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    1. Business_Garden6460 on

      Bill gates has major investments in plant based meat companies. It would really work out for him if a lot of people weren’t able to eat regular meat. You put the pieces together from there

    2. Other-Squirrel-2038 on

      My dog is on monthly flea and tick prevention 

      How do we get some lol 

      I wonder what would happen if I took the pill 🤣

    3. Gonzos_journal on

      Thank you i got smeared earlier in respect to this.

      https://www.dailymail.com/sciencetech/article-15385603/US-military-investigation-ticks-Lyme-disease-bioweapon.html

      Radioactive Lone Star Ticks in Virginia (1960s): According to published studies, U.S. tick experts conducted uncontrolled release experiments using hundreds of thousands of Lone Star ticks tagged with radioactive materials (including Carbon-14).
      Site 1: A farm 1.5 miles south of Monticello, Virginia, in an area surrounded by red cedars.
      Site 2: Newport City Park, Virginia (now Newport News), near the viaduct reservoir area.

      https://documents.un.org/doc/undoc/gen/g22/265/32/pdf/g2226532.pdf

      CIA-funded operation where infected ticks were dropped from an airplane on
      Cuban sugarcane workers in 1962. [5] To optimize pathogen-in-tick combinations for
      different climates and military objectives, bioweapons researchers force-fed ticks
      through glass capillary tubes with agents like Q fever (Coxiella burnetii), tularemia
      (Bacterium tularense), Weil’s disease (Leptospira icterohaemorrhagiae), Western
      equine encephalitis virus, epidemic typhus (Rickettsia prowazekii), Asiatic Relapsing
      Fever (Borrelia latychevi), Leptospira pomona, and the rabies virus. [6] [Fig. 1]
      • An army-funded university researcher who worked as a contractor to the United States
      of America entomological warfare program released hundreds of thousands of
      radioactive ticks in Montana and on the Atlantic Bird Flyway from 1966 to 1969,
      potentially spreading non-native ticks and unnatural diseases along from the coast of
      Canada to South America via migratory birds. [7]
      • The discoverer of the Lyme disease bacterium, Swiss-American scientist Willy
      Burgdorfer, admitted that he worked in the United States of America biological
      weapons program and that he believed the original 1968 disease outbreak of three
      novel tick-borne diseases (Lyme, babesiosis, and spotted fever) around Lyme,
      Connecticut, was started by a bioweapons-related accident. He was asked to suppress
      his evidence. [8] These disease-carrying ticks are moving into Canada as winters
      become milder. Researchers have found that between 2000 and 2015, Lyme risk
      doubled in the province of Quebec and tripled in Manitoba. [9]
      • There are unconfirmed accounts of the United States of America’s entomological
      weapons use during the Korean War and the Viet Nam War, but historians and
      journalists have been unable to verify these due to the iron-grip secrecy that the United
      States of America maintains on related records. [10] [Fig. 2]
      • There are unconfirmed reports that the United States of America’s entomological
      warfare program set up an active mosquito testing program in subarctic Canada in
      1949 and that they released three million radioactive mosquitoes in in 1950. There
      were also aerosol tests of tick-borne tularemia. This testing coincided with a
      mysterious epidemic that struck several Eskimo villages, killing 20% of those
      afflicted. [11]
      • In 1947, Hitler’s top biological weapons expert, Dr. Kurt Blome, began consulting for
      the CIA’s Special Operations Division in Camp Detrick, working in a lab at Camp
      2
      A/HRC/49/NGO/206
      King near Frankfurt. He shared information on weaponizing flea-borne plague,
      rinderpest, and foot-and-mouth pathogens, but details are still classified. [12] In 1956,
      an East German news bureau reported that American planes dropped “large amounts
      of potato bugs” near Zwickau. The Czech government alleges that it ruined their
      potato harvest.

    4. serialphile on

      I’ve thought this same thing for a while. About 5 or so years ago I watched a presentation about the state of the food manufacturing industry and it projected by 2030 that we wouldn’t have enough meat to keep up with the demand of the population.

    5. Ticks were a favorite vector in lab 257.

      These days they could spread an alpha gal syndrome allergy without ticks though.

      Professors discuss intentionally spreading tick-borne meat allergy as a ‚thought experiment‘ – SnackSafely.com https://share.google/MN8GTPEgC3JHZYiNB

      Link to the paper itself
      Beneficial Bloodsucking – PubMed https://share.google/MdOg8RHgiYkq7S7Bh

      There is adjuvant effects in the tick saliva alongside alpha gal that cause iGe responses. Mimic the saliva composition and they could skip the ticks entirely.

    6. CommercialMoment5987 on

      I’ve been noticing posts from people in my area saying they’re seeing a usually high volume of ticks this year. Unusually early in the year as well. I’ve been fearing exactly this, and Lyme disease.

    7. During Operation Paperclip after WWII we brought the head of Germany’s germ warfare program to work for us. His big thing was spreading infected ticks to decimate the enemy’s livestock and food supply. Plum Island.

    8. RudeNewYorker on

      I’m excited to watch Donald Trump tell everyone to start wearing MAGA flea and tick dog collars, only available for $49.99 from his website. Only a matter of time before getting Americans from figuratively heeling to a literal heel.

    9. Aggravating_Act0417 on

      Yup Lyme Disease from plum island military high security animal disease lab

    10. Out of all the countries in the world (surpassed by maybe Brazil) The US has the least incentive to make people allergic to cows. If anything, they would be looking for a cure.

    11. A couple years ago, my wife and I went and checked out Roseanne and Tom Arnold’s abandoned mansion near Ottumwa, Iowa. I had been bitten by 3 of these lonestar ticks but I never got alpha gal which is great cause I make ice cream for a living.

    12. OldGrimMechanic on

      I had a neighbor that died from a tick bite. That Lyme Disease was a slow death for her, it pretty much took over her nerves, cause slur her speech,she lost all motor skills with arms and legs, then that disease started destroying her organs.It was a slow painful death….

    13. Megamijuana on

      They admitted to working on this and now released it to everyone’s peril unlawfully. Needs to be huge lawsuits, shut down of this program/funding and apology.

    14. Peppery_Pete100 on

      There’s literally a guy at the WEF who talks about making people allergic to dairy and meat through tick bites as a way to tackle ‘global warming.’

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