As documented in October of 2024, symptoms of Bird Flu are short-lived, averaging only 4 days, including conjunctivitis in most cases (93 percent), respiratory symptoms (36 percent), other household contacts only 3 percent test positive, meaning human-to-human spread is rare. If you don’t work with poultry directly, you basically have nothing to worry about anyway.
However, if Fauci has funded gain-of-function research on Bird Flu, his insidious scientists may have designed some strains of Bird Flu that CAN easily be communicated to humans, and jump from human-to-human, just like they did with Covid-19. This would not surprise the natural health community of the world, as we all know the truth about the plandemic now, and the origins of it all from the Wuhan Lab and the NIH funding they received thanks to Fauci.
After a 4-year hiatus, the U.S. government has given the green light to restart controversial "gain of function" (GOF) experiments on bird flu, reigniting a heated debate over the risks and benefits of such research. These experiments, which alter the virulence and transmissibility of pathogens, were initially paused in 2014 due to fears they could lead to the creation of novel influenza strains capable of causing pandemics.
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has now lifted the funding pause and approved two key projects, led by researchers Yoshihiro Kawaoka and Ron Fouchier. The projects, which were at the center of the original controversy in 2014, involve identifying mutations in bird flu strains that could enhance their ability to spread between mammals and increase their virulence.
Despite passing a new U.S. review process, concerns over safety and transparency have been reignited. Critics argue that the details of the HHS panel's decision-making process should be made public, citing the need for greater transparency in evaluating the risks and benefits of such research.
Michael Imperiale, a researcher who has taken a balanced stance in the debate, finds the safety conditions imposed on Kawaoka's project reassuring. However, others like Thomas Inglesby of the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security and Richard Ebright of Rutgers University maintain that the lack of openness is "disturbing" and "indefensible."
As the experiments are poised to resume, the scientific community remains divided, with ongoing discussions about the ethical acceptability of GOF research and the potential consequences of any accidents. The next steps will be closely monitored by the NIH and the HHS, with reporting requirements in place to ensure transparency and safety.
With federal biocontainment labs facing a series of accidents in recent years, the stakes are high as researchers and policymakers grapple with the balance between advancing scientific knowledge and mitigating potential risks.
The virus primarily spreads through respiratory droplets and contaminated surfaces, similar to the common cold. While there have been no instances of human-to-human transmission, farmers in close contact with infected dairy cows have been the primary carriers.
Symptoms of bird flu include conjunctivitis, or pink eye, which has been a consistent indicator in all confirmed cases. Other symptoms mirror those of the common flu, such as fever, cough, and muscle aches. The virus is not bloodborne and is not transmitted through properly pasteurized milk or cooked meat.
Bookmark plague.info to your favorite independent websites for updates on new gain-of-function Bird Flu virus the globalists have already warned us will be released on January 21st, as soon as Trump starts cleaning out the parasites from the DC swamp. #BirdFluPsyop
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