First published at 07:45 UTC on December 3rd, 2021.
THE DISEASE WHICH KILLED SO MANY WAS NOT FLU OR A VIRUS. IT WAS BACTERIAL.
June 4, 1918, an 'experimental' bacterial meningitis vaccine cultured in horses by
#Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in New York was injected into soldier…
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THE DISEASE WHICH KILLED SO MANY WAS NOT FLU OR A VIRUS. IT WAS BACTERIAL.
June 4, 1918, an 'experimental' bacterial meningitis vaccine cultured in horses by
#Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in New York was injected into soldiers at Fort Riley.
they sent the antimeningococcic serum to England, France, Belgium, Italy and other countries, helping spread the epidemic worldwide.
https://vaccineimpact.com/2018/did-military-experimental-vaccine-in-1918-kill-50-100-million-people-blamed-as-spanish-flu/?
fbclid=IwAR0dfnF4caXe27yQMuKp-Jmt8-1Vk125L05xzSMQ6hk4PQJxIe18dv-qRbE
In the 68 higher-quality autopsy series, in which the possibility of unreported negative cultures could be excluded, 92.7% of autopsy lung cultures were positive for =1 bacterium. … in one study of approximately 9000 subjects who were followed from clinical presentation with influenza to resolution or autopsy, researchers obtained, with sterile technique, cultures of either pneumococci or streptococci from 164 of 167 lung tissue samples.
There were 89 pure cultures of pneumococci; 19 cultures from which only streptococci were recovered; 34 that yielded mixtures of pneumococci and/or streptococci; 22 that yielded a mixture of pneumococci, streptococci, and other organisms (prominently pneumococci and nonhemolytic streptococci); and 3 that yielded nonhemolytic streptococci alone. There were no negative lung culture results.” (3)
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2599911/
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