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Lyme disease cases are rising, with the CDC estimating half a million cases a year, or 1,300 people a day. Lyme disease wasn't a problem until the mid-1970s, the peak of the US biological weapons program. Three diseases emerged: Lyme arthritis, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, and Babesia. These previously rare diseases appeared across from the US government's biological weapons testing facility. This is a perfect stealth weapon, a poor man's nuke. Creating new germs inside ticks could have unintended consequences.

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You know, people go, oh, I'm allergic to ticks. You were injected with gelatin. That's why you're allergic to ticks. Tick goes to bite you because you were injected as a kid with gelatin, you have an allergic reaction. Why gelatin and ticks? How is that related? Something about the makeup of a tick and the gelatin. So I would assume something in their, like, skin. And when they go to bite you then when they put that into you, now what happens is their cells have transferred kinda into your cells, just kinda make it simple, and then you have that allergic reaction, but you don't actually have the Lyme. You know, Lyme is tested with a PCR test, number one, which is funny. And number two, you got EMF and heavy metal poisoning. It's wild how, like I said, everything gets flipped. You know, they target one thing and say it's the bug, but they don't say what's been injected into your body. They don't say the metal's going into your body, and they don't talk about the EMFs, are amplifying the metals. What is your favorite way of removing heavy metal or ways of removing heavy metals? We talked about chiluzhan and dragon's blood. Two of the best super foods to help pull things out, the fulvic acid and the tree sap, which is really beneficial. You can also get into organic moldy berry. Just one organic moldy blueberry, nice and simple. You can also do raw cream and raw butter, unpasteurized butter and cream. Fat is very good at pulling things out. People can look into turpentine. Turpentine is the old pine tree, you know, the sap of the pine tree, they can look into that. Doctor. Andrew Kaufman has a great protocol on that people can look into. You can get into the whole thing I've talked about with baking soda, you can get into Borax, you can get into grapefruits, the whole grapefruit one is a funny one. They tell you to stay away from the grapefruit. You know, big harm is always like, you know, don't don't don't eat the grapefruits. They interfere with the things we're trying to give you. Yeah. They're countering all of that. The other ones you can get into is apricot seeds. Big one as well too. I've been deleted many times for talking about that one.

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Did you say that Lyme disease is a highly likely a materially engineered bioweapon? I've made sure I put in the highly likely. Did you say Lyme disease is a highly likely militarily engineered bioweapon? I probably did say that. Did you say that And that's what the developer of Lyme our colleagues to hear it, mister Kennedy. I want them to hear it. You said yes. Did you say that exposure to pesticides

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In 2018, we found a USDA lab right outside of Washington, D.C. that was breeding hundreds of kittens each year. They would fly to places like China, purchase dog and cat meat from wet markets, and then transport it back to the U.S. in their carry-on luggage. They then force-fed this meat to the kittens in the lab. The project cost $52 million, and the purpose was to study if people eating dog and cat meat in China could be exposed to a specific parasite. Fortunately, the Trump administration shut down the project, and the remaining cats were adopted. What kind of person decides to conduct an experiment where you turn animals into cannibals to observe the results? How did they even get the grant for this? The person in charge of this experiment is in the USDA's Hall of Fame, which says a lot about the government's mindset.

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A New Jersey man has become the first known person to die after a tick bite triggered a severe meat allergy. The 47-year-old man went camping with his family in 2024 and grew violently ill after eating a steak. He recovered but, two weeks later, after eating a hamburger, he again became very sick and died. An autopsy labeled the death unexplained until his wife had his blood tested at the University of Virginia, where researchers determined he had Alpha-gal syndrome, an allergy caused by the bite of a Lone Star tick. Experts explain that Alpha-gal syndrome involves a hypersensitivity to a carbohydrate found in animal meat. The reaction is triggered by a bite from a Lone Star tick. Lone Star ticks are primarily found in the Northeast, South, and Midwest, and are identifiable by a white dot or lone star on their back. Tick populations have been rising and spreading to more parts of the United States, a trend linked to climate change, including milder winters. Doctors note that Alpha-gal syndrome is treatable, and prevention plays a crucial role. In areas where Lone Star ticks are prevalent, people are advised to wear long sleeves and long pants and to use tick repellent when outdoors in wooded areas. The emphasis is on prevention as the best approach to reducing risk. The victim had no known medical history prior to his illness. Alpha-gal syndrome is rare, but individuals who notice sickness occurring shortly after eating meat are advised to speak with their doctor.

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The speaker discusses the failed attempt to investigate whether ticks were weaponized with Lyme disease or other dangerous pathogens. Books and articles have claimed that research at Fort Detrick and Plum Island aimed to turn ticks into bioweapons. The researcher credited with discovering Lyme disease, Dr. Willie Burgdorfer, was revealed to be a bioweapons specialist. Chris Meadey's book and documentary, "Bitten" and "Under Our Skin," suggest that Lyme disease was created as a biological weapon by the US government. Meadey highlights gain of function experiments and a bug weapons program, including Project 112, which involved spraying tick-borne diseases. Burgdorfer, coincidentally, worked at a biosafety lab run by the National Institutes of Health.

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The speaker discusses a conspiracy theory about the UN using food as a weapon and banning humans from eating meat. They claim that vaccines contain a bovine protein that causes an autoimmune response, making people allergic to beef. They argue that this is part of a plan to weaponize the food supply. The speaker also mentions the use of glyphosate in GMOs and its negative effects. They connect this to the tick-borne alpha gal syndrome, which causes an allergy to red meat. They suggest that the protein found in ticks is also present in vaccines. The speaker warns that the globalists are preprogramming people to stop eating meat and urges viewers to share the information.

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The speaker discusses the origin of Lyme disease, asserting that it came from lab 257 on Plum Island, just outside Connecticut, about 25 miles from Lyme, Connecticut, where the first case was described. They claim this with a high degree of probability and reference the book Bitten as evidence. The speaker states that when Nazi war criminal doctors were executed in Nuremberg, at least one was spared and brought to the United States so that his mind could be used by the US military for biodefense, and that he was placed on Plum Island. The speaker says this individual openly believed that an incredible form of biowarfare was infecting ticks, and that Lyme disease is “that” and then “shows up 25 miles away.” The speaker adds that this is not the only related finding nearby: they mention “half, rat, half deer carcasses” found in the Hamptons, the last town being Montauk, noting that it washed up in Montauk in the nineties. They describe this as part of “a bunch of mad scientists doing things,” suggesting a connection to Lyme disease as something resulting from such experiments, and claim that “we all these people have Lyme disease.” The speaker then asks how many physicians know that it came from lab 257, asserting that approximately one percent know this. They comment on a broader philosophy: “just because you can do something doesn’t mean you should do it, and sometimes we can cause more harm than we can good by messing with mother nature.” Throughout, the speaker maintains that Lyme disease originated from a laboratory experiment linked to Plum Island and heavily implies misconduct or dangerous experimentation by scientists, tying these claims to Lyme disease’s appearance in nearby regions.

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Ticks carrying Lyme disease are not limited to the northeast, but are also found in the south and far west of the United States. Lyme disease, caused by a spirochete bacteria transmitted through tick bites, is a serious and potentially fatal epidemic spreading across the country. It can mimic other conditions, making diagnosis challenging, and the proper treatment is a subject of debate. Some patients continue to experience chronic symptoms even after antibiotic treatment, which insurance companies often deny coverage for. This controversy has hindered progress in understanding and treating the disease. Major universities recognize the need for better treatment, as current antibiotic regimens have shown limited effectiveness in animals. The federal government has allocated little funding for Lyme disease research compared to private foundations. The development of a vaccine has been complicated, with one being withdrawn due to side effects. The standard test for Lyme disease has flaws, removing key markers for diagnosis. The persistence of the disease and its transmission from mother to child have been overlooked in mainstream literature. To address this growing epidemic, new research and a change in approach are crucial.

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A man in Arkansas noticed strange clouds in the sky, leading to concerns about chemtrails. Lab tests revealed high levels of barium, sparking fears of secret government testing. Historical evidence of past biological experiments on the public adds to these concerns. The military denies any involvement in chemtrail programs. Barium exposure can cause health issues, including stomach and chest pains, and blood pressure problems. Long-term exposure may weaken the immune system.

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Lyme disease wasn't a problem problem a noticeable problem till the mid seventies. Three virulent tick-borne diseases showed up near Lyme, Connecticut, across from Plum Island, the US's biological weapons program site. Late sixties marked the peak of that program, and these three diseases—Lyme arthritis caused by the spirochete, Rickettsia (Rocky Mountain spotted fever), and Babesia (a cattle parasite)—appeared. Polly Murray, a Lyme housewife, documented it and pressed local health departments and the CDC for seven years before response. Alan Steer, a Yale-trained CDC EIS officer, investigated but couldn't identify the causative agent. Willy Bergdorfer found the spirochete, said it causes the bull's eye rash, and that "Just take two weeks of dike doxycycline, and the problem will go away." It didn't, and the backstory looked secretive.

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Speaker 0: If you live in these parts of the country, which is practically half of The US, you should start taping up your legs like this guy every time you go outside. There's this tiny little bug called the Lone Star tick causing massive problems. A single bite from this guy reprograms your entire immune system causing Alpha gal syndrome, which makes you allergic to red meat, and it can be life threatening. Now, what's crazy to me is that these ticks have apparently been around for over two hundred years, but there was no recorded cases of Alpha gal syndrome until just about twenty years ago, and now we're seeing a hundredfold increase in cases. The official explanation is that these ticks are spreading because of climate shifts and growing deer populations, but I find it awfully ironic that the same people pushing the global warming agenda while simultaneously investing in the solutions for it are also pushing the agenda to eat lab made and plant based meat, which are miserably failing. We also know about Lyme disease, another devastating tick borne illness, and its relationship to Bioengineering Lab two fifty seven on Palm Island, just nine miles away from Lyme, Connecticut. Now, don't know about you, but it's interesting that as thousands of people are healing and feeling better incorporating red meat back into their diet, there just so happens to be this exploding population of ticks that could forever prevent you from eating it. Speaker 1: We can use human engineering to make it the case that we're intolerant to certain kinds of meat, to certain kinds of bovine proteins. And there's actually analogues of this in life. There's this thing called the long star tick, where if it bites you, you will become allergic to meat.

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A Republican congressman is calling for an investigation into whether the Pentagon experimented on ticks to turn them into weapons, potentially causing the spread of Lyme disease in the US. Army labs in the 1950s were capable of breeding ticks with pathogens that could cause severe diseases. The link between the bioweapons program and Lyme disease was first outlined by Stanford's Chris Newby. William Bergdorfer, who worked for the military in the 1950s, hinted before his death that the outbreak may have been a bioweapons experiment gone wrong. The congressman has sponsored an amendment to investigate the issue. Critics argue that there is no credible evidence to support these claims.

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Lyme disease wasn't a problem problem, a noticeable problem, till the mid seventies, and there are actually three really virulent tick borne diseases that showed up right around Lyme, Connecticut at the mouth of the Connecticut River, which is right across from Plum Island, which was The US's, anti animal crop, headquarters for the biological weapons program. So late sixties, the peak of the biological weapons program in The US, these three freaky diseases showed up: Lyme arthritis caused by the spirochete; there was a, Rickettsia, which is, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, and then there was a cattle parasite. It was the second time it was found in man in that area called Babesia. And that's that's actually I got Lyme and Babesia, which can be fatal, and it's a serious disease. Polly Murray documented; CDC responded after seven years; Alan Steer; Willy Bergdorfer found the spirochete; 'Just take two weeks of dy doxycycline, and the problem will go away.' But it didn't, leading to a backstory of secrecy. 'Did you say that Lyme disease is highly likely a materially engineered bioweapon?' 'I probably did say that.'

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The speaker presents two examples to illustrate how human engineering might address large-scale global problems. First, they argue that reducing meat consumption would significantly benefit the planet, but acknowledge that people are not willing to give up meat. Some individuals might be willing to cut back, yet they struggle with a weakness of will. The speaker admits personal temptations, noting that the steak’s juiciness can be a barrier to reducing meat intake. Second, the speaker discusses a potential approach to overcoming such barriers by leveraging human engineering to create intolerance to certain kinds of meat, particularly bovine proteins. They relate this to everyday experiences with intolerances, such as milk intolerance, and mention that some people are intolerant to crayfish. The idea is that if people could be engineered to be intolerant to specific meats, it could curb consumption. To illustrate a natural analogue, they reference the long star tick, which causes people to become allergic to meat after a bite. The speaker indicates that the mechanism behind this allergy exists and suggests that a similar mechanism could be replicated or induced in humans through engineering. The overarching claim is that such engineered intolerances could be a tool to address significant global problems by shaping dietary behaviors. In sum, the speaker contends that human engineering might be used to generate selective meat intolerances, drawing on real-world allergies as a model, and posits that this could help tackle major world issues related to meat consumption and its environmental impact. The discussion emphasizes the potential of engineering-driven solutions to influence human behavior in ways that could benefit the planet, while acknowledging human resistance and personal temptations to consume meat.

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COVID-19 had telltale signs of being made in a laboratory from the beginning. The CIA has stated the virus came from a lab, but what they didn't say is that it was almost surely made in a US laboratory, possibly at the University of North Carolina, and may have been tested in a Chinese laboratory. The Biden administration hid this. One theory is that US scientists wanted to test the virus on a specific bat population in the Wuhan facility. The FBI should crack the case, as it is an inside US job. The University of North Carolina is withholding 2019 emails and fighting to keep them from public scrutiny. There is reason to believe that Tony Fauci funded reckless, dangerous research that went awry.

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The speaker discusses a failed attempt to investigate whether ticks were weaponized with Lyme disease or other dangerous pathogens. They mention books and articles claiming that research at Fort Detrick and Plum Island aimed to turn ticks into bioweapons. The speaker refers to Chris Newby's book, which includes interviews with Dr. Willie Burgdorfer, who discovered Lyme disease and was a bioweapons specialist. Another speaker recommends Chris Neeby's book and documentary, which suggest that Lyme disease was created as a biological weapon by the US government. They mention gain of function experiments, a bug weapons program, and project 112, which involved spraying tick-borne diseases. Dr. Burgdorfer worked at a biosafety lab run by the National Institutes of Health.

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Lyme disease cases are increasing, with an estimated half a million cases a year. The diseases emerged in the 1970s near a US biological weapons testing facility, suggesting a possible connection. This situation highlights the risks of manipulating nature and creating new germs, leading to unintended consequences.

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Cases of Lyme disease are increasing, with the CDC estimating half a million cases annually. The rise coincided with the peak of the US biological weapons program in the mid-seventies, leading to the emergence of Lyme arthritis, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, and Babesia. These diseases clustered near a government testing facility, suggesting a sinister origin. Nature cannot be controlled, and the implications are disturbing.

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Speaker 0 says: Today’s discussion covers the Lyme situation and claims about vaccines. The claim is that you were injected with gelatin as a child through vaccines, which made you allergic to ticks. Ticks are said to not cause disease, just to be aware. A PubMed article is cited about the association between tick bites, allergic reactions, and gelatin-containing vaccines causing the allergic reaction. Some people insist they didn’t get vaccines with gelatin, but Speaker 0 argues childhood vaccines actually contain it. Speaker 0 claims that the vaccine intended to save you is new, yet there was a past version that resulted in many lawsuits, implying a repeated pattern. The discussion then shifts to Lyme disease: if someone has Lyme, they allegedly had a PCR test that amplified the results to tell them they had an illness to sell a treatment and induce fear of ticks. Speaker 0 lists symptoms claimed to be Lyme disease: fevers, chills, headaches, fatigue, muscle aches, swollen lymph nodes, and facial palsy. These are described as side effects of vaccines as well. Even someone who says they didn’t take any vaccines is asked about exposure to wireless technology at home (microwaving), and pesticide exposure, which are claimed to cause the same symptoms. Speaker 0 references books on related topics: Peanut Allergy Epidemic, Contagion Myth, and The Poison Needle. The overarching claim is that “almost all illnesses result from vaccines, wireless, and pesticides.” Speaker 0 offers a supposed remedy: for any bug bite, use dragon’s blood and coconut oil, saying it heals ticks bites, wasps, spiders, bees quickly. The statement is presented as an example of why people were allergic to peanuts, tying vaccine use to broader allergy development. Speaker 0 concludes by reiterating the pattern: you get vaccinated, you become allergic to ticks; you get vaccinated, you become allergic to peanuts; the same mechanism is claimed to be at play.

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Speaker 0 discusses Lyme disease origins, asserting it came from lab 257 on Plum Island just outside of Connecticut, 25 miles from Lyme, Connecticut, where the first case was described. He says this with a high degree of probability and points to the book Bitten as a source. He claims that when Nazi war criminal doctors were executed in Nuremberg, at least one was spared and brought to the United States so his mind could be used by the US military for so-called biodefense, and that he was put on Plum Island. He states that this individual openly believed that an incredible form of biowarfare was infecting ticks, and that Lyme disease is what resulted. He then notes that Lyme disease shows up 25 miles away, and adds that this is not the only thing that showed up close by. He claims they found half rat, half deer carcasses in the Hamptons, in the last town Montauk, and that it washed up in Montauk in the nineties. He describes this as evidence of “a bunch of mad scientists” doing things, and asserts that all these people have Lyme disease. Regarding awareness, he asks how many physicians know that it came from lab 257, answering “Approximately one percent.” He comments that people are not honest with themselves, that just because you can do something doesn’t mean you should do it, and that sometimes we can cause more harm than we can good by messing with mother nature.

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A New Jersey representative wants the Pentagon to reveal if it experimented on weaponizing ticks, and if this caused the spread of Lyme disease in the US. Lyme disease infects over 300,000 Americans yearly via infected deer ticks, and can cause neurological damage if untreated. Congressman Chris Smith points to a 1950s secret army bioweapons program that weaponized ticks. Bioweapons specialists allegedly stuffed ticks with pathogens to cause severe disability, disease, and death. Army labs like Plum Island and Fort Detrick were reportedly capable of breeding millions of bugs monthly. Stanford's Chris Newby outlined the link in her book, "Bitten, The Secret History of Lyme Disease and Biological Weapons." She interviewed William Bergdorfer, who worked for the US military in the fifties growing microbes inside ticks, and who reportedly felt guilty about his work. Newby has been accused of creating a conspiracy theory by some scientists.

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A New Jersey congressman is requesting the Pentagon to disclose if it experimented on weaponizing ticks, and if this led to the spread of Lyme disease in the U.S. Lyme disease infects over 300,000 Americans annually and can cause neurological damage if untreated. Congressman Chris Smith points to a 1950s secret army bioweapons program that weaponized ticks with pathogens to cause disability, disease, and death. Army labs like Plum Island and Fort Detrick were allegedly capable of breeding millions of bugs monthly. Stanford's Chris Newby outlined the link in her book, "Bitten, the secret history of Lyme disease and biological weapons." She interviewed William Bergdorfer, who worked for the U.S. military in the fifties growing microbes inside ticks. Bergdorfer reportedly felt guilty and wanted the truth revealed before his death.

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The speaker finds government conspiracy theories interesting but angering, citing MK Ultra and Agent Orange as examples. Researching DARPA's history led to the realization that they were involved in "bad stuff," specifically during the Vietnam War with chemical companies like Dow Chemical and DuPont creating agents blue, purple, and orange. The speaker notes that more American soldiers got sick than killed in that conflict. The speaker dedicated the episode to their father-in-law, who suffered injuries from Agent Orange. The government denied responsibility for years but finally agreed to a settlement in 1981. The speaker's father-in-law applied for and eventually received his settlement forty years later.

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They present a history where science is cast as a weapon and subjects as expendable. In 1845 Alabama, J Marion Sims, called the father of gynecology, strapped down enslaved black women with no anesthesia or consent, performing 30 operations while his journals admit the practice. The US medical establishment funded his work and later enshrined him as a hero. In 1932 Tuskegee, the Public Health Service and the CDC lured 600 black men with free treatment; 400 already had syphilis. The cure penicillin was deliberately withheld; autopsies were mandatory, and broken families buried their fathers without knowing the government had murdered them for medical data. In the 1950s, Puerto Rico became a laboratory where poor, some illiterate, women were coerced into testing birth control pills by big pharma, suffering seizures and hemorrhages; some called it population control, the victims called it genocide. Decades later, those same players would push vaccines with catastrophic fertility side effects. History is a spiral. World War II ended, but the Pentagon began a war on its own soldiers. At Edgewood Arsenal, secret documents show over 60,000 troops exposed to sarin, VX, and LSD; a veteran wrote, they told us it was harmless. The truth was declassified after eighty percent of the victims were already dead. In September 1950, the US Navy operated aerosolized sprayers over San Francisco, releasing Ceratia marcescens bacteria into the fog, linked later to fatal pneumonia; a whistleblower’s report was buried until a 1976 Senate hearing forced admission. Operation Big Buzz 1955 released millions of weaponized mosquitoes in Florida, testing infection spread; internal memos bragged that subjects showed symptoms within seventy-two hours. No warning, no cure. The Pentagon also turned soldiers into lab rats. Operation White Coat infected thousands with biological agents; a veteran testified, they told us it was harmless. It was classified as national security with no compensation or justice. Even vaccines became weapons; millions of Americans were injected with s v forty, a monkey virus linked to cancer. The CDC buried the truth for forty years; how many died remains in redacted reports. In 1977, planes sprayed mock bioweapons on civilian cities from New York to Saint Louis to study how quickly a lethal pathogen could spread when aerosolized. The victims were unconsenting civilians. Before MK Ultra, Plum Island, there were the Tuskegee syphilis experiments and the deliberate infection of hundreds of black men, the lie of free treatment, withheld medicine while the CDC watched. Sea Spray 1950 tested turning an American city into a test lab; Vanderbilt pregnant women drank vitamin cocktails laced with radioactive iron, and their babies were stillborn or deformed; files sealed for fifty years. The Fernald School experiments fed orphans radioactive milk, smiles for cameras, later claimed there were no long-term consequences. MK Ultra involved LSD, electroshock at unsafe voltages, sensory deprivation, aiming at total mind fragmentation; data were laundered through Princeton and Harvard. Plum Island fueled Lyme’s mutations; Fort Detrick and the 1960s spirochete research connected to weaponized ticks; the Pentagon’s patents point to the truth. Victims of chronic Lyme are labeled hysterical. Gulf War syndrome and Morgellons follow the same playbook: silence the sick, discredit the dying, deny everything. Then vaccines—untested, unnecessary, unleashed with legal immunity, with VAERS rising and the CDC scrubbing data. Doctors who spoke out were suspended or erased. The narrative extends to digital IDs, CBDCs, depopulation, food shortages, and a spanning claim that agencies once poisoned cities and murdered victims now demand total compliance. The Wuhan lab leak theory is a distraction, the text asserts, because Fort Detrick and NIH funded decades of gain-of-function research; Fauci’s emails, EcoHealth Alliance grants, and the 2011 bat coronavirus patent are cited as evidence. Now the claim is an ongoing program of transmissible vaccines, self-replicating mRNA, and mosquito drones, branded as biodefense but described as an extermination agenda, with witnesses disappearing and no statute of limitations on crimes against humanity.
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