As another Lame Cherry exclusive in matter anti matter.
With the advent now of two new tick borne diseases in Missouri and Kansas, it is of the highest priority that the public is required to start pushing back against the regime and its conduits, to once again initiate the spraying of DDT in America to protect Americans, in the same way George W Bush began malaria control in Africa to protect Africans.......
The reality is the problem is not Chuck Schumer, Hillary Clinton or Steny Hoyer, but the problem is the very people you are trusting to protect you who are more rabid environmentalist than these problems above.
John the Pocket Tool Thune, senator of South Dakota, who is Mitch McConnell's chosen implement of the GOP is all for importation of Mexican wolves into the American desert just like border busters. This is your GOP in inaction progressing the Obama regime's scorched earth policy against Americans.....which now includes the growing of large dangerous predators to eat your food, eat your pets, eat your children and howl over your bones.
There was a reason Theodore Roosevelt and Franklin Delano Roosevelt implemented wholesale eradication of dangerous predators and complete drenching of citizens and lands with DDT. It was to protect Americans from disease and to give them life.
We need DDT sprayed throughout America to once again check this plague outbreak before more Americans perish.
Americans have the God given Constitutional Right to Warbex, 1080, Furadan, and DDT.
nuff said
agtG
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Friday that it’s working with Kansas officials to find any other cases. They’ve named the virus “Bourbon” after the county where the man lived.
The pathogen belongs to a group known as thogotoviruses. The Kansas man’s death is the first time a thogotovirus is known to have caused human illness in the U.S., and only the eighth time one is known to have caused symptoms in people, according to an article published Friday in the CDC’s Emerging Infectious Diseases journal.
Kansas officials said in December that they were investigating the virus with the CDC, and that it resembled other tick-borne illnesses.
Before he became sick, the man, who was more than 50 years old, was considered healthy, the CDC said in the report. CDC researchers identified the virus by looking for genetic traces in the man’s blood.
The recent discovery of Heartland virus in Missouri, also possibly linked to ticks, led the CDC to say that “that the public health burden of these pathogens has been underestimated.” Next-generation sequencing, a fairly new technology that can scan blood samples for many viruses or bacteria at once, will help health researchers make similar discoveries in the future, the CDC said.
To contact the reporter on this story: Anna Edney in Washington at aedney@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Crayton Harrison at tharrison5@bloomberg.net Drew Armstrong, Cecile Daurat