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So, this has been in the USA since the 1800's and we don't have a treatment and it kills 1/3 of those infected. Sounds like maybe it would be worth researching more?

Archive: https://archive.today/mPv20

From the post:

>Residents in a Massachusetts town are being urged not to leave their homes after dark due to the spread of a deadly mosquito-borne virus. The Board of Health in Oxford, a city of 13,300 people about 50 miles southwest of Boston, has set an outdoor curfew in hopes it will reduce the chances of people being bitten by mosquitoes which carry Eastern Equine Encephalitis (EEE). It comes after a resident was the first human to contract the rare and untreatable illness - known as 'Triple E' - domestically in nearly four years.

So, this has been in the USA since the 1800's and we don't have a treatment and it kills 1/3 of those infected. Sounds like maybe it would be worth researching more? Archive: https://archive.today/mPv20 From the post: >>Residents in a Massachusetts town are being urged not to leave their homes after dark due to the spread of a deadly mosquito-borne virus. The Board of Health in Oxford, a city of 13,300 people about 50 miles southwest of Boston, has set an outdoor curfew in hopes it will reduce the chances of people being bitten by mosquitoes which carry Eastern Equine Encephalitis (EEE). It comes after a resident was the first human to contract the rare and untreatable illness - known as 'Triple E' - domestically in nearly four years.

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt (edited )

If it's been around (known about) for going on 200 years and there haven't been any massive outbreaks of this particular disease, that would tend to indicate that it's ability to infect humans is very poor. Although, with so many people having fucked immune systems from taking the death jabs, the number of people who become infected with diseases that have always been around, but typically don't bother humans will likely increase. If it has a 33% mortality rate, that would tend to suggest that it's not going to be a likely pandemic type disease. Diseases that kill the host don't tend to spread well.

Chances are, if you didn't take the death jab, and you don't have an otherwise fucked immune system (you're not a ham planet and you aren't undergoing chemo for cancer), then you'll be fine. It's just yet more fear mongering from the government. They impose a voluntary lockdown after ONE person was infected? The first thing I'd want to know is the full medical history of that one person, are they an otherwise healthy person, or are they someone who is basically already on death's door and just waiting for a nudge from anything.

They need to find something starting with R to add to the front of the acronym, so it's REEE!