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Thursday, November 21, 2024

Pride Month Surprise: Outbreaks of Malaria, Monkeypox, Swine Flu See Sudden Surge

'There’s been some what we call ‘community transmission' ...'

(Jacob Bruns, Headline USA) As American life finally returns to something resembling pre-COVID lockdown life, mysterious outbreaks of major diseases have all simultaneously occurred. Among the diseases making the news are monkeypox, malaria and swine flu.

Monkeypox, for example, has emerged once more in full force, as Pride month orgies and parades hit full swing. According to a Los Angeles Times report, Los Angeles County officials are concerned about the rapid spread of the disease, which spreads mainly through homosexual activity.

“There’s been some what we call ‘community transmission,’” said Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer.

“That is, it’s not from travelers or people who went elsewhere and contracted monkeypox somewhere else. It’s actually they got monkeypox here in L.A. County, because it was transmitted from someone else here in L.A. County who had monkeypox.”

Likewise, malaria has made inroads into the United States in recent weeks, with four cases indigenously appearing in Florida, and one in Texas, reported Based Underground.

Malaria has not been found traced to mosquitoes in the United States since 2003. The disease is extremely deadly.

The spread of the disease pairs nicely with Bill Gates’s plans to release an army of vaccine-spreading mosquitoes in the United States.

The H5N1 Bird Flu has also begun making the rounds, in Poland specifically. But the flu–which is typically limited to birds only–has infected cats this time around, leading to concerns that it could spread to other mammals.

According to the report, 873 humans have caught H5N1 in the past 20 years, leading to 458 deaths, per the World Health Organization.

Making matters worse, the swine flu is back and led to the death of a 42-year-old Brazilian woman who had had no contact with pigs, meaning that she died possibly from transmission via other humans.

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