Ebola hoax: the numbers game
By Jon Rappoport October 15, 2014 www.nomorefakenews.com
There are several ways to create and
manage a fake epidemic.
For example, the agency in charge
invents case numbers and death numbers---and then, after they introduce the
vaccine or the drug, they change those numbers. They lower them. The cut them
down. And they say, "We won. We beat the virus with the vaccine."
This certainly happened in the
"Swine Flu crisis" of 2009. The CDC and WHO blew up the case numbers
to absurd heights...and then shut the whole operation down by saying the
numbers had dropped to negligible levels.
And they declared victory.
The CDC, the World Health
Organization, the US Department of Homeland Security, the US National Institutes
of Health, the DOD, and the suppliers and manufacturers of an Ebola
vaccine...they're all thinking the same thing:
"How do we manage the numbers,
so we can produce the greatest degree of fear and compliance, and then claim
victory?"
Up with numbers, then down with the
numbers.
Here's a situation where things
didn't work out so well for the managers. They stumbled badly and exposed
themselves:
"... the swine-flu vaccination
program was one of its (CDC) greatest blunders. It all began in 1976 when CDC
scientists saw that a virus involved in a flu attack outbreak at Fort Dix,
N.J., was similar to the swine-flu virus that killed 500,000 Americans in 1918.
Health officials immediately launched a 100-million dollar program to immunize
every American. But the expected epidemic never materialized, and the vaccine
led to partial paralysis in 532 people. There were 32 deaths." U.S. News
and World Report, Joseph Carey, October 14, 1985, p. 70, "How Medical
Sleuths Track Killer Diseases."
Here's a situation where it did work
out well for the medical crime bosses, because they covered their tracks and
hid, from the general public, the effects of a vaccine:
"Suffice it to say that most of
the large (polio) epidemics that have occurred in this country since the
introduction of the Salk vaccine have followed the wide-scale use of the
vaccine and have been characterized by an uncommon early seasonal onset. To
name a few, there is the Massachusetts epidemic of 1955; the Chicago epidemic
of 1956; and the Des Moines epidemic of 1959." Dr. Herbert Ratner, Child
and Family, 1980 vol. 19, no. 4.
In 1987, I had several illuminating
conversations with Dr. Herbert Ratner, who had been a public health officer in
Oak Park, Illinois, when the polio vaccine was first introduced in the 1950s.
Ratner told me how the polio numbers were manipulated.
Before the introduction of the
vaccine, the Infantile Paralysis Foundation was paying doctors all over the US
$25 for each diagnosis of polio. That stipend served to expand case numbers.
A patient with a limp and a fever
who walked into a doctor's office...polio. And 25 bucks for the doctor. (In
today's money, $222.71.)
About half of all cases of
polio-paralysis cured themselves within 60 days. So after the polio vaccine was
introduced, the definition of polio was changed: suddenly, to rate a polio
diagnosis, the paralysis had to last longer than 60 days. This change
automatically caused a drastic drop in case numbers---and that reduction was
attributed to the effect of the vaccine.
Manipulation.
If you control the information about
case numbers, if you can inflate them and deflate them, you can control
perception of a crisis. You can invent and un-invent the crisis.
But wait. What about real numbers of
people who have Ebola, who are dying from Ebola?
The real numbers? First of all, in
every so-called epidemic, most cases are diagnosed by "eyeball." The
patient has a few general symptoms that are flu-like, he's been in a certain
country...bang. He's a case number.
And the most widely used lab tests
for diagnosis, which I've analyzed in detail in previous articles, are useless
and irrelevant.
Briefly, the antibody test, when
positive, and when it isn't registering positive because it's reacting to some
irrelevant factor, is simply stating that the patient has contacted the virus
in question. It says nothing about whether he is sick or will get sick. In
fact, before 1985, a positive antibody test was generally taken as a good sign,
a sign that the patient's immune system had defeated the germ.
The PCR test is admittedly
insufficient to say there is enough of a particular germ in the body to cause
illness. And that's on a good day. On a bad day, the sample of genetic material
taken from the patient isn't even viral in nature. It's random debris. And
during the sensitive process of doing all the steps of the PCR, the techs make
mistakes, or tiny flecks of contamination in the lab get into the test and
produce a false result.
No, the modern way to manage a
so-called epidemic is by the numbers: as in inventing them.
One of the most egregious examples
of the game was exposed in October of 2009, by Sharyl Attkisson, who was
working at CBS News. She revealed that, with tens of thousands of purported
Swine Flu cases in the US, the CDC stopped counting cases altogether.
The hidden reason? The overwhelming
number of blood samples from the most likely Swine Flu patients, sent to labs
for testing, were coming back negative for the Swine Flu virus, or any flu
virus.
Three weeks after Attkisson's
revelation, the CDC chiefs doubled down. They estimated there were 22 MILLION
cases of Swine Flu in the US.
Case closed.
Source: Jon Rappoport
The author of three explosive
collections, THE MATRIX REVEALED, EXIT FROM THE
MATRIX, and POWER OUTSIDE THE
MATRIX, Jon was a candidate for a US
Congressional seat in the 29th District of California. He maintains a
consulting practice for private clients, the purpose of which is the expansion
of personal creative power. Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, he has worked as an
investigative reporter for 30 years, writing articles on politics, medicine,
and health for CBS Healthwatch, LA Weekly, Spin Magazine, Stern, and other
newspapers and magazines in the US and Europe. Jon has delivered lectures and seminars
on global politics, health, logic, and creative power to audiences around the
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1 comment:
I remember how, well into the 1970s, any time a high fever produced muscle spasms the older people would think that flu or measles or something had "gone into polio." My mother's reputation as a nurse got a boost from her being able to relieve a kid's fever-spastic arm by bathing it!
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