Monkeypox

From Wikispooks
Revision as of 12:02, 17 December 2024 by Terje (talk | contribs) (tidy)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Concept.png Monkeypox 
(tropical disease,  virus)Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Monkeypox.jpg
Typevirus,  disease
Interest of• 2021 Monkeypox Tabletop Exercise
• Ken Alibek
• Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy
A virus found in the 1950s in monkeys. The lurid exaggerations in the corporate media presentation of Monkeypox have many similarities to Covid-19. The symptoms are remarkably similar to one of the main side effects of Covid-19 jabs.

Monekypox is - according to the Official Narrative - an infectious disease caused by a virus that occurs in certain animals, including humans (although not usually monkeys).[1] The FDA approved a vaccine in 2019. In 2020 gain-of-function research into increasing virulence was ongoing at the Wuhan Institute of Virology[2], in 2021 the Nuclear Threat Initiative and the Munich Security Conference held a tabletop exercise to rehearse global reaction to an outbreak of monkeypox.

Virulence

“many media outlets have shared greatly exaggerated figures of up to 10% based on a single outdated and incomplete survey from the Congo. Yet if immuno-compromised individuals are excluded, the actual infection fatality rate in central and western Africa is about 1%, and it is likely to be a fraction of 1% in Western countries.”
 (27 May 2022)  [3]

As of 2022, two distinct clades have been described in the literature: the Congo Basin clade, and much milder West African clade, with an IFR of usually <1%.[4]

The UK’s National Health Service edited their Monkeypox page before (or along with) the 2022 outbreak and changed some of their descriptions significantly.[5]

Gain of Function

In 2020, researchers from the Wuhan Institute of Virology were actively researching genetic modification of the virus.[2]

Lab monkey escape

In January 2022, several monkeys escaped from the crash of a truck towing a trailer load of 100 of the animals on a Pennsylvania highway. The shipment of monkeys was en route to a CDC-approved quarantine facility after from Mauritius, an Indian Ocean island nation.[6]

2021 Monkeypox Tabletop Exercise

Full article: 2021 Monkeypox Tabletop Exercise

In 2021, a tabletop exercise was held, rehearsing the global reaction to an outbreak of monkeypox. The scenario portrayed a deadly global pandemic involving an unusually virrulent strain of monkeypox virus that first emerged in the fictional nation of Brinia and spread globally over 18 months. Ultimately, the exercise scenario revealed that the initial outbreak was caused by a terrorist attack using a pathogen engineered in a laboratory with inadequate biosafety and biosecurity provisions and weak oversight. By the end of the exercise, the fictional pandemic resulted in more than three billion cases and 270 million fatalities worldwide.

Jeffrey A Tucker-Monkeypox.jpg

Occurrence

The outbreak of this virus was predicted to occur in May 2022, which did happen (in mild intensity) in real life. The planning exercise includes the WHO or a new entity to legally seize control of national health services as national governments were "poorly planning". The outbreak was also the first ever to occur outside Africa since any exercise after the first outbreak in Africa in the 1950s. No mentioning of its IFR or side effects of the Covid-19 jabs were allowed to be made in official narratives.[7]

Ken Alibek

In 1998, Soviet defector Ken Alibek claimed that In the late 1980s, the Soviet miliary decided to start working with monkeypox virus, "which infects humans but is much less contagious than smallpox. So the Ministry of Defense decided to work with monkeypox instead of smallpox to create future biological weapons"[8] While Alibek is a notoriously unreliable and scaremongering witness, the claim came soon before a major expansion of the US "biodefense" industry after 2001, and indicates that the "vaccine" might have been a US military project.



Many thanks to our Patrons who cover ~2/3 of our hosting bill. Please join them if you can.


References