The
following is an interesting commentary about an article
on the 1918-1920 pandemic, which the propaganda says was
caused by Spanish flu (Irish Examiner, May 1).
It took a British science team to identify the first virus
in man in 1933, yet propaganda says that the virus of Spanish
flu killed millions of civilians and soldiers during the pandemic
from 1918 to 1920.
Many would have us believe that all those American soldiers
who died from non-combatant causes died from Spanish flu.
However, U.S. Army records show that seven men died after
being vaccinated.
Further, according to a report from U.S. Secretary of War
Henry L Stimson, the deaths were not only verified but also
there had been 63 deaths and 28,585 cases of hepatitis reported
as a direct result of yellow fever vaccination during only
six months of the war.
Plus, the yellow fever vaccination was only one of the 14
to 25 shots given to recruits.
After vaccination became a requirement in the U.S. Army in
1911, cases of typhoid and vaccinal diseases increased rapidly,
according to Army records. The death rate from typhoid reached
the highest point in the history of the U.S. Army after America
entered the war in 1917.
In 1917, 19,608 men were admitted into army hospitals due
to anti-typhoid inoculation and vaccinia, according to a report
of the Surgeon-General of the U.S. Army; and this doesn’t
take into account others whose symptoms were attributed to
other causes.
The army doctors knew all these cases of disease and death
were due to vaccination and were honest enough to admit it
in their medical reports.
Army doctors tried to suppress the symptoms of typhoid with
a stronger vaccine, however it caused a worse form of typhoid,
paratyphoid.
They then concocted an even stronger vaccine to suppress
the previous one and created an even worse disease--Spanish
flu.
After the war, this was one of the vaccines used to protect
a panic-stricken world from the soldiers returning from WWI
battlefronts infected with dangerous diseases.
The rest is history.
Irish
Examiner.com May 8, 2003