39 Comments
User's avatar
Franklin O'Kanu's avatar

John - I want you to examine the possibilities that viruses do not exist. This is known knowledge since polio — but not mainstream because mainstream needs fear and pandemic.

I’ve written three pieces on this, here’s there first one: https://unorthodoxy.substack.com/p/why-disease-causing-viruses-are-pseudoscience

Michael Warden's avatar

Absolutely - everyone with even a small interest in these themes should read ‘Ideological Constructs of Vaccination’ by Meteja Cernic which presents unequivocal evidence, drawn from official statistics offices on both sides of the Atlantic that polio, tetanus and various other supposed viral diseases declined by around 90% before their corresponding vaccines were developed.

Flash Gordon's avatar

Then what causes illness and spread of illness? It is easy to dismiss viruses if one wants but not so easy to dismiss the phenomenon of diseases and their spread. It is also impossible to dispute the statistical data of improved recovery times for people who take antiviral medications versus those who do not. You may not want to use the word 'virus' but the word pathogen is not so easily...eradicated :)

Cheryl's avatar

People get sick- not necessarily from each other. Immune system is a marvelous machine but can be damaged by all sorts of things- lifestyle being 1. As far as antivirals go- there aren’t many worth taking- and much of medicine is just about the money sadly

Matt Irwin MD's avatar

Thanks for clearly reporting the official story. I encourage you all to be highly skeptical of these Media fueled outbreaks. I have been following them for 30 years and every time you look deeply you find the story falls apart.

In the past 20 years the problem has become much worse because of reliance on highly unreliable PCR tests.

. A good place to start is sexual transmission of HIV. The research study cited below was published in the American Journal of epidemiology in 1997. It remains the highest quality study ever done on the subject. Although the abstract claims that it takes 1000 sexual contacts to transmit HIV (“ Per contact infectivity 0.0009“), which is astounding by itself, when you read the text of the article you find that despite following 175 couples over the course of their study, zero of the HIV negative partners changed to HIV positive. This despite very inconsistent use of “safe sex“ among the couples.

I will add that just because someone turns from HIV negative HIV positive does not mean that they “caught it” from someone. When a person’s system is activated by allergy, autoimmune conditions, exaggerated reactions to vaccines or other stimuli, people are very likely to turn from HIV negative to HIV positive, although not always permanently.

There is a very similar study on IV drug use. People using exclusively clean needles from a needle exchange program had a dramatically higher chance of testing HIV positive than people who used shared needles. This was also published in the American journal of epidemiology in 1997. However these studies appeared after 13 years of the same narrative that had created and bolstered many careers, belief systems, research grants and salaries, so people just ignored these landmark studies.

Nancy S. Padian, Stephen C. Shiboski, Sarah O. Glass, Eric Vittinghoff, Heterosexual Transmission of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) in Northern California: Results from a Ten-year Study, American Journal of Epidemiology, Volume 146, Issue 4, 15 August 1997, Pages 350–357, https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a009276

clem h fandango's avatar

Yes. And please also read the book "Serious Adverse Events" by Celia Farber on this subject.

Don M's avatar

Your outside tenting idea is what I was thinking. For me, only because I read that during the Spanish Flu, the medical attendants noticed that patients that had to be placed outside due to overcrowding in the hospitals, recovered at a higher rate than those inside.

Fresh air and sunlight proved to be a great disinfectant.

Suzy Cue's avatar

Mr. Leake - for me, it’s very suspicious that this Hantavirus story coincides with the news of the development of a number of Hantavirus ‘vaccines’. I’m frankly shocked that you didn’t even mention this in your post - please explain why you didn’t.

Kathleen Taylor's avatar

Mr. Leake's colleague Nicolas Hulscher covered the issue you call attention to in his May 6 edition of Focal Points. (See link below.)

https://www.thefocalpoints.com/p/the-vaccine-cartel-and-us-army-are

Privacy Required's avatar

This story as to how it spread sounds like bullshit to me. Difficult human to human transmission but aerosolized rat urine where tourist on their vacation visited a landfill, who doesn't want to visit a garbage dump on vacation, nice restaurants are so boring, and the urine that had soaked into the ground got airborne in a concentration high enough and with the right wind flow to infect humans.

I guess its time to dive down the rat hole that virus do not exist, I resisted hoping the experts would go head to head and resolve this controversy. But if you start with the premise most of what we have been told are lies to advance an agenda by the high table, one must look at the science and history of virology.

Ive listened to some smart people I respect making a strong case but my own cognitive dissonance kicked in. I believe I caught covid in 2020 from a jabber I was exposed to for hours after his 2nd bioweapon shot and then my wife caught it from me. Both of us had been isolated prior to getting sick. Further the flu season every single year of my life needs to be explained.

Michael Warden's avatar

Agreed.

Everyone with even a small interest in these themes should read ‘Ideological Constructs of Vaccination’ by Meteja Cernic which presents unequivocal evidence, drawn from official statistics offices on both sides of the Atlantic that polio, tetanus and various other supposed viral diseases declined by around 90% before their corresponding vaccines were developed.

DBC's avatar

98-99% I've read

URsomoney's avatar

John do you believe this crap - aerosolized rat urine?? Ridiculous story…people in shanty towns & slums across the world should be dropping like flies if this latest bs had any truth to it.

Satan's Doorknob's avatar

You'd have to explain, then, how hantavirus first made the news in the 1990s, if not earlier.

Revision: perhaps you mean the jabs make it earier to catch hantavirus. That'd seem plausible. "I have chosen to allow this," I recall some TV judge saying.

BuelahMan's Revolt's avatar

The links are Pfizer's own documents. Read it.

JanC1955's avatar

Instead of an "Antarctic expedition cruise," I think I'll take a nice warm shower in a bit. And instead of a bird watching excursion at a landfill, I'll just watch the hummingbirds at my feeder. Bonus: my plans will leave my savings account untouched, and my immune system intact! 😃

Satan's Doorknob's avatar

I can make some reasonable hypotheses about the likely health and constitution of those travelers who have sickened and or died from the virus:

Arguing for ill health

Most or all of these are elderly. It is probable they eat the standard diet and take few or no supplements. In other words, they have known or likely inadequate intake of vitamins and minerals known to promote good immune health. Right here are two of the most probable risk factors for infectious disease: age, with the sundry co morbidities common with age, and probable inadequate diet. Oh yeah, add also the stresses of travel. Now, granted these were not people fleeing a warzone or some other "bad" stress. Nevertheless, almost any travel will involve some amount of stressors. And those potentially upset the body, including the immune system.

Arguing for good health:

A cruise of this nature is EXPENSIVE. Passengers almost certainly are upper-middle class or better. This argues for better medical care in their normal lives, the “healthy passenger” effect if you like.

Beyond this, I can’t make predictions. It seems unlikely that Hantavirus is the next pandemic, but who knows. What is certain (already happening!) is that the popular media will play it up as if it were the next public health disaster.

Thanks for the historical background on “quarantine”. It may have helped reduce the risk of importing some illnesses. Alas, lice, fleas and other vectors would have few problems waiting an extra 40 days aboard ship.

In other news today, we learn that an entire private school in the US has been exposed to tuberulosis. It’s worth mentioning that thanks to public health measures, while that disease had been almost unknown in “rich” nations for many decades, it’s staging a resurgence, likely aided by massive undocumented immigration from poor nations where the disease is endemic and often poorly treated. Sadly, much modern tuberculosis is highly resistant to treatment. Finally, it’s also worth mentioning that in the old days, there were reasons that immigrants arriving here were at the minimum subjected to health inspections precisely to screen for such risky diseases. Well when millions slip in covertly, it’s kind of hard to do that, isn’t it?

Privacy Required's avatar

How about the timing of it all? All those that are sick got sick at the same time because they were of poor health? The probability seems unlikely, I lean more toward occams razor in that thrb chances of all getting sick all at once seem very unlikely.

Flash Gordon's avatar

Oh, lord. Here we go with PCR tests, again.

Sharon's avatar

It’s not a new mutant variant. Is it a gain-of-function variant??

Brien's avatar

Nothing about this is believable. Did anyone see the passenger drama actor for hire who gave the most pathetic performance ever seen? He sheds whimpering crocodile tears in front of the camera, allegedly in quarantine aboard ship. He’s trying to convince ‘the world’ that this is real. “We aren’t far, far away”, he sobs. “We’re here, and this is real”. Me thinks he protesteth too much. Just pathetic. There is no burden of proof here. This is just pure scam, 21st century style.

Kathleen Taylor's avatar

I saw that, too! Deplorable behavior.

I thought, "What an unmanly spectacle he is making of himself!"

I'd be ashamed if he were related to me. A little stoicism, please.

Acting like that also harms the immune system.

bagel with a schmear's avatar

Let's blame it on Iran

Randall Wadsworth's avatar

Thanks for presenting some real reporting on the cruise ship hantavirus fiasco. It’s scary but it helps to read a factual account of what has happened. I hope that we learn the prior health status and the detailed circumstances of the elderly Dutch couple who died.

Jenny Duceour's avatar

Thank you for this.