Disease
(Redirected from Tropical diseases)
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Disease | |
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Interest of | • CDC • Elena Cattaneo • Jeremy Farrar • Ronald Plasterk • Martin John Rogers |
Examples
Page name | Description |
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"ADHD" | A controversial, increasingly widely-diagnosed psychological disorder that big pharma seems to be using as a pretext for prescribing otherwise-illegal, highly addictive “performance enhancing” stimulants to improve the academic performance of schoolchildren. |
AIDS | |
Alpha-gal syndrome | A tick-borne allergy to red meat that some have speculated is a biological weapon. |
Alzheimer's disease | A neurodegenerative disease that usually starts slowly and progressively worsens |
Anemia | Decrease in red blood cells in the bloodstream. |
Aneurysm | An outward bulging, likened to a bubble or balloon, caused by a localized, abnormal, weak spot on a blood vessel. |
Anthrax | A sometimes fatal disease |
Autism | A serious mental condition which is poorly understood. Agreed to be on the rise, the reasons for this are disputed. |
Bird flu | |
Brain tumour | |
Cancer | |
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease | A fatal degenerative brain disorder. Early symptoms include memory problems, behavioral changes, poor coordination, and visual disturbances. Later symptoms include dementia, involuntary movements, blindness, weakness, and coma. About 70% of people die within a year of diagnosis. |
Ebola | The lurid exaggerations in the media presentation of Ebola have many similarities to Covid-19 |
Epidemic | |
Flu | |
Havana syndrome | Attack on US embassy staff and spies in different locations around the world. |
Lyme disease | |
MERS | Reportedly very deadly coronavirus, known since 2012 without evidence of spread outside hospitals. |
Malaria | |
Marburg virus | A virus presented by corporate media in 2021 as the next big thing, despite only a handful of deaths since 2005. Super-deadly but apparently now with asymptomatic infection (i.e no symptoms) that can be detected with a PCR test. May be cover for vaccine injuries. |
Monkeypox | 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. |
Pneumonia | |
Prion diseases | All known prion diseases in mammals affect the structure of the brain or other neural tissue; all are progressive, have no known effective treatment, and are always fatal. |
Respiratory syncytial virus | A fancy name for the common cold. |
Smallpox | Deadly virus eradicated in the wild after a vaccination campaign. |
Swine flu (H1N1) | A virus that was massively promoted as becoming a deadly pandemic for about 20 months on corporate media, from January 2009 to August 2010. Was declared a pandemic by WHO, with governments making big purchases for vaccines, only to throw them away, as the flu was deemed more damaging world wide. |
Toxoplasma gondii | Parasite that can rewire brain behavior to make host do things that everything in their fiber normally tells them not to do, especially in cats, but also humans. The U.S military has shown interest. |
Tuberculosis | |
Zika virus | Rare disease that was heavily hyped by Big Pharma. The symptoms might equally plausible be misdiagnosed effects from chemical pollution. |
A Disease victim on Wikispooks
Title | Description |
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Thomas Oppermann | German politician who suddenly died en-route to be interviewed in a talk show after voicing criticism of the governments Covid-19 measures. |
Related Quotation
Page | Quote | Author | Date |
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Philip Mountbatten | “Human population growth is probably the single most serious long-term threat to survival. We’re in for a major disaster if it isn’t curbed—not just for the natural world, but for the human world. The more people there are, the more resources they’ll consume, the more pollution they’ll create, the more fighting they’ll do. We have no option. If it isn’t controlled voluntarily, it will be controlled involuntarily by an increase in disease, starvation and war. Can you give me an example? I was in Sri Lanka recently, where a United Nations project set out in the late 1940s to eradicate malaria. It’s an island and it was therefore possible to destroy the mosquito carrying the disease. What people didn’t realize was that malaria was actually controlling the growth of the population. The consequence was that within about 20 years the population doubled. Now they’ve got to find something for all those people to do and some way to feed them.” | Philip Mountbatten | 21 December 1981 |
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