Anonymous ID: 878fd9 Feb. 29, 2020, 6:06 p.m. No.8288131   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>8287951

>>8287982

I meant MY SAUCE. I was wrong (it was Bird flu with millions predicted but ZERO DEATHS in US), but this is pretty close, and involves someone we know and love; one Sharyl Atkisson.

 

"But Attkisson’s investigation revealed a very different picture right from her first contact with individual states. She explains:

 

“Across the country, state by state, they were testing [for H1N1] until CDC told them not to bother. They were testing, in general, the cases most likely to be believed to have been swine flu based on a doctor’s diagnosis of symptoms and risk factors such as travel to Mexico.

 

These special cases were going to state labs for absolute confirmation with the best test – not the so-called “rapid testing,” but the real confirmation test.

 

Of those presumed likely swine flu cases out of approximately every hundred of what was tested, only a small fraction were actually swine flu. In every instance, perhaps the biggest number of cases that were swine flu was something like 30%. The smallest number was something like 2% or 3%.

 

Maybe there’s one state where it was just 1%.

 

The point is, of the vast majority of the presumed swine flu cases recognized by trained physicians, the vast majority were not flu at all. They weren’t swine flu or regular flu; they were some other sort of upper respiratory infection.”

 

And here is the clincher that it seems the CDC just doesn’t want the American public to know …

 

“The CDC explained that one of the reasons they quit counting was because of all the flu that’s out there, most are swine flu. Well, that’s true. Most of the flu that was out there was indeed swine flu, but they failed to say that most of the suspected flu was nothing at all. And I think that’s the caveat the public just didn’t know,” Attkisson explains.

 

She gives even more striking examples of the numbers the investigative report revealed. For instance:

 

In Florida, 83 percent of specimens that were presumed to be swine flu were negative for all flu when tested!

In California, 86 percent of suspected H1N1 specimens were not swine flu or any flu; only 2 percent were confirmed swine flu.

In Alaska, 93 percent of suspected swine flu specimens were negative for all flu types; only 1 percent was H1N1 flu."

https://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2009/11/24/Superstar-CBS-Reporter-Blows-the-Lid-Off-the-Swine-Flu-Media-Hype-and-Hysteria.aspx.