Monkeypox outbreak could be a result of failed vaxx of COVID-19
Monkeypox is rarely found outside African countries. Now, two years
into the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, it is all of a sudden
in every Western country and public health authorities, the
mainstream media and the World Health Organization (WHO) are
hyping it up.
And there may be evidence indicating that the so-called monkeypox
outbreak could in fact be a result (
https://bit.ly/3MXmmgY) of the
failed COVID-19 vaccination program.
Every nation that has reported presumed cases of monkeypox since May
has also rolled out COVID-19 injections. This could be a coincidence,
but most likely not.
Monkeypox was first discovered in humans in 1970 in the Democratic
Republic of Congo in a nine-year-old boy and from that time human
cases of monkeypox have been reported in 11 African countries.
It wasn't until 2003 that the first monkeypox outbreak outside of
Africa was recorded in the United States.
Researchers found that distinguishing monkeypox from chickenpox
is extremely difficult. The chickenpox virus is technically
recognized as the varicella-zoster virus, and just like the herpes
simplex virus, it becomes a permanent resident in the human body.
And like genital herpes, varicella may be quiet for several years,
holing up inside nerve cells and can reactivate later to wreak havoc
in the form of shingles.
Depending on whether you chose to receive the COVID-19 injection,
official government data and confidential Pfizer documents strongly
imply the COVID-19 injection may be reactivating the inactive
chickenpox virus or herpes virus due to the damage it does to the
immune system.
This means that people may not be seeing a worldwide outbreak of
monkeypox at all, but rather a resulting damage of COVID-19 vaccines.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) tried to delay the release
of Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine safety data for 75 years in spite of
approving the injection after only 108 days of safety review on
December 11, 2020.
But in early January, Federal Judge Mark Pittman ordered the FDA
to release 55,000 pages per month. From that time on the Public
Health and Medical Professionals for Transparency has posted all
of the Pfizer documents on its website and the latest drop came on
June 1.
One of the interesting documents contained in the data dump is about
the adverse events caused by the vaccine, including herpes viral
infections.
By the end of February 2021, just two months after the Pfizer vaccine
was given emergency use authorization in both the U.S. and the United
Kingdom, Pfizer has gotten 8,152 reports relating to herpes
infection,and 18 of these led to multiple organ dysfunction syndrome.
Multiple organ dysfunction syndrome is a systemic, dysfunctional
inflammatory reaction that requires long intensive care unit (ICU)
stay. It is marked by a high mortality rate based on the number of
organs affected and can be caused by herpes infection.
Over 1,000 monkeypox cases reported to WHO
(
https://yhoo.it/3MYE3gn)
Meanwhile, the WHO has reported that over 1,000 monkeypox cases
have been identified in dozens of countries where the disease is not
endemic, with some signs that cases are rising from community
transmissions.
More than one thousand confirmed cases of monkeypox have now
been reported to WHO from 29 countries that are not endemic for
the disease. So far, no deaths have been reported in these countries,
WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus announced
at a briefing on June 8.
Majority of these cases have been discovered in men who have sex
with men, although the WHO noted that the disease was not solely
found in this demographic, with some cases now reported among women.