Some of us are still wondering why, all of a sudden, bird flu has dropped from headlines and is no longer infecting human beings in the United States. Now, the University of Nebraska has asked the same question and given us all an answer.
The simple answer given was: Cases have gone down, but experts warn that it hasn’t disappeared.
Accoridng to the report by UNMC (University of Nebraska Medical Center), nearly as quickly as bird flu took hold in daily conversations, it disappeared from them and most people’s thoughts—making it easy for the public to think avian influenza’s threat had waned. Far from it, experts say. “The flu is still there, and we just don’t know enough about it,” says Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at the University of Saskatchewan.
Usually, though, the easily panicked masses cannot be bothered to care about or fear something unless the mainstream media tells them to. So, for all intents and purposes, the bird flu has disappeared, much like the seasonal flu did during the COVID-19 scamdemic.
They Admit It: The Flu Has Disappeared Now That COVID Is Here
Other than that, no real explanation was given for why the bird flu has been dropped from the headlines. While UNMC didn’t give a reasonable answer, it did link to an article by Scientific American, which claimed that even though the bird flu has evaporated from media outlets, it’s still circulating.
While some have suggested it’s waning on its own, the medical “experts” say not to accept that answer. “There has been this wishful thinking that it’s just going to wipe through and be gone, and we’ve just not seen that, and that’s just not how flu viruses work,” said Jennifer Nuzzo, an epidemiologist at Brown University.. “This isn’t going away.”
July cases to date remain very low, with just one commercial facility affected so far, but there’s no surprise among virologists and poultry “specialists.”
“We generally see a reduction in infections over the summer,” says Mike Persia, a poultry specialist at Virginia Tech.
Scientific American went on to allege that it would be premature to assume H5N1 is done with us. “I’m optimistic that maybe this was the last of it, and it goes away forever. I wouldn’t take the lull as proof of that, though,” says Jada Thompson, an agricultural economist at the University of Arkansas. “We need to maintain vigilance.”
Was the mainstream media told to drop it? Were humans not reacting to it the way the propagandists intended?
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