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January 23, 2015
Is The US Measles Outbreak A Planned Bio Attack?
By Susan Duclos
The headline is phrased as a question because that is exactly what it is, a question. Not a theory, not an assertion, but with the recent push for vaccinations and stories around the web on authorities targeting families that refuse to have their children vaccinated after controversial news came out about the dangers of some vaccinations, someone should at least ask if the Measles outbreak the US is suffering right now, that is reportedly expanding, was planned and has been deliberately used as a bioweapon.
Via the CDC we see "From January 1 to January 16, 2015, more than 50 people from six states were reported to have measles. Most of these cases are part of a large, ongoing outbreak linked to an amusement park in California." That number has now reached at least 75 according to the report linked above.
According to SIU School of Medicine, a "a biological weapon to be highly effective, three conditions should be optimized. The biological agent should consistently produce the desired effect of death or disease. It should be highly contagious with short and predictable incubation period and infective in low doses."
The CDC writes the following about "Transmission" of Measles: "Measles is transmitted primarily from person to person by large respiratory droplets but can also spread by the airborne route as aerosolized droplet nuclei. Infected people are usually contagious from 4 days before until 4 days after rash onset. Measles is one of the most contagious viral diseases known; secondary attack rates are >90% in susceptible household and institutional contacts."
Multiple sites, including The Spinger Link Security Threat Assessment , Wiki and WW3SurvivalGuide.com, we see that under the header of "Common epidemiologic clues that may signal biological attack," the following is listed "Illness that is unusual (or atypical) for a given population or age group such as an outbreak of measles-like rash in adults."