Re: Intentional Contagion - Ignorance
I don't think genetic alterations will be needed, all that would be necessary is nothing more than selective breeding to isolate the most prolific breeding and resistant to treatment strains of particularly mean and nasty species of little monsters. If an adversarial foreign power really wanted to cause the USA some serious problems and incite public panic, it doesn't take much medical expertise to understand just how vulnerable, untrained and woefully unprepared our medical system is in a position to be able to mobilize against a widespread
parasite pandemic. The amount of imported foodstuffs entering our ports, especially from Asia via the Port of Los Angeles is huge, and our customs and FDA inspectors are so understaffed, undertrained , under equipped, and overwhelmed by the sheer volume that effectively the percentage of imported foodstuffs getting adequately inspected is only in the single digit percentages. 90% of it cruises right in ands up on store shelves and restaurant kitchens with nobody really knowing if microscopic eggs or encysted larvae are contaminating it. I caught Fasciolopsis Buski myself from a meal eaten at an Asian restaurant in L.A. which launched my own
parasite adventure. Way back in the beginning, I naively thought I'd just caught that one
parasite only, and it was a stubborn, resistant one that ultimately I had to take enough Praziquantel to kill a horse to beat it..,,, and you were abso-freakin-lutely correct about it being just the tip of the iceberg. Turned out that I had at least 5 to 7 different kinds of parasitic creatures living inside me that we completely, and well hidden from obvious sight. It was the F.Buski, being such an obnoxious trematode that suddenly appeared on the scene in a huge boisterous way, that disrupted the status quo, and whatever pecking order all the other critters had worked out amongst themselves to hide in plain sight and abuse my body and health in a way that wasn't so readily noticeable until the big Asian invader came along and wreaked havoc, causing all the other species to now demand their center stage headlining act too. some of them must've been simmering in the background for a very long time too..... years. A couple of species were easy to identify and eradicate quickly (Fasciola Hepatica responded to triclabendazole instantly and I expelled about half a dozen of those, followed by some liver pain and issues that resolved in 6-8 weeks. Schistosomiasis Haemtobia showed up while treating the stubborn F. Buski and adding high dose D3 and other vitamins nuked that. That seemed to be the end of the trematodes. I've seen no evidence or any conventional cestodes such as taenia species but did have something intestinal that I never positively identified but think was some wierd marine zoonotic diphyllobothrium that came from seafood likely sushi. Then the really wierd sh*t started showing up including the Mansonella Ozzardi (90% certainly identified by shape of its heads and faces, and filarial nature and the freakin' "dragons" in my intestines that the Mansonella appear to be using as some kind of alternative intermediate host to compete full reproductive cycles inside me. Ive come to the conclusion that these "dragon" creatures are not helminths at all, but rather some unidentifiable species of huge, macroscopic collembola, a non-insect arthropod, and it's proving to be one hell of a bitch to kill. Ivermectin combined with oregano oil, papaya enzymes, high dose vitamin C, and Myrrh Gum capsules seem to be kinda controlling it.
Seems that much of the medical literature that describes the lifecycles and treatment protocols for most of even the common and easy to identify
parasites is all now of questionable accuracy. It's all 40+ years out of date and it's now incomplete and wrong. These creatures evolve, adapt, and overcome.... and do it faster that even the experts understand. The CDC themselves even released a paper that describes what they call "adaptive phenotypic plasticity" in how these
parasites can rapidly and unexpectedly change, while at the same time argues with the Oklahoma State Department of Health, swearing up and down that Mansonella Ozzardi is only vectored by biting flies and midges and doesn't exist north of Mexico's southernmost border while OK's researchers have gathered up a ton of mosquitoes around the Oklahoma City metro area that are actively carrying M. Ozzardi and presented them to the CDC who plugs their fingers into their ears and says "La La La La, I can't hear you"