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Monkeypox: Truth vs Fearporn

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I keep getting asked the same question again and again; is this outbreak of monkeypox a real threat, or is this another case of overstated and weaponised public health messaging? I am going to save my answer to this question for the end of this article, wrote Dr. Robert Malone, and instead focus on what monkeypox is, the nature and characteristics of the associated disease, and what we know and don’t know.


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By Dr. Robert Malone

The monkeypox virus, which originates in various regions of Africa, is related to smallpox (Variola), which are both members of the genus Orthopoxvirus. However, it is important to understand that Variola (major or minor) is the species of virus which is responsible for the worst human disease caused by the Orthopox viruses. For example, cowpox, horsepox, and camelpox are also members of this genus, none of which are a major health threat to humans, and one of which (cowpox) has even been (historically) used as a smallpox vaccine. My point is that just because monkeypox is related to smallpox, this does not in any way mean that it represents a similar public health threat. Anyone who implies otherwise is basically engaged in or otherwise supporting weaponised public health-related propaganda. In other words, spreading public health fearporn.

Monkeypox was first identified in 1958 in colonies of monkeys, and the first human case of the virus was identified in 1970 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Most likely this was just the first case identified, as people living in Africa have been in contact with monkeys and the other monkeypox animal hosts for millennia. The “West African” monkeypox clade (clade = variant) circulating outside of Africa at this time causes a milder disease compared to the closely related virus found in other regions of Africa (Congo clade).   

The symptoms of monkeypox are somewhat similar to but much milder than smallpox disease. The general clinical presentation of the disease caused by the West African monkeypox clade virus involves Influenza-like symptoms — fever, body aches, chills — together with swollen lymph nodes. A rash on the palm of the hand is often observed. In the latter stage of the disease, which may last for up to a month or more in some cases, may involve small lesions which develop a crust, and which can result in a small depigmented scar. There is no evidence of asymptomatic transmission. In other words, current medical knowledge indicates that it is only spread by person to person contact between an uninfected individual and someone who already has symptoms of the disease. Therefore, disease spread can be readily controlled by classical public health interventions such as contact tracing, temporary quarantine of those who have had physical contact with someone who is infected, and longer-term quarantine of those who develop symptoms. Essentially all of the current cases in the west that we are seeing in the news are among men who have sex with men and appear to be due to close physical contact. monkeypox is endemic in many parts of Africa, and is a “zoonotic” virus, meaning it can be transmitted from a variety of animals (not just monkeys) to humans. Initial animal to human transmission followed by limited human to human transmission is probably the cause of the sporadic cases typically observed in Africa. Chickenpox, which is highly transmissible, is not part of the genus Orthopoxvirus, despite the name “pox.” Once again for emphasis, cowpox and camelpox are also in the genus Orthopoxvirus, and they are not particularly pathogenic when contracted by humans; just because monkeypox is a “pox” virus in the genus Orthopoxvirus, does not mean it is particularly deadly.

Monkeypox is a double-stranded DNA virus, which means that due to the double-stranded nature of DNA each of the two strands act as a “check” on the other during replication. As a consequence of this “error checking”, this and other DNA viruses mutate much more slowly than RNA viruses do. Over time, DNA virus genomes are relatively stable. This means that, unlike SARS-CoV-2 (Covid) or influenza, monkeypox is unlikely to rapidly evolve to escape either naturally acquired or vaccine-induced immunity. For the purposes of making a vaccine, this makes it a much easier target that, say, a rapidly evolving RNA Coronavirus such as SARS-CoV-2, the virus which causes Covid-19. Furthermore, from an immunological point of view, the various Orthopox viruses often are cross-protective. In other words, if you have been vaccinated with a smallpox vaccine, or previously infected by cowpox, camelpox, or monkeypox, you are highly likely to be quite resistant to disease caused by the monkeypox virus which is now being (quite rarely) reported in non-African countries.

Current data indicate that monkeypox is not very infectious in humans – it has a low Ro (perhaps below 1), which is the term used to describe how efficiently an infectious disease can spread from human to human. Again, this is super good news for containment. A Ro of <1 generally means that (even in the absence of social distancing or other containment measures), for every person already infected, on average less than one other person will become infected. For comparison purposes, the Omicron variants of SARS-CoV-2 have a Ro in the range of 7 to 10. A virus with a Ro of less than one can be easily contained with the standard public health methods discussed above. A virus with a Ro of 7-10 essentially cannot be contained and will rapidly spread throughout the world, as we have seen with the Omicron variants. In the case of a virus with a Ro around 1 or less, traditional infectious disease containment methods such as contact tracing, identification and isolation of infected individuals can be all that is needed to control the virus. Now the fact that monkeypox is being spread from human to human (rather than only arising from contact between a person and an infected animal) is not such good news, but since this transmission appears to be from very close contact, this means that it can be easily contained without resorting to a general population vaccination campaign. In this type of setting, if there is a significant outbreak, vaccination is often restricted to just the health care and/or first responder personnel most likely to be in contact with an infected person. Using a vaccine to help that containment via either “ring” vaccination or widespread vaccination strategies is generally unnecessary, and may even be counterproductive, depending on the safety of the vaccine – keeping in mind that no drug or vaccine is perfectly safe.

Let me take a moment to tell a personal story to illustrate this point. After the 9-11 events including the anthrax letters, I took a job involving clinical development of a wide range of biodefence vaccines under a US Department of Defence (DoD) contract (issued to Dynport Vaccine Company). One of the vaccine indications we worked on was for the prevention of smallpox. The Vice President of the United States at the time, Mr. Dick Cheney, was advocating for widespread vaccination against smallpox because it was thought that there was something like a 1% chance of a bioterror attack involving the reintroduction of smallpox into the United States. The existing live attenuated smallpox vaccine began to be deployed throughout the United States to healthcare workers and first responders. Then multiple reports of vaccine-caused damage began to circulate. I was tasked with looking into historic DoD smallpox vaccine campaign records concerning these types of “adverse events”. Adverse events after administration of this live attenuated vaccine were well known, and generally fell into two categories. In some cases, a small subset of young war fighters and recruits had some previously undetected immunologic defect which resulted in them developing an ongoing infection by the live attenuated vaccine virus that was being used at the time. The other group developed more subtle symptoms including what now appears to have been vaccination-associated myo- and pericarditis – typically ascribed to an autoimmune process. These problems were known risks back when smallpox vaccination was common (and smallpox had not been eradicated) and therefore no surprise when the same vaccine was redeployed in the present. But smallpox had been eradicated, and Mr. Cheney’s worst-case scenario never happened. Those who were vaccinated and damaged to protect against a non-existent threat provide a great example illustrating a completely upside-down risk-benefit ratio. All risk, no benefit. And, appropriately, the smallpox vaccination campaign was halted.

Key takeaway: this is not influenza or Covid – this virus mutates slowly, it is not highly infectious, naturally acquired immunity is potent and long-lasting, and Orthopox vaccines are usually cross-protective. The risk of immunologic escape is very, very low. And the spread of this virus can be readily stopped by simple, inexpensive classical public health measures. If it were otherwise, we would already have experienced a pandemic of monkeypox decades ago.

Monkeypox disease severity can vary with different clades (found in different regions in Africa, which also suggest the virus has been around for a very long time). Luckily, this particular clade is less severe and appears to be endemic in Africa. Unfortunately, it has rarely been studied and so relatively little is known about the virus and associated human disease, largely because the infectious threat to the general population is so low. STAT news’ journalist Helen Branswell has recently interviewed CDC experts, and published an excellent summary of the clinical presentation:

With one to three days of the onset of fever, a distinctive rash appears, often starting on the face. Many conditions can cause rashes but the monkeypox rash has some unusual features, notably the fact that vesicles can form on the palms of the hands. In countries where it is endemic, the virus is believed to mainly spread to people from infected animals when people kill or prepare bushmeat for consumption.

Once the virus jumps to people, human-to-human transmission can occur via respiratory droplets — virus-laced saliva that can infect the mucosal membranes of the eyes, nose, and throat — or by contact with monkeypox lesions or bodily fluids, with the virus entering through small cuts in the skin. It can also be transmitted by contact with clothing or linens contaminated with material from monkeypox lesions. (STAT News).

There was a prior outbreak of monkeypox in the United States during 2003. That particular outbreak, the first reported outside of Africa, was traced back to the importation of small mammals from Ghana. As shown by this outbreak, multiple animals can contract the disease – during that outbreak, giant pouched rats and squirrels tested positive for the virus and eventually spread it to prairie dogs being sold as pets in multiple Midwestern states (per the CDC). Forty-seven people caught the disease from the prairie dogs. This is important and relevant history, because the current outbreak appears to be occurring from human-to-human transmission, with no single individual traced as case zero. There have been a few other outbreaks outside of Africa over the years from travellers coming from Nigeria. It is currently thought that the monkeypox virus is much more common in Nigeria than has previously been reported.

There is a vaccine that was licensed in the U.S. in 2019 for people 18 years of age and older to protect against smallpox and monkeypox; Bavarian Nordic’s Jynneos. A second vaccine, ACAM2000 made by Emergent Product Development, protects against smallpox and is also thought to offer some protection against monkeypox. Both vaccines are licensed only for people considered at high risk of contracting the disease because they are not entirely safe.  In the 2003 monkeypox outbreak in the U.S., the smallpox vaccine was deployed to persons considered at high risk.

The U.S. already holds supplies of the vaccines in the Strategic National Stockpile, a hedge against public health emergencies. “To combat a smallpox emergency, the SNS holds enough smallpox vaccine to vaccinate the entire U.S. population. In addition, the SNS has antiviral drugs that can be deployed to treat smallpox infections, if needed,” a spokesperson for the Department of Health and Human Services said via email. In my opinion, the 119-million-dollar smallpox vaccine purchase which was just authorised by the US HHS and Biden administration represents an unnecessary and unwarranted expense, unless there are data showing that the current strain is significantly different from the historic predecessor strains within this clade.

The WHO’s Van Kerkhove noted that some of these products have been licensed using what is known as the animal rule, where animal efficacy data are used as a surrogate because the lack of circulating smallpox means the vaccines or drugs can’t be tested for efficacy in people. As a result, any such product could only be used in the context of a clinical trial, she said.

“There are options. We just have to make sure that they’re used appropriately. One of the things related to vaccines is we want to make sure if the vaccines are needed and used, they’re used among populations that need them the most. There’s not ample supply of anything right now,” she said.

Still, she expressed confidence the outbreak can be controlled.

“What we need to do right now is focus on stopping the spread. And we can do that. We can do that with the appropriate messaging, with the appropriate testing … with supportive isolation and clinical care as necessary, with protecting health workers,” Van Kerkhove said. (STAT News).

The Bill Gates-funded organisation GAVI has provided their assessment of the medical threat posed by monkeypox, which can be found HERE. Many readers of this Substack will not be surprised by my assessment that this GAVI threat assessment is highly biased towards overstatement. For example, the article seeks to create parallels between monkeypox and Ebola:

Similar to viruses like Ebola, transmission only happens in close proximity by contact with lesions, body fluids, respiratory droplets or contaminated materials such as bedding or clothes.

The article also states the following pants-on-fire disinformation;

Although symptoms often ease within a month, one in ten cases can be fatal. Children are particularly susceptible.

Factcheck determination by qualified subject matter expert

This assertion represents a very biased interpretation of a data report from the World Health Organisation:

In 2020, the World Health Organisation (WHO) reported 4,594 suspected cases of monkeypox, including 171 deaths (case fatality ratio 3.7%). They are described as suspected because confirmation requires PCR testing, which is not easily available in endemic areas.

Those readers who have become sensitised to this type of information manipulation and weaponisation will immediately notice two key things about this comment. First, the reported mortality of 3.7% (NOT 10%) of cases is from suspected, not confirmed cases. Secondly, this type of sampling is highly biased towards more severe disease – countries rarely will detect and do not report cases of mild disease to the WHO.

So, is the biothreat real? Is it imminent? Does it justify the global media hype? As I was waiting in an airport lounge to travel from the USA to the UK two days ago, I saw a newsreel from CNN which was breathlessly reporting on this “threat” while displaying historic images of patients suffering from smallpox disease. This provides a classical example of public health fearporn, in my opinion, and CNN should be reprimanded for broadcasting irresponsible propaganda – misinformation and disinformation- under the guise of journalism.

In my opinion, based on currently available information, monkeypox is a virus and disease which is endemic in Africa, emerges sporadically after transmission into humans from animal hosts, and is typically spread by close human contact. It is readily controlled by classical public health measures. It does not have a high mortality rate. Unless there has been some genetic alteration, either through evolution or intentional genetic manipulation, it is not a significant biothreat, and has never been considered a high threat pathogen in the past.

So, stop the fear-mongering, misinformation and disinformation.

Read other articles by Dr. Robert Malone on his Substack HERE.

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1 year ago

[…] Source link […]

GundelP
GundelP
1 year ago

Any proof for that Rhoda? Who and when isolated the the virus of small pox??? What was the exact method of isolations, ‘please find it and publish for discussion.

Till then and according to historical notes smallpox came with bedbugs, never jumped from person to person, but ‘infected’ full families who had so many bed bugs that they almost carried the beds….

GundelP
GundelP
Reply to  GundelP
1 year ago

Quotes
This child, although living in the same room with the patients at the Pest House, had not acquired the smallpox, after being exposed to it all of the time for a period of six weeks; yet upon the fifth day after returning home, this child acquired the initial fever. I then examined their house and found it to be literally alive with bedbugs.”—CHARLES A. R. CAMPBELL, M. D.

“Assuming that bedbugs are the only diffusing agents of this loathsome disease, then our present knowledge of its being “air-borne,” or of its being transmitted by fomites, must be all wrong, therefore the principal work here mentioned is the demonstration of its non-contagiousness by means of clothing, bedding, hangings –in short, fomites……..Anita H., a Mexican child, four years of age, never vaccinated and who had never had the disease, was taken to the pest house, where she took a baby out of the crib and played with it about four hours, hugging and kissing it and riding it in a perambulator around the grounds; but, although this baby was covered with pustules of smallpox, and although we took no precautions whatever (the girl’s mother having agreed to this experiment), the girl did not acquire the disease.  P. H., a Mexican, vaccinated in infancy, who freely mingled with the smallpox patients in the discharge of his duties as night watchman at the pest house, keeping up the fires and remaining all night, did not contract the disease.  A. C., decidedly strumous, never vaccinated nor had the smallpox, freely mingled with smallpox patients in all of the stages, playing cards with them, eating and sleeping in the infected tents, and has continued to do so for more than two years.”—CHARLES A. R. CAMPBELL, M. D.”

GundelP
GundelP
1 year ago

By the way – and have a look at the photos on Daily Mail (or google’s) – this news was published in MAY 2021:

Syphilis explosion in Melbourne as horrific sexual disease spreads rapidly among women and case numbers soar – here’s the list of suburbs most at risk”
What was the start of the covid vax in Melbourne?

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9589807/Syphilis-explosion-Melbourne-number-cases-spike-1400-one-year.html

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1 year ago

[…] Source link Author Rhoda Wilson […]

mcc
mcc
1 year ago

what happened to my comment of a few minutes ago, it disappeared

mcc
mcc
Reply to  Rhoda Wilson
1 year ago

Many thanks. Here it is again or words to that effect.
Whether there is a real threat whether monkeypox or any other disease won’t matter any more: from this week the world can be plunged into into medical tyranny at any time now that the World Health Amendments are on the point of being agreed. It gives Tedros the power to do this on merely subjective grounds.
They even added a section (Chapter IV) on an Orwellian Compliance Committee, to oversee forcible imposition of their measures: Shanghai style lockdowns here we come.
Not only will Tedros be able to decide what is a health emergency (climate change, wild weather, say) but it will be enforceable, so presumably UN troops.
Another comment to follow giving a link to the website OffGuardian, showing the 7 steps by which this might be done.

mcc
mcc
Reply to  mcc
1 year ago
KarlM Alias
KarlM Alias
1 year ago

I wonder how many of the infected had already been jabbed? This looks like a classic case of genetic transfer therapy related acquired immune deficiency.

geraldina07
geraldina07
1 year ago

Whatever the facts “it’s going to happen and it’s already underway”, why??

Because the British Branch of the Cabal have a ‘live section’ up and running already with a ‘scary picture’ of ‘the virus’….

https://www.bbc.com/news/live/health-61552254

It’s already begun, give it 6 weeks and they’ll be locking down again.

geraldina07
geraldina07
Reply to  geraldina07
1 year ago

And here we go – the UK with a quarter of the worlds cases – leading the way, get the popcorn in for this one,

  1. More than 80 cases of monkeypox have now been confirmed outside Africa – in Europe, the US, Canada and Australia

In the UK, 21 people have now been confirmed to have monkeypox. Up until today, all those cases were in England.

geraldina07
geraldina07
Reply to  Rhoda Wilson
1 year ago

Well just follow the link and see some of the ‘highlights’ – it reads Exactly the same as Covid19 in terms of the rhetoric, and it’s as if it had been here for quite some time judging by some of the comments already coming out of the WHO…..

  1. UK PM Boris Johnson says that so far the consequences “don’t seem to be very serious but it’s important that we keep an eye on it”
  2. World Health Organization experts say the outbreak can be contained and they do not have evidence the virus has mutated
  3. Anyone at the highest risk of having caught monkeypox should isolate for 21 days, says official UK guidance
  • Denmark and Scotland have recorded their first cases of monkeypox, meaning it’s now been found in 16 countries outside Africa, including Spain, Portugal, the US and Australia
  1. The number of confirmed monkeypox cases in the UK has risen to 57, with an additional 36 cases reported in England
  2. More than 100 cases have now been confirmed outside Africa – in Europe, the US, Canada and Australia

One possibility is that the virus has changed in some way, although currently there is little evidence to suggest this is a new variant.
Another explanation is that the virus has found itself in the right place at the right time to thrive.

THEIR PARTY IS ALREADY IN FULL-SWING – BE SURE NOT TO MISS OUT BY KEEPING AN EYE ON THE BBC WEBSITE. oh yeahhhh baybeeee!!!!

They are already spinning the headlines:

This is the summary point:

‘Formidable’ challenges as monkeypox spreads – WHO

The warning by the UN health agency’s chief comes amid an unusual monkeypox outbreak outside Africa.

Reads in the Article as:

World faces big challenges over Covid, monkeypox and wars – WHO

So you just know by the spinning of the headline – THEY WANT THEIR GLOBAL PANDEMIC – question is now: how long before the WHO classify it as such?? How did the Pandemic treaty go yesterday, see – they’ve already shifted your focus on that havent they!!!

https://www.bbc.com/news/health-61546199

Last edited 1 year ago by geraldina07
Rabbitnexus
Rabbitnexus
Reply to  Rhoda Wilson
1 year ago

No, as their plans called for, it began in 10 places. It is now well over that. Absolute garbage. I guess this one will be even more preposterous than COVID. A lot of sheep are dumber than ever now and they’re the real workers in these things. They stampede a bunch of cretins and they carry the day for their lies.

Rabbitnexus
Rabbitnexus
Reply to  geraldina07
1 year ago

Less than six weeks. They want to ramp up the fear factor and asserting a more rapid response than for COVID is necessary will be the order of the day. That allegedly “slow response” to COVID has been their favourite schtick already for a while. I’ll not be surprised if they start stopping travel in days or a week or 2.

geraldina07
geraldina07
Reply to  Rabbitnexus
1 year ago

They were already mentioning ‘travel bans’ – at first they say ‘no plans for [insert here]”, but that’s just to test the waters – as we have seen throughout the scamdemic – you get to pick up on their methodology if you’ve got half-a-clout!

Dreamhouse
Dreamhouse
1 year ago
Big Bear
Big Bear
1 year ago

Is it just a coincidence that these new covid “vaccines” contain monkey kidney cells and now all of a sudden there is an outbreak of monkey pox? What a coincidence.

Rabbitnexus
Rabbitnexus
Reply to  Big Bear
1 year ago

That’s the kind of pseudo science we’re being subjected to. I think non-scientists should not be making such silly speculations. There is NO reason why there’s any relation between the two. The name Monkey doesn’t equate to a connection.

geraldina07
geraldina07
Reply to  Rabbitnexus
1 year ago

It’s a fair proposition, the ‘experts’ cannot be trusted at all – treat them with a pinch of salt.

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1 year ago

[…] Read More: Monkeypox: Truth vs Fearporn […]

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1 year ago

[…] Read More: Monkeypox: Truth vs Fearporn […]

Rabbitnexus
Rabbitnexus
1 year ago

None of which will play any part in the recommendations from the WHO or the worthless goons we have in governments, everywhere.

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1 year ago

[…] week ago, Dr. Robert Malone wrote an article stating “what we do know” about monkeypox. Today he has published an […]

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1 year ago

[…] week ago, Dr. Robert Malone wrote an article stating “what we do know” about monkeypox. Today he has published an […]

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1 year ago

[…] week ago, Dr. Robert Malone wrote an article stating “what we do know” about monkeypox. Today he has published an […]

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1 year ago

[…] week ago, Dr. Robert Malone wrote an article stating “what we do know” about monkeypox. Today he has published an […]