I’ve written a couple of posts recently about the importance of growing your own food in whatever capacity you can for food security and health. A few days ago, I read a post by Dr. Peter McCullough in his Courageous Discourse newsletter about IgA Vasculitis after COVID-19 Vaccination. It was comment someone made on this post that caused me to research this topic. See post here:
Here’s the comment that struck me:
By NotAMushroom
“Dr McC, I’m appreciative of your blunt and accurate words concerning the blunderous [sic], collectivist, profiteering ‘inventors’ of this ridiculous genetic manipulation. In the beginning you were much more deferential to these people. You’re now calling it like it is as myself and many of my colleagues did from the start, because we’d seen this before. They run all this garbage through veterinary medicine first. It’s only just now we’re hearing of these self-perpetuating oral ‘vaccines.’ Investigate the wildlife ‘vaccination’ program and you’ll see it’s been in trials for at least three decades.”
I decided to investigate this wildlife vaccination program and it’s extremely disturbing. One paper I came across entitled “mRNA Vaccine Development for Emerging Animal and Zoonotic Diseases,” published in 2022, discusses orally administered mRNA vaccines that can now be developed for elimination of animal rabies in the near future.
I found numerous reports and articles detailing what has, apparently, been an ongoing annual wildlife oral rabies vaccination campaign directed by the USDA. The oral vaccine is embedded in baits distributed around the habitats of targeted wildlife, such as raccoons and others.
Another recent article (January 2023) discusses a wildlife vaccine bait airdrop on the Texas border for combatting rabies. Read about the process here.
Implications for US Food Supply
While I realize that rabies is a lethal disease, killing tens of thousands of humans each year, globally, what concerns me is the goal to successfully incorporate these mRNA vaccines into edible baits (food). A while ago, I heard people voicing concerns about governments incorporating these agents into human foods, but I wasn’t sure that was feasible. Now, I see they’re moving to that end through this animal research.
Ostensibly, various government entities could quietly require these be added to certain common food staples, giving citizens no choice about the matter. This is probably at least a couple of years away and I don’t know how they would ensure ‘safe’ dosages, etc. They’re already pushing insects, which are very unsafe for humans to ingest.
There’s just no way out unless we grow our own foods according to our abilities. Not only does there seem to be deliberate steps taken almost daily to cripple access to food around the world, people in the US still seem to think famine can’t happen here. It certainly can and that’s what these ‘elite’ leaders want.
Perma Pastures Farm on Youtube is one of our favorite permaculture channels. His guidance and explanations are easy to understand and reproduce. Of course, if you live in a suburban situation, you likely won’t have pigs, etc., but the principles for growing food crops and augmenting soil carry over to even the smallest spaces.
Learning about the basic principles can go a long way toward giving you the information and confidence you need to get started. I can answer questions as well, though I don’t know as much (at ALL) as my #1 better half, DS. I will forward any questions I can’t answer to him.
You can start small, but start now.
Wanna buy me a coffee? I sure would appreciate it!
They want us dead
Mareks disease is just another example of “vaccines” gone wrong
https://www.livescience.com/51682-vaccines-evolve-deadlier-viruses.html
I like your article. Our family had a garden in the back yard that looked similar to yours. This was in the 1970's and there were 10 kids in my family, so us kids worked for our stay... :) We grew squash, zucchini, tomatoes, green beans and more. We had a compost pile in the back. Also pegged along the back fence was 2 or 3 discarded wooden legs that had roses growing out of them - my Dad did prosthetics for a living. Yeah, it looked tacky... :)