Governments aren't telling people
the truth about bird flu preparation
Posted Thursday, March 31, 2005 by Mike Adams at newstarget.com
We've heard some very interesting news recently that countries
are stocking up on a bird flu vaccine. And yet the very newspapers
in which we see these headlines say the vaccine is currently
being beta-tested on small groups of people. I'm curious how
countries are stocking up on a vaccine that hasn't even gone
through testing yet. Clearly this vaccine isn't in production.
How can countries be stockpiling the vaccine if it isn't being
produced?
While I think these stockpile rumors are simply state lies
intended to calm people down, I know that some countries actually
are stocking up on Tamiflu, which is an antiviral prescription
drug. But Tamiflu will be all but useless if an outbreak occurs.
Not because it doesn't work – it actually does have
antiviral properties – but because you have to take
a Tamiflu pill every day. Thus, if you have 100,000 pills
you can really only treat 1,000 people for 100 days. Clearly
you would need hundreds of millions of these pills if you
were planning on treating the entire U.S. population in some
kind of avian bird flu outbreak. Also, Tamiflu isn't necessarily
effective against the H5N1 bird flu virus. It wasn't designed
for that. It's been around for a long time as a basic antiviral
drug, but in my research I've found that there are many other
antiviral herbs and substances that are far more powerful
than Tamiflu, that don't require a prescription and are much
more affordable.
For example, I did a report on a product from Jenny Lee Naturals
called "AV," which stands for antiviral. It's made
of the 12 most powerful antiviral herbs, all put together
in one tincture. I've also created a free report called "Beat
the Bird Flu virus" that lists the top antiviral vitamins,
minerals, nutritional supplements, medicinal herbs, amino
acids and products. The report is available as a free download
on www.truthpublishing.com.
So if there is an outbreak of the bird flu virus, the solution
is readily available if people would just get the right information.
That information should include knowledge about the antiviral
properties of these medicinal herbs and supplements. But of
course, the public won't ever be told that. They'll be told
there's no vaccine and that Tamiflu has run out. This will
likely create a sort of panic or even a run on antiviral prescription
drugs. Of course, once again, people in the know aren't going
to be concerned about that because they'll be stocking up
on elderberry extract and boosting their immune systems by
taking herbs like astragalus, aloe vera, St. John's Wort,
lemon balm herb and many others that have powerful antiviral
properties.
My impression of the statements from governments around the
world on bird flu is that they are basically designed to calm
people down and are largely false statements. I fail to see
how any country can be stocking up on a vaccine that doesn't
even exist. And those who say they're stockpiling Tamiflu
can't possibly have enough Tamiflu to treat any reasonable
percentage of the population for very long. They would run
out in less than a month, leaving everybody on their own.
So, as usual, when it comes to your health, you can forget
getting any good information from public sources.
You have to take your health into your own hands and be responsible
for your own health outcome, which means educating yourself.
The best way to do that is to subscribe to this website. Enter
your email in the form on the top left and you'll get an update
from me with new feature articles on a regular basis. Your
email address will be protected, and it will never be sold
or rented. You won't receive any spam at that email address,
but you will receive news about the bird flu, especially if
we start to see an outbreak.
Even now, we're seeing symptomless bird flu carriers in Vietnam.
This is particularly frightening to observers of the situation,
because now we're finding out that people can carry the bird
flu virus and not show any symptoms, which means they could
be stealth carriers and unknowingly transmit the virus to
others. Obviously this means that lots of people could be
picking up the bird flu virus from those individual carriers
if it becomes transmittable between humans. In this scenario,
it would be very difficult for the CDC or the World Health
Organization to track the origins of that particular outbreak.
Currently H5N1 has not mutated into a human-transmittable
form, but that is expected to take place at some unpredictable
time in the future, and at that point, symptomless carriers
of the virus could become a real problem.
Essentially, the bird flu situation looks to be getting worse.
We're seeing more infections in Vietnam and symptomless carriers,
and countries are doing little to actually prepare for the
virus. They have plans in place and claim to be stockpiling
a vaccine that doesn't even exist. The only thing they are
really stockpiling is Tamiflu, which is not very effective
against H5N1 and will be in short supply if an outbreak actually
occurs.