mada85
The Cosmic Force
Mystery deepens over cause of Suffolk bird flu outbreak
When I first read about this outbreak of bird flu in Suffolk, I thought something wasn't quite right. I wondered how the disease is being spread/transferred, and how an outbreak occurred in a poultry farm whose operators claim to have some of the best bio safety measures. Here's some thoughts on the latest article (link above).
All the above may well be just paranoia on my part, but if the pathocracy like to hide things in plain sight, then I think it's worth unpacking their statements to try and get at the truth.
When I first read about this outbreak of bird flu in Suffolk, I thought something wasn't quite right. I wondered how the disease is being spread/transferred, and how an outbreak occurred in a poultry farm whose operators claim to have some of the best bio safety measures. Here's some thoughts on the latest article (link above).
Has Sir David King just given the game away? Does he know for an absolute fact that the disease is not going to spread, and if so, how does he know? How difficult would it be to introduce bird flu to the Bernard Matthews farm? And what about the use of the word 'rendering'? Surely the authors don't mean kidnapped and sent to Staffordshire for torture as suspected terrorists? This next quote is also suggestive:Guardian Unlimited said:The government was last night investigating possible links between the discovery of H5N1 avian bird flu at a Bernard Matthews turkey farm in Suffolk and recent outbreaks of the disease in Hungary.
As the cause of the UK outbreak remained unclear, a team of 30 people continued to gas 159,000 turkeys on the Holton farm in Suffolk throughout the night. The government confirmed that the virus which was identified in one turkey shed on Friday was the same strain found last month in Hungary, where an outbreak among geese on a farm prompted the slaughter of thousands of birds.
[...]Mr Matthews owns Saga Foods, [Hungary's] largest poultry company.
A spokesman for Bernard Matthews said the two operations were connected only in terms of ownership. "All our birds are British. The fact that we have a Hungarian operation is immaterial. It is very unlikely. It's a complete mystery to us. We have the highest biosafety standards of anyone. We are waiting for Defra to finish its investigations and they will tell us the likely cause." He refused to comment on the possibility of a wild bird carrying the disease getting into the plant, but said there was no history of such an event.
[...]Last night, as the carcasses of the birds were shipped to Staffordshire for rendering, the government sought to play down health fears. Chief scientist Sir David King said: "I'm really confident this is not going to spread to other poultry holders."
Has Patricia Hewett given another piece of the game away? In the pathocrats' terms, 'preparing very, very seriously and thoroughly' would mean making sure 'they' are safe from the flu. Perhaps this outbreak is a test run to see if the disease can cross the species gap.Guardian Unlimited said:The government last night said it was monitoring the public health situation. Health secretary, Patricia Hewitt, said: "We are preparing very, very seriously and thoroughly for the possibility of a pandemic flu. It is a very remote risk, but if it did happen it could be very serious indeed."
It seems to me that this incident works very well for the pathocracy. There is now an 807 square mile restriction zone around the affected farm, the government is preparing for a flu pandemic, people are scared of bird flu, all of which serves to ratchet up the climate of fear. People acclimatise themselves to the idea of restriction zones and 'necessary measures'.Guardian Unlimited said:But mystery deepened over how the disease had got into what Bernard Matthews called "the most bio-secure" plant in Britain, with other turkey breeders and scientists discounting the theory that a wild bird had got into the closed plant.
"Nothing has given us any indication whatever that this event is linked directly to wild birds," said Lawrence Woodward, director of the Elm Farm Research Centre, who sits on the Defra committee of avian flu stakeholders. "The idea that a solitary bird carrying H5N1 is flying around East Anglia out of the migratory season and then falls down a ventilation shaft of the biggest poultry farm in Britain is just not viable," he said.
All the above may well be just paranoia on my part, but if the pathocracy like to hide things in plain sight, then I think it's worth unpacking their statements to try and get at the truth.