For some reason, the federal government's principle public health agency
keeps trying to turn the Zika virus into something it isn't: a major
health crisis. At the same time, it wants to poison us with a chemical that is far worse than the disease it is meant to eradicate.
Based on little more than anecdotal evidence, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would have us believe
that the Zika virus, which medical scientists have been aware of for
decades, causes a rare paralytic condition known as Guillain-Barre
Syndrome.
"Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS) is an uncommon sickness
of the nervous system in which a person's own immune system damages the
nerve cells, causing muscle weakness, and sometimes, paralysis," the
agency says on its website.
"Several countries that have
experienced Zika outbreaks recently have reported increases in people
who have Guillain-Barre syndrome," the agency said, adding that its own
research "suggests" that Zika could lead to an increase in GBS, even
though only "a small portion" of people stricken with the virus actually wind up with the syndrome.
For some reason, the federal government's principle public health agency
keeps trying to turn the Zika virus into something it isn't: a major
health crisis. At the same time, it wants to poison us with a chemical that is far worse than the disease it is meant to eradicate.
More likely, however, is that the instances of paralysis are being caused by the chemical-laced pesticides being sprayed to eradicate Zika-carrying mosquitoes.
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