By John Wayne on Tuesday, 12 March 2024
Category: Race, Culture, Nation

Is Bird Flu the Next Big Thing? By Brian Simpson

A story was in the mainstream media for a short period of time, that the US and communist Chinese researchers were working on ways, by gain-of-function research, to make bird flu even more deadly to humans. Apparently the genetically modified virus would be kept in the Wuhan Institute of Virology, and other communist places, and the Wuhan Institute is now seen as the most likely source of a lab leak of the Covid-19 virus.

This story shows the deep levels of conspiracy which operate, it is especially relevant, as bird flu out in nature now seems to have become better able to infect mammals. If this trend continues, humans will be next. I would not put it past the globalists to see the present outbreaks coming from a deliberate release of a genetically modified virus. I would expect that after the dummy run of Covid-19, which is a pussy cat compared to bird flu, something of a new plandemic will be seen prior to the 2024 US election, so that the postal voting scan for the Democrats can be implemented. Trump will be made a sucker once more.

https://nypost.com/2024/03/09/us-news/fears-of-humans-catching-avian-flu-heighten-as-virus-spreads-to-mammals-quite-likely/?utm_source=sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=news_alert&utm_content=20240309?&utm_source=sailthru&lctg=6108aaaca7ec8c70750fd5a2&utm_term=NYP%20-%20News%20Alerts

"Fears that humans may someday catch avian flu have heightened as the virus been contracted by mammals, the USDA announced.

Three states — Washington, Montana, and Kentucky — have reported cases of bird flu in mammals so far this year. Washington reported three striped skunks have the virus, while Montana found it in a mountain lion, and Kentucky had a raccoon, according to the USDA.

The virus is already widespread among wild birds and especially poultry for decades, with more than 82 million animals currently affected across 48 states.

Now that it has spread to mammals, the fear of humans catching the virus has spiked, even though risk is currently low.

"I think it's quite likely," Dr. Chris Walzer, with the Wildlife Conservation Society, told CBS News. "This avian influenza outbreak has been one of the largest threats to wildlife globally. We just can't wait for it to hit human populations."

Walzer is calling for better tracking of the disease to help protect humans from the virus as it is acquiring "new traits that could create a problem for us humans," he said.

Scientists everywhere are now being urged to watch for signs of avian flu's spread, according to CBS News.

The bird flu has also been found in marine animals in South America, according to a new study published in Emerging Infectious Diseases.

Research used genomic testing and found nearly identical samples of the virus in four sea lions and a seal, according to the Wildlife Society.

In Argentina, Chile, and Peru alone, H5N1 has killed at least 600,000 wild birds and 50,000 mammals since 2022.

The virus has caused US egg prices to surge as California's massive poultry industry has been struck.

Sunrise Farms in Sonoma County had to slaughter entire flock of 550,000 hens, per government rules." 

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