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Ebola Outbreak, Black Death "Plague" Very Similar Viruses


UNEEK
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Experts: Ebola Outbreak, Black Death 'Plague' Spread From Africa as Viruses

 

Most assume that Black Death quickly ravaged the fourteenth century western world was a bacterial bubonic plague epidemic caused by flea bites and spread by rats.  But the Black Death killed a high proportion of Scandinavians -- and where they lived was too cold for fleas to survive.

 

A modern work gives us a clue into this mystery. The “Biology of Plagues” published by Cambridge University Press analyzed 2,500 years of plagues and concluded that the Black Death was caused by a viral hemorrhagic fever pandemic similar to Ebola

 

 If this view is correct, the future medical and economic impacts from Ebola have been vastly underestimated.   

 

Authors Dr. Susan Scott, a demographer, and Dr. Christopher J. Duncan, a zoologist at the University of Liverpool point out that the Bible used the term “plague” to describe a catchall of afflictions resulting from divine displeasure. 

 

The researchers analyzed the “Four Ages of Plague”, including “Plague of Athens” from 430 to 427 BC that killed about a third of the city; “Plague of Justinian” from 542 to 592 AD and killed 10,000 a day in Constantinople; Black Plague from 1337 to 1340 AD that killed a third of Eurasia; and a series of plague outbreaks in Europe from 1350 to 1670 that killed about half a number of city populations.

 

Historical records of the Athenian plague paint a very similar picture to the Black Death and the accelerating Ebola pandemic.  Like Ebola, the plague is believed to have originated in Africa and then travelled northward. 

 

Athenians suffered a sudden onset of severe headache, inflamed eyes, and bleeding in their mouths and throats.  The next symptoms were coughing, sneezing, and chest pains; followed by stomach cramps, intensive vomiting and diarrhea, and unquenchable thirst.

 

 With flushed skin burning from fever and open sores, 50 to 90 percent died in the second week of symptoms.  Desperate to cool off, contagious victims may have transmitted the disease to other humans by jumping into public cisterns and watering troughs.

 

Th bubonic plague was first recorded in China about 37 AD and still is a worldwide public health problem, with thousands of cases each year.  The most recent outbreak occurred in the Chinese city of Yumen on July 22, 2014, where a man died after handling a dead marmot.  The Chinese military responded by quarantining 30,000 local residents.

 

The first symptom of bubonic plague is a mild and non-alarming fever.  But bubonic swellings follow within a few days.  Sufferers either go into a deep coma or become violently delirious, paranoid and suicidal. 

 

Most victims die within a few days.  Recovery is almost certain for those whose “buboes”, sores lymph glands, fill with pus.  But before antibiotics, the appearance of black blisters was considered a sign of imminent death.

 

Bubonic plague is very seldom spread from person to person.  The disease needs a rodent population, usually rats, to carry fleas to spread the infection to humans.  Once the local rats die out from the infection, human infections tend to tail off. 

 

For the 2011 book, “The Black Death in London”, author Barney Sloane, an archaeologist who worked on medieval sites for the Museum of London and is now attached to English Heritage, documents the 1348-49 epidemic that killed two thirds of the city could not have been bubonic plague, because “The evidence just isn't there to support it.” 

 

“We ought to be finding great heaps of dead rats in all the waterfront sites but they just aren't there.  And all the evidence I've looked at suggests the plague spread too fast for the traditional explanation of transmission by rats and fleas.  It has to be person to person – there just isn't time for the rats to be spreading it.” 

 

The World Bank just estimated the cost of Ebola in West Africa is $32 billion over the next two years as it spreads from Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone to its larger neighbors. 

 

This estimate assumes that the Ebola hemorrhagic fever can only be transmitted by direct human to human contact with bodily fluids. 

 

But The United States Center for Disease Control (CDC) in June 30, 1995 published  guidelines (44(25);475-479) for managing patients with suspected viral hemorrhagic fever, including “Lassa, Marburg, Ebola, and Congo-Crimean hemorrhagic fever” to prevent hospital acquired “nosocomial transmission”. 

 

According to the CDC:

“Epidemiologic studies of VHF in humans indicate that infection is not readily transmitted from person to person by the airborne route.”  

 

Although airborne transmission “is considered a possibility only in rare instances from persons with advanced stages of disease (e.g., one patient with Lassa fever who had extensive pulmonary involvement may have transmitted infection by the airborne route).

 

In contrast, investigation of VHF in nonhuman primates (i.e., monkeys) has suggested possible airborne spread among these species.”

 

On October 2, 2014, the CDC published Ebola Virus Disease: Transmission, stating: “Ebola is not spread through the air or by water”.  The CDC states “Only mammals have shown the ability to become infected with and spread Ebola virus.” 

 

They suggest “humans, bats, monkeys, and apes” as transmitters.  But this mammal to mammal theory should concern Americans, since 18.6 billion rats are the most populous mammal and six cities with the largest rat populations on earth are in the U.S; including: 1) New York; 2) Boston; 3) Baltimore; 4) Chicago; 5) New Orleans; and 6) Atlanta.

 

Senator and ophthalmologist Rand Paul warns that US officials are underestimating the danger posed by Ebola, because, “This could get beyond our control.” 

 

The World Health Organization agrees “There is no evidence that the EVD [Ebola] epidemic in West Africa is being brought under control.” 

 

The WHO’s current “Ebola count” is 8,033 cases and 3,865 deaths from Guinea, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Congo, Spain and United States. 

 

 Australia, Germany and Turkey just reported new cases and some authoritarian nations may be suppressing disclosure of Ebola cases.    

   

A pandemic is “an epidemic (a sudden outbreak) that becomes very widespread and affects a whole region, a continent, or the world due to a susceptible population.”  True pandemics cause a high degree of mortality”, like the Black Death and Ebola outbreak.

 

The probable logic behind President Obama not closing U.S. airports to travelers from Ebola-ravaged countries is that with the death of first U.S. Ebola patient and numerous cities reporting potential cases, the U.S. risks becoming an “Ebola-ravaged” nation.

 

http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2014/10/09/Risks-Rise-Ebola-Pandemic-is-Same-Virus-as-the-Black-Death

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Uneek :)

 

Thank you.. I have been reading about collidal silver to combat this and intravernous Vitamin C.. I am buying EmergenC and drinking it 3 - 4 packages a day.. I have used EmergenC for common cold and it helps me.  Also essential oil will be good.. I like Young Living Thieves and Immupower, lavender, clove = penniccillin.. we need to take care of ourselves because they can't make the vaccine fast enough 

 

Here is recipe to make Thieves : the original Thieves doesn't have lavender 

 

Lavender Thieves 

 

45 drops clove essential oil

35 drops lemon essential oil

25 drops eucalyptus essential oil

20 drops cinnamon essential oil

15 drops lavender essential oil

10 drops rosemary essential oil

 

Combine all ingredients and store in 15 ml glass bottle 

 

Try to use organic essential oils.  I am checking a couple sites where I can buy bulk

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2nd health worker in Dallas confirmed with Ebola. She flew to Cleveland in the weekend and got diagnosed yesterday.  There are 3 contacts from her symptoms to diagnose.  CDC and Frontier Airlines Flight # 1442 and 1443 are notifying passengers and will monitor closely those who considered high risk.

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Thanks for the recipe Nadita -- I am very much a believer, supporter, and user of essential oils -- for years now -  I even have my own blend that I  made & sold to my massage clients for pain -   the oils are very expensive  but lol  so is everything these days -- 

 

I do not take the flu shots - and I WILL NOT - grape seed extract is an herbal antibiotic and is great -  modern mans medicine is okay in moderation but do have major concerns of side effects

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Just wanted to clarify in this thread  :)  I am an essential oil user and I have been using Young Living brand since 2001 and I was introduced to Young Living by my renters.  I am not claiming that essential oil will CURE Ebola but we can be vigilant and look at any options we can to help ourselves.  Even with collidal silver and vitamin C.. we know Vitamin C is good for cold so we can beef up our immune system with anything we can such as echinacea etc.  

 

Please I am not promoting anything but this is for INFORMATION ONLY.  My goal is to give you the information and at your own discretion, you can listen to it or throw it to the trash can.. either way, won't hurt me  :)  


 

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