Outbreaks

Civil Defense Perspectives 34(2): March 2019

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), a disease outbreak is the occurrence of cases of disease in excess of what would normally be expected in a defined community, geographical area, or season. A single case of a communicable disease long absent, or caused by an agent not previously recognized in that area may also be reported as an outbreak.

Although measles was declared eradicated from the U.S. in 2000, there are dozens to hundreds of cases reported every year, generally attributed to travel from abroad. A peak of 667 cases in 2014 was followed by 188 in 2015 and 86 in 2015. In 2019, the 2014 peak has been surpassed. The last death in the U.S. attributed to measles occurred in 2015.

Why the nonstop news coverage? It appears to be related to the nationwide push to do away with exemptions from the nearly 70 injections of mandated school vaccines, except for narrowly defined medical exemptions. There is far less coverage of outbreaks that can’t be blamed on the tiny proportion of vaccine exemptors, or that result from an influx of unhealthy immigrants or from homeless drug addicts defecating in public.

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Green New Deal

Civil Defense Perspectives 34(1): January 2019 (published May 2019)

The new date for the Apocalypse has been set for 12 years, unless “we” take immediate drastic action. Schoolchildren are “striking” (skipping school) to urge governments to do something to save their futures.          

Former bartender, new Democratic Socialist congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (“AOC”) (D-N.Y.) crashed into the new Congress, holding a sit-in in Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office even before Congress  convened, to advocate the Green New Deal. Many Democrat candidates for President and dozens of congressmen have signed on. It calls for a “national, social, industrial and economic mobilization on a scale not seen since World War II” —with a “near total economic transformation.”

This would require generating 100% of power from “renewable” sources, “upgrading” all buildings for energy efficiency (cost to meet California requirements for an average home, $58,000), and replacing 260 million gasoline-powered cars with all-electric vehicles (or perhaps just junking them).

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