
By Jon Rappoport
November 19, 2009.
The love for, and fascination with, viruses is a fun pastime. “Here’s a virus, there’s a virus, there’s another virus.” Wonderful.
In political terms, this means these virus lovers are VERY suggestible every time the CDC or the World Health Organization decides to announce a new threat, a new epidemic, a new pandemic, a new plague.
“It’s a virus, called H13cXy27.” Wow. Hypnotize me some more.
Instead, try looking at it from another angle. Let’s say we accept the oft-cited global figure of 300,000 to 500,000 deaths from the flu every year. Ordinary flu. Every year.
So, if you’re a public health agency searching for more power, you can cut into that big death statistic and carve out a piece of it and claim it’s…NEW. Never been seen before. You go right in there and chop off a hunk for yourself.
You call it Buffalo Flu.
You claim researchers in your tight little circle of labs have isolated a new, never-seen-before buffalo virus…and the threat is huge because there is no natural human immunity to it anywhere on the planet. It could sweep across Earth and kill millions.
You discover BV (buffalo virus) in a cluster of cases in, say, Texas. Small town just outside a ranch in Texas. Five people have died there.
You ignore the fact that lately there has been a lot of spraying of pesticide on the ranch. Nasty pesticide. You ignore the fact that every year, 5-10 people die in that general area, when the wind blows south. Their lungs collapse and bleed.
Who cares? It’s a virus. You find it in those five dead people. BV. Of course, you never see how much of it, the virus, is in those people. You find a trace here and there, and you say it’s enough. The dead people’s lungs were inflamed to beat the band and the lungs were green or purple or black or a bright orange. The virus did that. That’s what you say.
And you can find a trace of that virus from Mongolia to Argentina, because it’s everywhere. It’s actually been everywhere for 50 million years. You just never saw it before. People with decent immune systems don’t even get sick from BV. They don’t.
But now you’ve got a hot deal. Now you can start cutting into that 300,000 to 500,000 flu-death stat and removing pieces of it for yourself, and you can call it BV. You’re in like Flynn. You’re golden. You’ve cooked up the specter of a new disease.
Meanwhile, people all over the world get sick and die, just like they do every year. Every single year. A lot of it is called flu. If you really want to scare the hell out of everybody, you cut yourself a really big fat piece of that 300,000 to 500,000 death stat. You don’t even test anybody for BV anymore. You say “the pandemic has been established” and you just start throwing around big numbers. You say “tens of millions” of people in the US alone are infected with BV.
And if enough people believe you, you’re in.
And you know what? It IS a religion. The vaccine is the sacrament. The men in white coats are the working priests. The CDC and WHO are the cathedrals of lies. Medical treatment doled out by the certified priests is salvation. BV is the devil.
If some other folks who don’t wear the official white coats say they can keep people healthy with unapproved “sacraments,” you can move in, like the Inquisitors, and hold their feet to the fire. You can say these rebels, these heretics, are crazy and they are from Hell. They’re diverting the needy from the true sacrament that will bring them salvation.
You come down hard on these heretics, because they’re claiming they don’t need your sacrament. They don’t even need to pay attention to the devil, the virus. They can go way beyond that and help people establish their own power (immunity). This last claim, you say, is proof they come from Satan, because that’s what Satan always promises. Power. Independence. Self-sufficiency.
You’ve got your bases covered.
You sure do.
Until people start waking up.
Telling you they don’t need your priests or your arcane knowledge or your hocus-pocus for BV.
Telling you they see BV is just another one of your phony scare tactics that might work on children---but they’re all grown up now.
Their juvenile fascination with viruses doesn’t give them a kick anymore. They can get their excitement somewhere else. The viral movie is over.
JON RAPPOPORT www.nomorefakenews.com and www.insolutions.info
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