Difference between revisions of "Ebola"
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|type=virus, disease | |type=virus, disease | ||
|image=Businessweek ebola.png | |image=Businessweek ebola.png | ||
+ | |constitutes=tropical disease | ||
|image_caption=The situation had several similarities with [[Covid-19]] a few years later, not least the intense and misleading press coverage | |image_caption=The situation had several similarities with [[Covid-19]] a few years later, not least the intense and misleading press coverage | ||
+ | |description=The lurid exaggerations in the media presentation of Ebola have many similarities to Covid-19 | ||
|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ebola_virus_disease | |wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ebola_virus_disease | ||
|wikiquote=http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Ebola | |wikiquote=http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Ebola | ||
+ | |campfire=https://www.campfire.wiki/doku.php?id=ebola | ||
}} | }} | ||
− | '''Ebola''' is a naturally occurring, | + | '''Ebola''' is a naturally occurring, viral hemorrhagic fever, with similarities to a number of other diseases; outbreaks typically occur in tropical regions of [[Sub-Saharan Africa]]. During the 2010s, several Ebola outbreaks received huge attention, especially from many of the actors who [[COVID-19/Perpetrators|later would play a role]] in [[Covid-19]]. |
The fight against Ebola soon turned into a Western-led [[militarized]] response reinforced by a "media-generated panic",<ref>Jacob Levich; <i>The Gates Foundation, Ebola, and Global Health Imperialism</i> https://www.academia.edu/16242454/The_Gates_Foundation_Ebola_and_Global_Health_Imperialism Many of the examples in Wikispooks are sourced from his article, which is definitely worth reading in full</ref> in what might be described as a dress rehearsal for the grand-scale [[Covid-19/lockdown|2020 lockdowns and repeal of civil liberties]]. | The fight against Ebola soon turned into a Western-led [[militarized]] response reinforced by a "media-generated panic",<ref>Jacob Levich; <i>The Gates Foundation, Ebola, and Global Health Imperialism</i> https://www.academia.edu/16242454/The_Gates_Foundation_Ebola_and_Global_Health_Imperialism Many of the examples in Wikispooks are sourced from his article, which is definitely worth reading in full</ref> in what might be described as a dress rehearsal for the grand-scale [[Covid-19/lockdown|2020 lockdowns and repeal of civil liberties]]. | ||
− | == | + | ==Official narrative== |
− | + | Ebola was first identified in 26 August [[1976]]. It had major outbreaks in 1976, 1995 and 2007. Between 1976 and 2013 it killed a total of 1,716 people.<ref>http://biasedbbc.org/blog/2014/10/14/ebola-gay/</ref> The 2014 outbreak is estimated at 11,310 deaths<ref>http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/news-perspective/2018/12/us-health-worker-monitored-drc-ebola-nears-600-cases</ref>. After 9 months, the [[2018]] [[Congo|East Congo]] death toll surpassed 1000<ref>https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/world-digest-may-3-2019/2019/05/03/3aae762c-6db2-11e9-8f44-e8d8bb1df986_story.html</ref>. | |
In [[2014]], when U.S. armed forces, to the accompaniment of [[corporate media|media]] fanfare in the face of an alleged global menace, proceeded to erect a number of Ebola Treatment Units (ETUs — essentially, large tents containing rows of cheap plastic mattresses) all across West Africa, these emergency facilities were to stand empty. As of April [[2015]], only 28 Ebola patients had been treated at the 11 ETUs built by the U.S. military; nine centers never received a single Ebola patient<ref><http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/12/world/africa/idle-ebola-clinics-in-liberia-are-seenas-misstep-in-us-relief-effort.html</ref>. | In [[2014]], when U.S. armed forces, to the accompaniment of [[corporate media|media]] fanfare in the face of an alleged global menace, proceeded to erect a number of Ebola Treatment Units (ETUs — essentially, large tents containing rows of cheap plastic mattresses) all across West Africa, these emergency facilities were to stand empty. As of April [[2015]], only 28 Ebola patients had been treated at the 11 ETUs built by the U.S. military; nine centers never received a single Ebola patient<ref><http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/12/world/africa/idle-ebola-clinics-in-liberia-are-seenas-misstep-in-us-relief-effort.html</ref>. | ||
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==Pathology and Potential Diagnosis Errors== | ==Pathology and Potential Diagnosis Errors== | ||
− | + | According to the {{ON}}, infection occurs from direct contact—through broken skin or mucous membranes — with the bodily fluids of infected people; it does not appear to spread through vectors (like [[bubonic plague]]) or coughs and sneezes (like [[influenza]] or [[SARS]]). Early findings that the virus kills 90 percent of its victims proved exaggerated; in [[2014]] the [[WHO]] reported an average 50 percent death rate<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20141214011751/https://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs103/en/</ref>, while one expert projects a survival rate as high as 90 percent with adequate treatment<ref><http://www.lrb.co.uk/v36/n20/paul-farmer/diary></ref>. | |
− | But since the symptoms of Ebola are very broad (vomiting, bleeding, diarrohea, fatigue, weakness, lack of appetite), and these very same symptoms could be caused by a multitude of different causes, the | + | But since the symptoms of Ebola are very broad (vomiting, bleeding, diarrohea, fatigue, weakness, lack of appetite), and these very same symptoms could be caused by a multitude of different causes, the likelihood of "misdiagnosis" exists. |
− | The | + | The "hot zone" areas of Ebola, [[Sierra Leone]], [[Guinea]], and [[Liberia]], have been decimated for a long time: [[war]], [[extreme poverty]], [[malnutrition]], starvation, contaminated water supplies, exposure to toxic industrial chemicals, vast toxic overuse of [[antibiotics]], [[pesticides]] (some of them banned in other countries), expired and unrefrigerated medicines, [[vaccines]] (which, when given to people whose immune systems are already hanging on by a thread, can be lethal)<ref name=john>https://web.archive.org/web/20160606103004/https://jonrappoport.wordpress.com/2014/08/05/ebola-the-us-diagnostic-test-is-utterly-ureliable/</ref>. A 2014 [[Unicef]] paper pointed out, "the symptoms of Ebola are not specific. Fever, weakness, and headaches could be anything from the flu to malaria". There is no easy way to make a laboratory diagnosis of Ebola.<ref name=john/> |
− | + | ===Plane crash=== | |
+ | In 2002 a British veterinarian, Dr. [[Annelisa M. Kilbourn]], died in a [[plane crash]] which all three other passengers survived without serious injury. At the time of her death she had been working on establishing whether [[Gorillas]] in [[Gabon]] died of Ebola and could spread to humans. She was collaborating then with [[William Karesh]] who went on to become a leading figure at [[EcoHealth Alliance]]. [[Mark Kulacz]] pointed out: "The [[zoonotic]] story of Ebola rests heavily on the dead apes that Annelisa Kilbourn found. Sometimes I wonder if she started questioning if the apes really were dying of Ebola, or if maybe some evidence was planted? That would be a really dangerous thing to talk about. If one were a [[conspiracy theorist]] that would explain why she might have been assassinated for that in [[2002]]."<ref>https://rumble.com/v41syuz-abcellera-amy-jenkins-andrew-huff-darpa-mascola-nabel-modex-sina-bavari-vic.html?start=1703</ref> | ||
==Misleading PCR Diagnosis Tool later used for Covid== | ==Misleading PCR Diagnosis Tool later used for Covid== | ||
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==Falsely Monstrous Reputation== | ==Falsely Monstrous Reputation== | ||
− | [[Image:Hot zone.jpg|thumbnail|250px|left|One epidemiologist has called <i>The Hot Zone</i>’s lurid exaggerations | + | [[Image:Hot zone.jpg|thumbnail|250px|left|One epidemiologist has called <i>The Hot Zone</i>’s lurid exaggerations "one of the banes of my existence" and "infuriating to so many of us in [[epidemiology]] and infectious disease"<ref>Susan Perry http://www. |
− | minnpost.com/second-opinion/2014/10/hot-zone-helps-fan-myths-andfears-about-ebola-epidemiologist-says</ref>]]Ebola’s uniquely monstrous reputation in the West dates from the appearance of [[Richard Preston]]’s 1992 New Yorker article, | + | minnpost.com/second-opinion/2014/10/hot-zone-helps-fan-myths-andfears-about-ebola-epidemiologist-says</ref>]]Ebola’s uniquely monstrous reputation in the West dates from the appearance of [[Richard Preston]]’s 1992 New Yorker article, "Crisis in the HotZone," and subsequent 3.5-million-copy lurid bestseller <i>The Hot Zone: A Terrifying True Story</i> (1994). Preston’s book creates suspense by suggesting, falsely, that the virus is liable to become airborne at any moment, and dramatically distorts the symptoms of the disease—for example, patients are described as "bleeding out" from every orifice and "weeping tears of blood" while their internal organs "liquefy." A [[1995]] [[Hollywood]] movie,<i>Outbreak</i>, further consolidated the Ebola myth. |
==2014 Outbreak== | ==2014 Outbreak== | ||
− | The most publicized outbreak was detected in March [[2014]]. An [[Ebola]] outbreak began due to natural causes in [[Guinea]] in December 2013 but was not detected until March 2014,<ref>http://www.dddmag.com/news/2014/07/ebola-crisis-triggers-health-emergency</ref> after which it spread to [[Liberia]], [[Sierra Leone]], and [[Nigeria]]. | + | The most publicized outbreak was detected in March [[2014]]. An [[Ebola]] outbreak began, possibly due to natural causes,<ref>https://www.independentsciencenews.org/health/did-west-africas-ebola-outbreak-of-2014-have-a-lab-origin/</ref> in [[Guinea]] in December 2013 but was not detected until March 2014,<ref>http://www.dddmag.com/news/2014/07/ebola-crisis-triggers-health-emergency</ref> after which it spread to [[Liberia]], [[Sierra Leone]], and [[Nigeria]]. |
Predictions of an uncontrollable global epidemic were common, sometimes reaching apocalyptic proportions<ref>https://www.thedailybeast.com/ebola-experts-warn-of-an-african-apocalypse</ref>. By October 2014, two-thirds of US-Americans said they were worried about a widespread Ebola [[epidemic]] in the [[United States]]<ref>www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/ebola-poll-two-thirds-of-americans-worried-about-possible-widespread-epidemic-in-us/2014/10/13/d0afd0ee-52ff-11e4-809b-8cc0a295c773_story.html</ref>. By April 2015, approximately 10,000 deaths had been recorded, mostly in West Africa. The number is more than previous epidemics, but still an insignificant number (and given Ebola's similarity to malaria and the way PCR-tests later were used to inflate the number of Covid-cases, the numbers might conceivably have been fudged{{cn}}). | Predictions of an uncontrollable global epidemic were common, sometimes reaching apocalyptic proportions<ref>https://www.thedailybeast.com/ebola-experts-warn-of-an-african-apocalypse</ref>. By October 2014, two-thirds of US-Americans said they were worried about a widespread Ebola [[epidemic]] in the [[United States]]<ref>www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/ebola-poll-two-thirds-of-americans-worried-about-possible-widespread-epidemic-in-us/2014/10/13/d0afd0ee-52ff-11e4-809b-8cc0a295c773_story.html</ref>. By April 2015, approximately 10,000 deaths had been recorded, mostly in West Africa. The number is more than previous epidemics, but still an insignificant number (and given Ebola's similarity to malaria and the way PCR-tests later were used to inflate the number of Covid-cases, the numbers might conceivably have been fudged{{cn}}). | ||
− | [[image:Ebolaisrealsm.jpg|thumbnail|250px|right| | + | [[image:Ebolaisrealsm.jpg|thumbnail|250px|right|A street poster reinforcing the message]]The locals in [[West Africa]] were skeptical of certain aspects of the declared epidemic (misdiagnosis, the severity of the situation, biological research etc.), necessitating a massive propaganda campaign by [[Unicef]] and Western NGOs<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20150328223454/http://truthstreammedia.com/why-the-massive-ebola-is-real-propaganda-campaign/</ref>. Posters with <i>"Ebola is real, Ebola is here, and Ebola kills,"</i> were put up on streets; pop songs with the line <i>"Ebola is real"</i> became #1 on the chart on the radio there<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20150328223454/http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2014/08/how-to-make-a-hit-ebola-song/378980/</ref> and even public service messages being played at the start of each incoming phone<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20150328223454/http://dfw.cbslocal.com/2014/10/04/across-3-continents-ebola-makes-its-way-to-us/</ref> call reminding Liberians 24/7 that Ebola is indeed real<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20150328223454/http://www.npr.org/blogs/goatsandsoda/2014/08/06/338234063/skeptics-in-sierra-leone-doubt-ebola-virus-exists</ref>. |
==The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation== | ==The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation== | ||
− | On September 10, [[2014]], the [[Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation]] (BMGF) announced plans to commit $50 million | + | On September 10, [[2014]], the [[Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation]] (BMGF) announced plans to commit $50 million "to support emergency |
− | response to | + | response to Ebola" (BMGF 2014a). BMGF publicity suggested, without precisely saying so, that the entire sum would be committed to near-term disaster relief and investments in local health infrastructure. |
− | In the event, however, BMGF’s response to Ebola was carefully calibrated to advance the organization’s long-term strategic goals. A small portion of the money pledged was immediately released to existing emergency responders, but the remainder was vaguely allocated to | + | In the event, however, BMGF’s response to Ebola was carefully calibrated to advance the organization’s long-term strategic goals. A small portion of the money pledged was immediately released to existing emergency responders, but the remainder was vaguely allocated to "work with public and private sector partners to accelerate the development of therapies, [[vaccines]], and diagnostics that could be effective in treating patients and preventing further transmission of the disease"<ref>https://www.gatesfoundation.org/Media-Center/Press-Releases/2014/09/Gates-Foundation-Commits-$50-Million-to-Support-Emergency-Response-to-Ebola</ref>. |
In practice, this meant a variety of investments in projects of the kind BMGF typically funds—for example, biomedical R&D, Big Data initiatives, [[vaccine]] development—as well as the creation of new U.S.-based [[Public-Private Partnership|PPPs]] designed to override the authority of local health systems.<ref>Jacob Levich; The Gates Foundation, Ebola, and Global Health Imperialism https://www.academia.edu/16242454</ref> | In practice, this meant a variety of investments in projects of the kind BMGF typically funds—for example, biomedical R&D, Big Data initiatives, [[vaccine]] development—as well as the creation of new U.S.-based [[Public-Private Partnership|PPPs]] designed to override the authority of local health systems.<ref>Jacob Levich; The Gates Foundation, Ebola, and Global Health Imperialism https://www.academia.edu/16242454</ref> | ||
===Poor People as Guinea Pigs=== | ===Poor People as Guinea Pigs=== | ||
− | *An award of $5.7 million was given to a vast private-public consortium charged with scaling up the production of convalescent blood products. Partners in the enterprise included pharmaceutical firms, private foundations, and universities, as well as the U.S. Army | + | *An award of $5.7 million was given to a vast private-public consortium charged with scaling up the production of convalescent blood products. Partners in the enterprise included pharmaceutical firms, private foundations, and universities, as well as the U.S. Army "biodefense" outfit, [[USAMRIID]]. BMGF proposed to accelerate largescale collection of blood and plasma from Ebola sufferers. Although the project held no therapeutic benefits for the sick, WHO was persuaded to issue emergency approval in light of the crisis <ref>https://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/ebola/26-september-2014/en/</ref>. |
− | *Tucked into BMGF’s September 10 press release was a single reference to development of a controversial antiviral drug called [[brincidofovir]]. Originally touted as a treatment for smallpox, [[brincidofovir]] had a troubled history. Patent-holder Chimerix had been unable to secure approval for trials necessary to bring the drug to market, and, in early [[2014]], it attempted to apply pressure on the [[FDA]] via a sensational [[social media]] campaign that many deemed [[unethical]]<ref>https://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/ebola/26-september-2014/en/</ref>. The overnight rebranding of brincidofovir as an Ebola drug took the [[Big Pharma|pharma industry]] by surprise: according to one analyst, | + | *Tucked into BMGF’s September 10 press release was a single reference to development of a controversial antiviral drug called [[brincidofovir]]. Originally touted as a treatment for smallpox, [[brincidofovir]] had a troubled history. Patent-holder Chimerix had been unable to secure approval for trials necessary to bring the drug to market, and, in early [[2014]], it attempted to apply pressure on the [[FDA]] via a sensational [[social media]] campaign that many deemed [[unethical]]<ref>https://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/ebola/26-september-2014/en/</ref>. The overnight rebranding of brincidofovir as an Ebola drug took the [[Big Pharma|pharma industry]] by surprise: according to one analyst, "no one in the field even had this drug on their radar" <ref>https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidkroll/2014/11/13/the-rationale-for-using-brincidofovir-bcv-in-ebola-patients</ref>. With BMGF backing the drug, ethical considerations evaporated. WHO swiftly approved large-scale trials in West Africa, suspending longstanding concerns that poor people were being used by pharmaceutical firms as guinea pigs for experimental treatments. |
− | *WHO’s emergency suspension of testing safety protocols opened the door for further large-scale drug testing in West Africa; rushing to take advantage, BMGF granted nearly $6 million to [[Clinical Research Management]], founded by a [[USAMRIID]] alumna to conduct unspecified clinical trials intended | + | *WHO’s emergency suspension of testing safety protocols opened the door for further large-scale drug testing in West Africa; rushing to take advantage, BMGF granted nearly $6 million to [[Clinical Research Management]], founded by a [[USAMRIID]] alumna to conduct unspecified clinical trials intended "to inform potential future treatments"<ref>https://www.gatesfoundation.org/How-We-Work/Quick-Links/Grants-Database/Grants/2015/01/OPP1125767</ref> |
*Three grants totaling more than $1 million were given to [[Rockefeller University]] and the private firm [[Mapp Biopharmaceuticals]] to accelerate production and testing of [[ZMapp]]. This experimental drug was developed by Mapp in conjunction with [[USAMRIID]] and [[DARPA]], a U.S. Department of Defense agency responsible for development of emerging military technologies.<ref>https://www.gatesfoundation.org/How-We-Work/Quick-Links/Grants-Database/Grants/2014/09/OPP1121122</ref> | *Three grants totaling more than $1 million were given to [[Rockefeller University]] and the private firm [[Mapp Biopharmaceuticals]] to accelerate production and testing of [[ZMapp]]. This experimental drug was developed by Mapp in conjunction with [[USAMRIID]] and [[DARPA]], a U.S. Department of Defense agency responsible for development of emerging military technologies.<ref>https://www.gatesfoundation.org/How-We-Work/Quick-Links/Grants-Database/Grants/2014/09/OPP1121122</ref> | ||
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==Bill Gates' blueprint for the future== | ==Bill Gates' blueprint for the future== | ||
− | Powerful [[Western]] institutions, notably the [[Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation]], viewed the African Ebola outbreak of 2014–2015 as an opportunity to advance an ambitious global agenda. Building on recently created public health literature proposing | + | Powerful [[Western]] institutions, notably the [[Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation]], viewed the African Ebola outbreak of 2014–2015 as an opportunity to advance an ambitious global agenda. Building on recently created public health literature proposing "global health governance" (GHG) as the preferred model for international healthcare, on March 18, [[2015]], [[Bill Gates]] publicly called for the creation of a worldwide, [[militarized]], supranational authority capable of responding decisively to outbreaks of infectious disease—an authority governed by Western powers and targeting the underdeveloped world. |
− | The article | + | The article "The Next Epidemic — Lessons from Ebola", published New England Journal of Medicine, was a "global call to action". Reinforced by a much publicized op-ed in the [[New York Times]]<ref>https://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/18/opinion/bill-gates-the-ebola-crisis-was-terrible-but-next-time-could-be-much-worse.html</ref> Gates sketched an action plan that had uncanny similarities to what happened during [[Covid-19]]<ref>JACOB LEVICH; <i>The Gates Foundation, Ebola, and Global Health Imperialism</i> https://www.academia.edu/16242454/The_Gates_Foundation_Ebola_and_Global_Health_Imperialism</ref>: |
*Work closely with Western military forces, specifically [[NATO]], in operations targeting the [[developing world]]. | *Work closely with Western military forces, specifically [[NATO]], in operations targeting the [[developing world]]. | ||
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==AFRICOM, Operation United Assistance== | ==AFRICOM, Operation United Assistance== | ||
− | The Ebola crisis offered useful [[humanitarian cover|cover]] for a substantial escalation in U.S. military presence<ref>https://www.facebook.com/naomi.wolf.author/posts/10152722211314476</ref> . Calling Ebola a | + | The Ebola crisis offered useful [[humanitarian cover|cover]] for a substantial escalation in U.S. military presence<ref>https://www.facebook.com/naomi.wolf.author/posts/10152722211314476</ref> . Calling Ebola a "top national security priority for the United States,"<ref>https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/the-press-office/2014/09/16/fact-sheet-us-response-Ebola-epidemic-west-africa</ref> in September [[2014]] [[the White House]] authorized the deployment of 3,000 troops to [[Guinea]], [[Liberia]], [[Sierra Leone]], [[Nigeria]], and [[Senegal]] under [[AFRICOM]] command. |
Writing for the [[Council on Foreign Relations]], U.S. Air Force Colonel [[Clint Hinote]] compared the spreading [[virus]] to ideological contamination and urged [[public health]] workers to employ [[counterinsurgency tactics]]<ref>blogs.cfr.org/campbell/2014/10/01/ebola-and-counterinsurgency-a-struggle-for-legitimacy/</ref>. | Writing for the [[Council on Foreign Relations]], U.S. Air Force Colonel [[Clint Hinote]] compared the spreading [[virus]] to ideological contamination and urged [[public health]] workers to employ [[counterinsurgency tactics]]<ref>blogs.cfr.org/campbell/2014/10/01/ebola-and-counterinsurgency-a-struggle-for-legitimacy/</ref>. | ||
− | [[AFRICOM]], the U.S. military command established in [[2007]] charged with responsibility for all African nations with the exception of [[Egypt]], was in the midst of a rapid expansion aimed at securing U.S. interests across the continent. Established in [[2007]] with the purported goal of facilitating disaster relief and | + | [[AFRICOM]], the U.S. military command established in [[2007]] charged with responsibility for all African nations with the exception of [[Egypt]], was in the midst of a rapid expansion aimed at securing U.S. interests across the continent. Established in [[2007]] with the purported goal of facilitating disaster relief and "war prevention," AFRICOM was widely understood among U.S. planners as a counter to growing Chinese influence in a region rich with strategic resources<ref>https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2012/jun/14/africom-imperial-agenda-marches-on</ref>. |
As a health effort, the U.S. military contributed little or nothing to controlling the [[epidemic]]. The most effective international aid came | As a health effort, the U.S. military contributed little or nothing to controlling the [[epidemic]]. The most effective international aid came | ||
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In 2014, the US military was reportedly using a PCR-based microbiological analyzerfor Ebola detection that the [[FDA]] was "actively blocking" in the USA.<ref>http://www.naturalnews.com/047315_Ebola_detection_testing_technology_FDA.html</ref> | In 2014, the US military was reportedly using a PCR-based microbiological analyzerfor Ebola detection that the [[FDA]] was "actively blocking" in the USA.<ref>http://www.naturalnews.com/047315_Ebola_detection_testing_technology_FDA.html</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Treatment== | ||
+ | The [[CDC]] approved two drugs for ebola in late 2020, [[inmazeb]] and [[ebanga]].<ref>https://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/treatment/index.html</ref> | ||
==Biological Warfare Research== | ==Biological Warfare Research== |
Latest revision as of 01:02, 22 December 2023
Ebola (tropical disease) | |
---|---|
The situation had several similarities with Covid-19 a few years later, not least the intense and misleading press coverage | |
Type | virus, disease |
Interest of | • Michael Callahan • Ron Klain • Robert Malone • Jon Rappoport • Devi Sridhar • Hans Tolzin • Don Craig Wiley |
The lurid exaggerations in the media presentation of Ebola have many similarities to Covid-19 |
Ebola is a naturally occurring, viral hemorrhagic fever, with similarities to a number of other diseases; outbreaks typically occur in tropical regions of Sub-Saharan Africa. During the 2010s, several Ebola outbreaks received huge attention, especially from many of the actors who later would play a role in Covid-19.
The fight against Ebola soon turned into a Western-led militarized response reinforced by a "media-generated panic",[1] in what might be described as a dress rehearsal for the grand-scale 2020 lockdowns and repeal of civil liberties.
Contents
- 1 Official narrative
- 2 Pathology and Potential Diagnosis Errors
- 3 Misleading PCR Diagnosis Tool later used for Covid
- 4 Falsely Monstrous Reputation
- 5 2014 Outbreak
- 6 The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
- 7 Bill Gates' blueprint for the future
- 8 AFRICOM, Operation United Assistance
- 9 Ebola, ISIS and Russia
- 10 2018-19 Outbreak
- 11 The Ebola Effort in the United States
- 12 Intellectual property
- 13 Treatment
- 14 Biological Warfare Research
- 15 Related Quotations
- 16 References
Official narrative
Ebola was first identified in 26 August 1976. It had major outbreaks in 1976, 1995 and 2007. Between 1976 and 2013 it killed a total of 1,716 people.[2] The 2014 outbreak is estimated at 11,310 deaths[3]. After 9 months, the 2018 East Congo death toll surpassed 1000[4].
In 2014, when U.S. armed forces, to the accompaniment of media fanfare in the face of an alleged global menace, proceeded to erect a number of Ebola Treatment Units (ETUs — essentially, large tents containing rows of cheap plastic mattresses) all across West Africa, these emergency facilities were to stand empty. As of April 2015, only 28 Ebola patients had been treated at the 11 ETUs built by the U.S. military; nine centers never received a single Ebola patient[5].
There were very few imported cases of Ebola in Europe in connection with the Ebola outbreak in West Africa (one in Italy, one in Spain and three in the United Kingdom) and one acquired locally (a health care worker infected while caring for an evacuated Ebola patient in Spain)[6]. Eleven cases were reported in the United States[7].
Pathology and Potential Diagnosis Errors
According to the Official Narrative, infection occurs from direct contact—through broken skin or mucous membranes — with the bodily fluids of infected people; it does not appear to spread through vectors (like bubonic plague) or coughs and sneezes (like influenza or SARS). Early findings that the virus kills 90 percent of its victims proved exaggerated; in 2014 the WHO reported an average 50 percent death rate[8], while one expert projects a survival rate as high as 90 percent with adequate treatment[9].
But since the symptoms of Ebola are very broad (vomiting, bleeding, diarrohea, fatigue, weakness, lack of appetite), and these very same symptoms could be caused by a multitude of different causes, the likelihood of "misdiagnosis" exists.
The "hot zone" areas of Ebola, Sierra Leone, Guinea, and Liberia, have been decimated for a long time: war, extreme poverty, malnutrition, starvation, contaminated water supplies, exposure to toxic industrial chemicals, vast toxic overuse of antibiotics, pesticides (some of them banned in other countries), expired and unrefrigerated medicines, vaccines (which, when given to people whose immune systems are already hanging on by a thread, can be lethal)[10]. A 2014 Unicef paper pointed out, "the symptoms of Ebola are not specific. Fever, weakness, and headaches could be anything from the flu to malaria". There is no easy way to make a laboratory diagnosis of Ebola.[10]
Plane crash
In 2002 a British veterinarian, Dr. Annelisa M. Kilbourn, died in a plane crash which all three other passengers survived without serious injury. At the time of her death she had been working on establishing whether Gorillas in Gabon died of Ebola and could spread to humans. She was collaborating then with William Karesh who went on to become a leading figure at EcoHealth Alliance. Mark Kulacz pointed out: "The zoonotic story of Ebola rests heavily on the dead apes that Annelisa Kilbourn found. Sometimes I wonder if she started questioning if the apes really were dying of Ebola, or if maybe some evidence was planted? That would be a really dangerous thing to talk about. If one were a conspiracy theorist that would explain why she might have been assassinated for that in 2002."[11]
Misleading PCR Diagnosis Tool later used for Covid
Intriguingly, the ‘gold-standard’ for finding Ebola is a polymerase chain reaction - a PCR-test) - which later became one of the deceptive and misleading main tools to inflate number of cases in the Covid-19 situation[12][13]
Falsely Monstrous Reputation
Ebola’s uniquely monstrous reputation in the West dates from the appearance of Richard Preston’s 1992 New Yorker article, "Crisis in the HotZone," and subsequent 3.5-million-copy lurid bestseller The Hot Zone: A Terrifying True Story (1994). Preston’s book creates suspense by suggesting, falsely, that the virus is liable to become airborne at any moment, and dramatically distorts the symptoms of the disease—for example, patients are described as "bleeding out" from every orifice and "weeping tears of blood" while their internal organs "liquefy." A 1995 Hollywood movie,Outbreak, further consolidated the Ebola myth.
2014 Outbreak
The most publicized outbreak was detected in March 2014. An Ebola outbreak began, possibly due to natural causes,[15] in Guinea in December 2013 but was not detected until March 2014,[16] after which it spread to Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Nigeria.
Predictions of an uncontrollable global epidemic were common, sometimes reaching apocalyptic proportions[17]. By October 2014, two-thirds of US-Americans said they were worried about a widespread Ebola epidemic in the United States[18]. By April 2015, approximately 10,000 deaths had been recorded, mostly in West Africa. The number is more than previous epidemics, but still an insignificant number (and given Ebola's similarity to malaria and the way PCR-tests later were used to inflate the number of Covid-cases, the numbers might conceivably have been fudged[citation needed]).
The locals in West Africa were skeptical of certain aspects of the declared epidemic (misdiagnosis, the severity of the situation, biological research etc.), necessitating a massive propaganda campaign by Unicef and Western NGOs[19]. Posters with "Ebola is real, Ebola is here, and Ebola kills," were put up on streets; pop songs with the line "Ebola is real" became #1 on the chart on the radio there[20] and even public service messages being played at the start of each incoming phone[21] call reminding Liberians 24/7 that Ebola is indeed real[22].
The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
On September 10, 2014, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF) announced plans to commit $50 million "to support emergency response to Ebola" (BMGF 2014a). BMGF publicity suggested, without precisely saying so, that the entire sum would be committed to near-term disaster relief and investments in local health infrastructure.
In the event, however, BMGF’s response to Ebola was carefully calibrated to advance the organization’s long-term strategic goals. A small portion of the money pledged was immediately released to existing emergency responders, but the remainder was vaguely allocated to "work with public and private sector partners to accelerate the development of therapies, vaccines, and diagnostics that could be effective in treating patients and preventing further transmission of the disease"[23].
In practice, this meant a variety of investments in projects of the kind BMGF typically funds—for example, biomedical R&D, Big Data initiatives, vaccine development—as well as the creation of new U.S.-based PPPs designed to override the authority of local health systems.[24]
Poor People as Guinea Pigs
- An award of $5.7 million was given to a vast private-public consortium charged with scaling up the production of convalescent blood products. Partners in the enterprise included pharmaceutical firms, private foundations, and universities, as well as the U.S. Army "biodefense" outfit, USAMRIID. BMGF proposed to accelerate largescale collection of blood and plasma from Ebola sufferers. Although the project held no therapeutic benefits for the sick, WHO was persuaded to issue emergency approval in light of the crisis [25].
- Tucked into BMGF’s September 10 press release was a single reference to development of a controversial antiviral drug called brincidofovir. Originally touted as a treatment for smallpox, brincidofovir had a troubled history. Patent-holder Chimerix had been unable to secure approval for trials necessary to bring the drug to market, and, in early 2014, it attempted to apply pressure on the FDA via a sensational social media campaign that many deemed unethical[26]. The overnight rebranding of brincidofovir as an Ebola drug took the pharma industry by surprise: according to one analyst, "no one in the field even had this drug on their radar" [27]. With BMGF backing the drug, ethical considerations evaporated. WHO swiftly approved large-scale trials in West Africa, suspending longstanding concerns that poor people were being used by pharmaceutical firms as guinea pigs for experimental treatments.
- WHO’s emergency suspension of testing safety protocols opened the door for further large-scale drug testing in West Africa; rushing to take advantage, BMGF granted nearly $6 million to Clinical Research Management, founded by a USAMRIID alumna to conduct unspecified clinical trials intended "to inform potential future treatments"[28]
- Three grants totaling more than $1 million were given to Rockefeller University and the private firm Mapp Biopharmaceuticals to accelerate production and testing of ZMapp. This experimental drug was developed by Mapp in conjunction with USAMRIID and DARPA, a U.S. Department of Defense agency responsible for development of emerging military technologies.[29]
- The Tony Blair Africa Governance Initiative received $700,000. This is a foundation devoted to advancing neoliberal reforms and bolstering the involvement of Western NGOs in African states[30].
Bill Gates' blueprint for the future
Powerful Western institutions, notably the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, viewed the African Ebola outbreak of 2014–2015 as an opportunity to advance an ambitious global agenda. Building on recently created public health literature proposing "global health governance" (GHG) as the preferred model for international healthcare, on March 18, 2015, Bill Gates publicly called for the creation of a worldwide, militarized, supranational authority capable of responding decisively to outbreaks of infectious disease—an authority governed by Western powers and targeting the underdeveloped world.
The article "The Next Epidemic — Lessons from Ebola", published New England Journal of Medicine, was a "global call to action". Reinforced by a much publicized op-ed in the New York Times[31] Gates sketched an action plan that had uncanny similarities to what happened during Covid-19[32]:
- Work closely with Western military forces, specifically NATO, in operations targeting the developing world.
- Bypass national safety regulations in order to fast-track testing and use of novel vaccines and other medications.
- Suspend constitutional guarantees in sovereign nations affected by epidemics.
- Create worldwide surveillance networks, free of privacy protections, that would make information about people in developing countries instantly available to the imperial core.
AFRICOM, Operation United Assistance
The Ebola crisis offered useful cover for a substantial escalation in U.S. military presence[33] . Calling Ebola a "top national security priority for the United States,"[34] in September 2014 the White House authorized the deployment of 3,000 troops to Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Nigeria, and Senegal under AFRICOM command.
Writing for the Council on Foreign Relations, U.S. Air Force Colonel Clint Hinote compared the spreading virus to ideological contamination and urged public health workers to employ counterinsurgency tactics[35].
AFRICOM, the U.S. military command established in 2007 charged with responsibility for all African nations with the exception of Egypt, was in the midst of a rapid expansion aimed at securing U.S. interests across the continent. Established in 2007 with the purported goal of facilitating disaster relief and "war prevention," AFRICOM was widely understood among U.S. planners as a counter to growing Chinese influence in a region rich with strategic resources[36].
As a health effort, the U.S. military contributed little or nothing to controlling the epidemic. The most effective international aid came from Cuba, which made use of a robust universal health-care program to place nearly 500 health professionals on the ground in Sierra Leone,Liberia, and Guinea.
Operation Gritlock
The UK led Operation Gritlock, where 750 military personnel were sent to Sierra Leone to "to help deal with the deadly Ebola outbreak"[37] in its former colony. The military Ebola Treatment Centre (ETC), co-located with the large Save the Children-run, DFID-funded site at Kerry Town, was the first in-country facility dedicated to treating healthcare professionals, both international and local[38]. Vaccine developers, including the UK pharmaceutical company GlaxoSmithKline, formed collaborations with the US National Institutes of Health and other international partners to vaccinate at-risk health care workers in the region. The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) initiated phase II vaccine trials in West Africa and the University of Oxford led phase I vaccine trials in the UK and elsewhere[39].
Ebola, ISIS and Russia
In 2014, a frequent talking point in Western policy circles was mentioning Ebola in the same breath as ISIS and Russia. President Barack Obama did so [40] when he outlined the three most significant global threats, as did British Prime Minister David Cameron when he in a speech lumped together Ebola, Islamic State and Russia as posing the greatest dangers to the world order[41].
2018-19 Outbreak
On 8 May and then again on August 1, 2018, the Ministry of Health of the Democratic Republic of Congo declared Ebola outbreaks.[42][43] The WHO advised "against restriction" of travel.[44]
In July 2019 the WHO declared the continued outbreak a Public Health Emergency of International Concern[45] and scientists were wondering whether it had become more contagious after cases were reported in urban areas in the Congo and in Uganda.[46]
The Ebola Effort in the United States
Several of the actors who were part in the massive operation to counter Ebola in the United States, later played central roles in the Covid-19 situation.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, then director of the U.S. National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases, envisaged a countrywide vaccination as early as October 2014 (which country or countries would get the rushed vaccine, he didn’t specify). At the time, his Institute was working on an experimental Ebola vaccine (the first to begin human clinical trials) in a partnership with GlaxoSmithKline.
“As the epidemic gets more and more formidable and in some cases out of control it is quite conceivable, if not likely, that we may need to deploy the vaccine to the entire country to be able to shut the epidemic down. That is clearly a possibility.”
Anthony Fauci (October 6, 2014) [47]
Intellectual property
In 2010, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was granted patent #CA2741523A1 on a strain of Ebola known as "EboBun", derived from the 2007 outbreak.[48]
In 2014, the US military was reportedly using a PCR-based microbiological analyzerfor Ebola detection that the FDA was "actively blocking" in the USA.[49]
Treatment
The CDC approved two drugs for ebola in late 2020, inmazeb and ebanga.[50]
Biological Warfare Research
Ebola has had significant interest from the US biological warfare complex, formally for defensive purposes, but as always, there is no clear division between defense and offense in this area.
Noticeably, at the time Liberia and Sierra Leone were not parts (they joined in 2016) to the Biological Warfare Convention, which prohibits research into offensive biological weapons. Thus the countries can become loopholes outsiders to conduct - nominally local and legal - experiments that would otherwise be in breach of the Convention.
Cyril E. Broderick, a tenured professor of the Agricultural College of the University of Delaware, formerly professor of Plant Pathology at the University of Liberia's College of Agriculture and Forestry, was published in Liberia's largest newspaper claiming that "The US Department of Defense (DoD) is funding Ebola trials on humans, trials which started just weeks before the Ebola outbreak in Guinea and Sierra Leone."[51][52] Francis Boyle concurred.
Related Quotations
Page | Quote | Author | Date |
---|---|---|---|
Francis Boyle | “I have absolute proof from a Pentagon document that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) was doing bio-warfare work for the Pentagon in Sierra Leone, the heart of the outbreak, as early as 1988. Why would they do that? As I suggested to try to circumvent the Biological Weapons Convention to which the US government is a party. So, always bio-warriors do use offensive and defensive bio-warfare work, violating the Biological Weapons Convention. So effectively they try to offshore it into West Africa where Liberia is not a party and Guinea is not a party. Sierra Leone is a party. But in Sierra Leone and Liberia there were disturbances which kept the world from really paying attention of what was going on in these labs.<a href="#cite_note-4">[4]</a>” | Francis Boyle | |
Sasha Latypova | “The perpetrators desperately, at all cost, need you to to believe that "mutating viruses in a lab" achieves some scary result, that then can be "leaked". That anyone can do it, even a PhD student in their garage. That our enemies are doing it and will "release" a super scary bug any time now, unless the Government is "prepared" by making a stockpile of "predictive vaccines" that can be deployed in DAYS after a new scary virus is detected in China. Or Timbuktu. It is, however, a narrative. There is no way to "mutate viruses" in a lab in the way they all imply - to artificially make them deadlier and more transmissible at the same time. This is a propaganda fairytale with a very specific goal. You should be very concerned about any person (on "their" side or "ours") who repeats it with a serious face. | Sasha Latypova | 27 January 2023 |
References
- ↑ Jacob Levich; The Gates Foundation, Ebola, and Global Health Imperialism https://www.academia.edu/16242454/The_Gates_Foundation_Ebola_and_Global_Health_Imperialism Many of the examples in Wikispooks are sourced from his article, which is definitely worth reading in full
- ↑ http://biasedbbc.org/blog/2014/10/14/ebola-gay/
- ↑ http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/news-perspective/2018/12/us-health-worker-monitored-drc-ebola-nears-600-cases
- ↑ https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/world-digest-may-3-2019/2019/05/03/3aae762c-6db2-11e9-8f44-e8d8bb1df986_story.html
- ↑ <http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/12/world/africa/idle-ebola-clinics-in-liberia-are-seenas-misstep-in-us-relief-effort.html
- ↑ https://www.euro.who.int/en/health-topics/health-emergencies/ebola-outbreak-2014/ebola-outbreak-in-west-africa-and-the-risk-to-europe
- ↑ https://web.archive.org/web/20180601103141/https://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/history/2014-2016-outbreak/index.html
- ↑ https://web.archive.org/web/20141214011751/https://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs103/en/
- ↑ <http://www.lrb.co.uk/v36/n20/paul-farmer/diary>
- ↑ a b https://web.archive.org/web/20160606103004/https://jonrappoport.wordpress.com/2014/08/05/ebola-the-us-diagnostic-test-is-utterly-ureliable/
- ↑ https://rumble.com/v41syuz-abcellera-amy-jenkins-andrew-huff-darpa-mascola-nabel-modex-sina-bavari-vic.html?start=1703
- ↑ https://blogs.unicef.org/blog/is-it-ebola-or-malaria-the-diagnostic-challenge/
- ↑ https://www.theguardian.com/society/2014/sep/11/gold-coast-ebola-case-likely-malaria-disease-expert
- ↑ Susan Perry http://www. minnpost.com/second-opinion/2014/10/hot-zone-helps-fan-myths-andfears-about-ebola-epidemiologist-says
- ↑ https://www.independentsciencenews.org/health/did-west-africas-ebola-outbreak-of-2014-have-a-lab-origin/
- ↑ http://www.dddmag.com/news/2014/07/ebola-crisis-triggers-health-emergency
- ↑ https://www.thedailybeast.com/ebola-experts-warn-of-an-african-apocalypse
- ↑ www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/ebola-poll-two-thirds-of-americans-worried-about-possible-widespread-epidemic-in-us/2014/10/13/d0afd0ee-52ff-11e4-809b-8cc0a295c773_story.html
- ↑ https://web.archive.org/web/20150328223454/http://truthstreammedia.com/why-the-massive-ebola-is-real-propaganda-campaign/
- ↑ https://web.archive.org/web/20150328223454/http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2014/08/how-to-make-a-hit-ebola-song/378980/
- ↑ https://web.archive.org/web/20150328223454/http://dfw.cbslocal.com/2014/10/04/across-3-continents-ebola-makes-its-way-to-us/
- ↑ https://web.archive.org/web/20150328223454/http://www.npr.org/blogs/goatsandsoda/2014/08/06/338234063/skeptics-in-sierra-leone-doubt-ebola-virus-exists
- ↑ https://www.gatesfoundation.org/Media-Center/Press-Releases/2014/09/Gates-Foundation-Commits-$50-Million-to-Support-Emergency-Response-to-Ebola
- ↑ Jacob Levich; The Gates Foundation, Ebola, and Global Health Imperialism https://www.academia.edu/16242454
- ↑ https://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/ebola/26-september-2014/en/
- ↑ https://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/ebola/26-september-2014/en/
- ↑ https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidkroll/2014/11/13/the-rationale-for-using-brincidofovir-bcv-in-ebola-patients
- ↑ https://www.gatesfoundation.org/How-We-Work/Quick-Links/Grants-Database/Grants/2015/01/OPP1125767
- ↑ https://www.gatesfoundation.org/How-We-Work/Quick-Links/Grants-Database/Grants/2014/09/OPP1121122
- ↑ https://www.gatesfoundation.org/How-We-Work/Quick-Links/Grants-Database/Grants/2014/10/OPP1123784
- ↑ https://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/18/opinion/bill-gates-the-ebola-crisis-was-terrible-but-next-time-could-be-much-worse.html
- ↑ JACOB LEVICH; The Gates Foundation, Ebola, and Global Health Imperialism https://www.academia.edu/16242454/The_Gates_Foundation_Ebola_and_Global_Health_Imperialism
- ↑ https://www.facebook.com/naomi.wolf.author/posts/10152722211314476
- ↑ https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/the-press-office/2014/09/16/fact-sheet-us-response-Ebola-epidemic-west-africa
- ↑ blogs.cfr.org/campbell/2014/10/01/ebola-and-counterinsurgency-a-struggle-for-legitimacy/
- ↑ https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2012/jun/14/africom-imperial-agenda-marches-on
- ↑ https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-29542129
- ↑ https://www.rcpjournals.org/content/clinmedicine/17/4/332
- ↑ https://www.rcpjournals.org/content/clinmedicine/17/4/332
- ↑ https://www.rt.com/news/190392-russia-lavrov-obama-threat-speech/
- ↑ https://youtu.be/k8hQdZIqs8s
- ↑ https://reliefweb.int/sites/reliefweb.int/files/resources/SITREP-EVD-DRC-20180514.pdf
- ↑ https://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/outbreaks/drc/2018-august.html
- ↑ https://www.intellihub.com/theres-another-ebola-outbreak-and-the-who-isnt-recommending-travel-restrictions/
- ↑ https://www.who.int/csr/don/18-july-2019-ebola-drc/en/
- ↑ https://www.newyorker.com/science/elements/is-ebola-evolving-into-a-more-deadly-virus
- ↑ https://web.archive.org/web/20150403032943/http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20141006/INFO/310069975/experts-starting-to-admit-it-may-take-vaccine-to-stop-ebola-in-west
- ↑ http://www.naturalnews.com/046290_Ebola_patent_vaccines_profit_motive.html
- ↑ http://www.naturalnews.com/047315_Ebola_detection_testing_technology_FDA.html
- ↑ https://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/treatment/index.html
- ↑ http://www.liberianobserver.com/security/ebola-aids-manufactured-western-pharmaceuticals-us-dod
- ↑ http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Peace/2014/09/10/Liberia-s-Largest-Newspaper-Ebola-and-AIDS-Manufactured-by-US-Dept-of-Defense