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Public health authorities deserve credit for the significant decline in measles deaths in America, which fell by over 98% from 1900 to 1962, before the introduction of the measles vaccine in 1963. This decline was largely due to improvements in nutrition, sanitation, clean water, and public health initiatives like quarantine. Before the vaccine, around 400 Americans died annually from measles, reflecting a mortality rate of 1 in 500,000. While the vaccine has contributed to further reductions in deaths, the ongoing efforts of public health agencies played a crucial role in this decline. However, current public health messaging often attributes the decline solely to the vaccine, overlooking these other important factors.

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Between 1900 and 1960, before the first measles vaccine in 1963, the measles mortality rate in America declined by over 98%. This decline wasn't due to vaccines, but rather public health initiatives like improved nutrition, sanitation, clean water, and basic quarantine measures. In the years just before the vaccine, about 400 Americans a year died from measles, a rate of one in 500,000. While every death is a tragedy and measles can still be fatal, this mortality rate was already on a downward trajectory when the vaccine was introduced. It is debatable how much of the further decline is attributable to the measles vaccine versus continued public health efforts. However, today's public health authorities often only credit the measles vaccine for the decline in mortality, ignoring the impact of earlier public health initiatives.

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The speaker argues that public health authorities deserve credit for the large decline in measles deaths in America that occurred before the first measles vaccine was introduced. They reference data they say is available on the CDC website, noting that between 1900 and 1960–1962 the mortality rate for measles declined by over 98 percent, a trend that existed before the vaccine's introduction in 1963. The speaker stresses that this decline was not caused by the vaccine, since there was no measles vaccine in the early period. They propose several public health factors as contributors to the decline, including nutrition and sanitation, clean water, sewage management, and basic living conditions such as ensuring natural light in tenement buildings. They also highlight quarantine practices and the practice of advising sick individuals to stay at home and rest, even if not the kind of enforced stay-at-home measures discussed in other contexts. The speaker notes that, in the years immediately before vaccination, roughly 400 Americans died per year from measles, averaging about one death per 500,000 people, illustrating that mortality was still a real concern even as the downward trajectory was already underway. The speaker acknowledges that measles can still be lethal in certain contexts and that there were pockets of the United States in the early 1960s that resembled conditions in less developed parts of the world. They emphasize that the declining mortality rate continued after the vaccine was introduced in 1963, describing the trajectory as ongoing and implying that vaccine influence is not the sole or definitive cause of the earlier decline. When addressing contemporary public health messaging, the speaker notes that public health authorities today often claim that measles caused the decline and that the measles vaccine caused the decline in mortality, but they allegedly do not discuss the other public health efforts that contributed. The underlying point is that attribution of the decline is contested, and the role of broad public health measures should be acknowledged alongside vaccination. The speaker repeatedly stresses that the data cited are uncontroversial and data-driven, and that the discussion centers on attribution and emphasis rather than disputing the data itself.

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The Spanish flu killed more people than bullets in WWI, infecting a third of the world's population between 1918 and 1920. It didn't start in Spain and wasn't a flu; it was bacterial pneumonia. A 2008 NIH paper stated bacterial pneumonia caused death in at least 92.7% of autopsies reviewed. The name "Spanish flu" was a smokescreen. The first cases of bacterial pneumonia in 1918 traced back to Fort Riley, Kansas, where soldiers were vaccinated with an experimental serum. The bacteria spread due to poor sanitary conditions. The American population was also vaccinated, and vaccines were distributed across Europe. Only the vaccinated died, not the elderly. The Rockefeller Institute, with scientist Dr. Frederick Gates, oversaw the distribution and mass vaccination program. Gates injected soldiers with random dosages of an experimental bacterial meningitis vaccine. Survivors became "cloud adults," spreading the bacteria. The speaker draws parallels between this event and modern COVID events, including the involvement of the Gates and Rockefeller initiatives, the development of disease in specific locations, closed societies, and shedding.

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During the Spanish flu, one third of the world population was infected. Contrary to its name, it didn't start in Spain and it wasn't a flu virus. It was actually a bacteria that caused severe pneumonia. The outbreak began when soldiers were injected with an experimental bacterial meningitis vaccine in the US. The Rockefeller Institute, led by Dr. Frederic Gates, was responsible for the mass vaccination program. The vaccinated soldiers spread the bacteria wherever they went, infecting even the non-vaccinated. This situation is similar to the concept of shedding in modern times. The parallels between the past and present include the involvement of the Rockefeller and Gates families, the development of diseases, and the implementation of societal restrictions for safety reasons.

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The city was in chaos with many starving in the streets while the wealthy enjoyed lavish meals. The poor ate turnip soup and bought crows, squirrels, and rats from butchers, while the rich indulged without a care.

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Professor David Moranz discusses the concept of viral-bacterial co-pathogenesis and its relevance to sepsis, septic shock, and death from bacterial disease, using early 20th-century pandemics as a lens. Key points: - The idea that sepsis, septic shock, and death can be downstream events prompts examination of upstream events and progression to prevent outcomes. - Co-pathogenesis, involving simultaneous infection with a virus and a bacterium, was recognized in the early 1900s. Ellis Island health officers noted higher mortality in children with viral infections like measles when co-infected with bacteria such as streptococci or diphtheria. - During World War I, crowded army camps experienced massive measles outbreaks and secondary bacterial pneumonia deaths. A notable study tracked soldiers with measles: those who were colonized with group A beta-hemolytic streptococcus (Strep pyogenes) had all complications and deaths among colonized individuals, while non-colonized soldiers fared better. - With influenza in 1918, pathology from the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology showed that death was associated with severe bacterial pneumonia in all 58 autopsies studied. Across 173 autopsy studies from 15 countries (over 8,000 individuals), 95% had pneumopathogens cultured from the lungs; 80.4% of pleural effusions contained pneumopathogens; 70% of those with pre-death blood cultures had one or more positive cultures. - The principal pneumopathogens identified were Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococcus), Streptococcus pyogenes (Group A beta-hemolytic strep), and Staphylococcus, though other pathogens occurred as well, including meningococcus in some outbreaks of fatal influenza-associated pneumonia. - Pathology commonly showed bronchopneumonia, with viral lesions characterized by infection of apical cells of the bronchiolar and bronchial epithelium. The virus disrupts the protective epithelial layer, enabling bacteria to colonize the basal layer and cause pneumonia. This is why bronchopneumonia was prevalent in both measles- and influenza-associated deaths. - The proximate cause of death often involved hypoxia from damaged pulmonary tissue or alveolar edema; sepsis and multi-organ failure were also cited in some cases, alongside heart or renal failure in others. - Notable interpretation by contemporaries: French physician quote that influenza condemns secondary infections; William McCallum remarked he never autopsied a flu death without finding bacteria. He viewed these events as epidemics of severe bacterial pneumonia precipitated by the two viruses. - In modern research, experimental models (mostly mice, sometimes primates) show that adding influenza (or similar viruses) to a bacterial infection like pneumococcus results in markedly worse pathology and faster death, illustrating the continuing relevance of viral-bacterial co-pathogenesis. The talk links historical observations to current inquiry, describing how colonization by pneumopathogens in crowded settings, followed by a cytolytic viral infection that damages the respiratory epithelium, creates conditions for severe bacterial pneumonia and respiratory compromise.

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Between 1900 and the introduction of the measles vaccine in 1963, the measles mortality rate in America declined by over 98%. This decline had nothing to do with vaccines because there was no measles vaccine at the time. Public health authorities should take credit for this due to improved nutrition, sanitation, clean water, and quarantine practices. In the years before the vaccine, around 400 Americans a year died of measles, which was one in 500,000 Americans. The mortality rate was already declining when the measles vaccine was introduced in 1963. It can be debated how much of the further decline is attributable to the vaccine versus continued public health efforts. Public health authorities today claim the measles vaccine caused the decline in mortality, without mentioning the other factors.

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The Spanish flu didn't start in Spain, but in the US as a bacterial pneumonia outbreak from a vaccine experiment on soldiers. The Rockefeller Institute led the mass vaccination program, causing the spread of the disease. Survivors became carriers, infecting others. Similarities to COVID-19 include closed societies, shedding, and safety measures for the greater good.

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One third of the world was infected during the Spanish flu, which actually started in the US and was caused by a bacteria, not a flu virus. Soldiers were used in a vaccine experiment by the Rockefeller Institute, leading to mass vaccination. Survivors became "cloud adults" spreading the bacteria. Similarities are drawn to COVID-19 times with mass vaccination and shedding. The connection is made between Frederick Gates then and Bill Gates now, as well as the Rockefeller Initiative then and now, with diseases originating in Fort Riley then and Wuhan now, leading to societal shutdowns for safety.

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Before Yom Kippur, tens of thousands of Hasidic Jews in Brooklyn will purchase and physically handle live chickens in the largest wet market in the country. With little to no PPE, they will swing the chickens around their heads as part of an annual atonement ritual called koporos. The chickens will be killed in about 30 pop up slaughterhouses erected without permits on public streets in violation of eight New York City health codes. The body parts, blood, and feces of thousands of animals will contaminate the streets for days. If the viruses that they harbor co mingle and mutate into a more dangerous strain then these wet markets could be the source of another zoonotic disease outbreak. According to a toxicologist who studied fecal and blood samples taken during Kaporos, the ritual poses a significant public health hazard.

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During the Spanish flu, one third of the world population was infected. Contrary to its name, it didn't start in Spain and it wasn't a flu virus, but rather a severe bacterial pneumonia. The Rockefeller Institute conducted an experimental vaccine trial on soldiers, injecting them with a meningitis vaccine cultured in horses. These soldiers, along with the American population, were vaccinated due to fears of European diseases. The Rockefeller Institute and Dr. Frederick Gates were responsible for the distribution and mass vaccination program. Survivors became carriers, spreading the bacteria to others, including the non-vaccinated. Similar patterns can be seen today with COVID-19, where vaccinated individuals can still infect the non-vaccinated. The parallels between the past and present, such as disease origins and closed societies, are intriguing.

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During the Spanish flu, one-third of the world population was infected. Contrary to its name, it didn't start in Spain and it wasn't a flu virus. It was a bacteria that originated in the US and was spread through soldiers. The Rockefeller Institute was responsible for the mass vaccination program, led by Dr. Frederick Gates. Survivors became carriers, infecting others, similar to shedding in COVID times. The parallels between then and now are striking, with disease outbreaks, societal closures, and the pursuit of safety. The connections between Frederick Gates and Bill Gates, as well as the Rockefeller Initiative then and now, are intriguing.

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During the Spanish flu, one third of the world population was infected. Contrary to popular belief, it didn't start in Spain and it wasn't a flu virus. It was actually a bacteria that caused severe pneumonia. The Rockefeller Institute in New York injected soldiers at Fort Riley, leading to the rapid spread of the bacteria. The American population was then vaccinated by the Rockefeller Institute, with Doctor Frederick Gates leading the program. Those who survived became carriers and spread the bacteria to others, similar to shedding in COVID-19. This pattern of vaccination and infection is seen both then and now, with Frederick Gates in the past and Bill Gates in the present. All of this was done for the sake of our safety.

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There hasn't been anything like this since the Spanish flu in 1917. It was a vicious pandemic that happened over a hundred years ago. This current situation is the worst event of its kind since then.

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During the Spanish flu, one third of the world population was infected. Contrary to popular belief, it didn't start in Spain and it wasn't a flu virus. Instead, it was a bacteria that caused severe pneumonia. The Rockefeller Institute in New York injected soldiers at Fort Riley, leading to the rapid spread of the bacteria. The American population was then vaccinated by the Rockefeller Institute, with Doctor Frederick Gates in charge. Those who survived became carriers and spread the bacteria to others, similar to shedding in COVID-19. The parallels between the past and present, with the Rockefeller and Gates involvement, raise interesting questions about disease development and vaccination for our safety.

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The speaker states that vaccines contained 40 different viruses that were being inactivated. The yellow fever vaccine contained leukemia virus due to the crude science of the time. The speaker says they were not reporting AIDS virus at the time, but they had a disease virus. The speaker says it was good science at the time because they didn't worry about these viruses.

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In 1916, a Rockefeller lab in Manhattan aimed to create the most pathological strain of polio possible. They injected monkeys with monkey brains and human spinal serum, resulting in an accidental release into the public. This caused the worst polio epidemic on record, with a 25% mortality rate. The speaker claims that polio is normally a human commensal and only became more lethal due to human actions that made it more invasive. They state that wild polio strains are normal human commensals, but oral vaccines obliterated them and replaced them with vaccine strains. The speaker confirms that vaccine-derived polio is transmissible.

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The Spanish flu didn't originate in Spain and wasn't a flu. It was a bacteria causing lethal pneumonia. In 1918, an experimental bacterial meningitis vaccine, cultured in horses by the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in New York, was injected into soldiers. The Rockefeller Institute was in charge, and Doctor Frederick Gates was the lead scientist. Survivors became "cloud adults," spreading the bacteria, similar to shedding in modern COVID times, where the vaccinated infect the non-vaccinated. Frederick Gates then, is likened to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation now.

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Back in Chicago at a warehouse that appeared abandoned, it's revealed to be filled with undocumented individuals. Recently, there was a measles outbreak with reports of 13 to 15 cases, but the actual number could be around 100. The disease is airborne, and there's no quarantine in place, allowing people to come and go freely without any warnings or signage about the dangers. Additionally, illegal vendors are operating on the streets. This situation reflects a broader concern about the impact of immigration policies on American citizens, regardless of their background.

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Speaker 0 notes: “we’d had the smallpox vaccine for nearly fifty years and hadn't eradicated it, weren't even sure that it was working, and that's when they decided we need to mandate this.” He calls it “the greatest ad campaign that has ever been,” and contrasts COVID: “COVID… has a death rate of less than zero point five percent… 99.5 percent of humanity is not going to die from this thing.” He asks which product would sell: “the point five percent” or “the ninety nine point five percent need to take.” Speaker 1 adds: “Parliament idea comes passed the Vaccine Act of 1853… eerily similar to what we saw during COVID,” Jenner’s idea spreads; by 1853 vaccination is widespread, yet “the worst smallpox outbreak in history” occurs in 1871 in Leicester; “Jenner and nor did anyone else in the entire nineteenth century know the causative agent of smallpox.” “We scraped some pus. We don't know what the agent is.” “We have no idea how this thing's working.” “To this day, the whole thing is a mystery.” Pasteur is depicted as fraudster; “Louis Pasteur proclaims a vaccine for waterfowl… anthrax vaccine for animals,” “self promotion becomes huge,” and media fear is used repeatedly.

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The Spanish flu didn't start in Spain and wasn't a flu, but a bacterial pneumonia caused by an experimental vaccine on soldiers in the US. The Rockefeller Institute led the mass vaccination program, with Dr. Frederick Gates overseeing. Survivors spread the bacteria, similar to shedding in COVID-19. Parallels are drawn to current events with Bill Gates and the Rockefeller Initiative. Society closures were justified for safety then and now. Translation: The Spanish flu didn't originate in Spain and was actually caused by a bacterial pneumonia from an experimental vaccine given to soldiers in the US. The Rockefeller Institute led the mass vaccination effort, overseen by Dr. Frederick Gates. Survivors spread the bacteria, similar to shedding in COVID-19. Comparisons are made to current events involving Bill Gates and the Rockefeller Initiative. Society closures were deemed necessary for safety then and now.

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In 1916, a Rockefeller lab in Manhattan aimed to create the most neuropathological strain of polio possible by injecting monkey brains and human spinal serum into monkeys. An accidental release led to the worst polio epidemic on record, with a 25% mortality rate. The epicenter fanned out, but the virus attenuated as it moved through the body, returning to its normal state as a human commensal. Highly lethal viruses typically die out because they kill their hosts, preventing further spread. Polio was made more lethal by human actions that increased its invasiveness. Wild polio strains were normal human commensals until they were eradicated by oral vaccines and replaced with vaccine strains.

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Sick people were killed in this area, with estimates ranging from 100 to 200. A mob entered sick houses, setting them on fire and sometimes even cutting the hair of the sick individuals. The aftermath revealed horrifying evidence in the rubble of their homes.

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During the Spanish flu, one third of the world population was infected. Contrary to popular belief, it didn't start in Spain and wasn't caused by a flu virus. Instead, it originated in the US and was caused by a bacteria that led to severe pneumonia. The Rockefeller Institute was involved in injecting soldiers at Fort Riley, which resulted in the rapid spread of the bacteria. The American population was also vaccinated under the supervision of Dr. Frederick Gates. Survivors became carriers and spread the bacteria to others, similar to shedding in COVID-19. This historical event draws parallels to the present, with Bill Gates being associated with vaccination efforts, just like the Rockefeller initiative.
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