cases of H5N1 in dairy workers in the coming weeks and months, as surveillance efforts ramp-up across America.
There are currently at least 350 people under surveillance who have been exposed to bird flu-infected cattle, which have now been identified in at least 68 herds across nine states.
Last week, the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced a new set of measures to encourage farmers to increase their monitoring efforts, so that health authorities can better understand how the virus is spreading.
The agency will provide up to $1,500 to any farm that implements a biosecurity plan, including "enhanced" measures for people travelling between dairy farms like vets, milk haulers, and technicians – although it is unclear exactly what those measures are.
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