Call me a conspiracy theorist if you want, I have been called worse, especially since so many "conspiracy theories" have been proven true, but I read a couple of pieces recently about how ticks, namely 'lone star ticks,' are creating meat allergies, which according to the CDC is an "emerging public health concern," and it got me thinking about coincidences.
Like the coincidence of a new "emerging public health concern," right at a time when we see global warming proponents insisting we stop eating meat. Coincidentally, those telling us to stop eating meat are also the ones pushing us to eat bugs.
Alpha-gal syndrome, or AGS, is a serious and potentially life-threatening allergic reaction that comes after people eat red meat or consume products that have alpha-gal, a type of sugar found in most mammals, according to the CDC.
As for the AGS meat allergy, it can manifest as anaphylaxis—or a life-threatening allergic reaction characterized by a sudden constriction of airways and a drop in blood pressure, according to the National Institutes of Health. Researchers say that unlike allergic reactions to other foods, which are generally immediate, AGS reactions can occur three to six hours after eating red meat.
AGS symptoms can include a rash, hives, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, shortness of breath, stomach pain, and heartburn. Symptoms can be mild to severe, officials have said.
The global warming crowd, now known as climate change crowd because the previous name didn't catch on, seem obsessed about getting Americans to stop eating meat, so is there any chance whatsoever that their scientists would weaponize insects and/or arachnids, which many consider ticks to be?
That is when I got the searches engines cranking, along with some helpful links Stefan Stanford sent me, and the results truly gave me the creepy-crawlies.
HISTORY OF BUGS BEING WEAPONIZED FOR WAR....
Before we had the technological advances in modern day science, bugs/insects have been used by military strategists. According to History.com, beehive catapults, scorpion bombs, bug pit prisons and more, had been used throughout history.
• Delivering disease via insect vectors has been wickedly effective. During WWII, Japanese biological warfare units dropped plague-infected fleas and cholera-coated flies on Chinese cities—killing some 440,000 people. The Japanese military also developed plans to spread plague-carrying fleas over San Diego in 1945, but never followed through.
• As Severus’s men reached the walls of Hatra, scorpion bombs rained down, inflicting agonizing punishment on the Romans wherever they had exposed skin—legs, arms and, worst of all, their faces and eyes. With arachnids deployed among the Hatreni defenses, Severus was held at bay for 20 days, until his troops finally broke off the battle and retreated.
• European history is replete with accounts of beehives and wasp nests being used as warheads—including on the high seas as a highly effective way to clear the decks of an enemy ship. The technological high point in hive-heaving machinery emerged in the 14th century with the development of the entomological predecessor of the Gatling gun—a windmill-like device that propelled straw hives from the ends of the rapidly rotating arms.
Read the rest of the history of "bugs of war," before moving along to what has already been created via insects and bugs, by scientists, researchers and the U.S. military.
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The Insect Allies program was announced by DARPA in 2016. It is a research project that aims to protect the U.S. agricultural food supply by delivering protective genes to plants via insects, which are responsible for the transmission of most plant viruses. Scientists believe loading the bugs up with viruses that would offer plants protective benefits could be one way of ensuring food security in the event of a major threat.
In an editorial published in the journal Science, a group of researchers led by Richard Guy Reeves, from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology in Germany, says Insect Allies isn't exactly what it says it is. Instead, they claim DARPA is potentially developing insects as a means of delivering a "new class of biological weapon."
Scientists and legal scholars question the rationale for the use of insects to disperse infectious genetically engineered (GE) viruses engineered to edit the chromosomes in plants, warning that the technology could very easily be weaponized.
Bingo!
Does anyone doubt that a bug or insect that can be genetically modified to "deliver" protective genes to plants and crops, can also be modified to deliver any type of virus, plague, or disease to people?
The House of Representatives this week passed an amendment offered by New Jersey Congressman Chris Smith, directing the federal government’s “watchdog” agency to investigate the Department of Defense’s (DOD) possible weaponization of ticks and other insects with Lyme disease during its consideration of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2022 (H.R. 4350).
“In the spirit of transparency and accountability, my amendment directs the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to probe whether the Department of Defense ever weaponized ticks with Lyme disease or any other dangerous pathogen,” said Rep. Smith, the founding co-chair of the House Lyme Disease Caucus.
Entomological warfare (EW) is a type of biological warfare that uses insects to interrupt supply lines by damaging crops, or to directly harm enemy combatants and civilian populations. There have been several programs which have attempted to institute this methodology; however, there has been limited application of entomological warfare against military or civilian targets, Japan being the only state known to have verifiably implemented the method against another state, namely the Chinese during World War II. However, EW was used more widely in antiquity, in order to repel sieges or cause economic harm to states. Research into EW was conducted during both World War II and the Cold War by numerous states such as the Soviet Union, United States, Germany and Canada. There have also been suggestions that it could be implemented by non-state actors in a form of bioterrorism. Under the Biological and Toxic Weapons Convention of 1972, use of insects to administer agents or toxins for hostile purposes is deemed to be against international law.
With all the information available online regarding the weaponization of bugs, whether drones that look like bugs or insects, or genetically modifying bugs to deliver viruses to plants, which could just as easily be delivered to human beings, is it too much of a stretch to be suspicious of a new "emerging public health concern," regarding the use of ticks to cause an allergy to meat?
Especially when we keep hearing from the obsessed climate change crowd about how we need to stop eating meat?
I don't like coincidences and fully admit they make me suspicious.
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