PANDEMIC ALERT: Experts issue terrifying warning for Americans to prepare NOW because bird flu really is spreading
Got cowpox? What about gain-of-function chicken flu? Are you worried? Should you be? When? Without Biden in the White House, it’s getting much more difficult for fake news and the CDC to create mass panic over the next “pandemic,” whether that’s Covid-25, Bird Flu, Swine 2.0, or something new that Bill Gates has funded in some gain-of-function biolab somewhere.
Still, somehow, mass media and “leading experts” (recall who those were during the Covid plandemic) claim that the U.S. is “staring down the barrel of another pandemic” as bird flu “spirals out of control” across U.S. farms. Sure.
It’s the slow-motion pandemic and it’s happening one bird at a time. Get ready to mask up, social distance, lock down, and inject heart-stopping “technology” for the ‘greater good’ and to flatten out that dreaded curve. Got cow flu? What about Bird-Cow-Human flu?
H5N1 Bird Flu Spreads to Dairy Cows and Humans, Raising 'Gain-of-Function' Plandemic Concerns
The H5N1 avian influenza, a highly pathogenic virus with a historic fatality rate as high as 50%, has now infected over 1,000 dairy cattle herds and 70 humans in the U.S., marking the largest outbreak in decades. The first U.S. death—a Louisiana resident exposed to infected birds—was reported in January 2024, while recent cases among farmworkers underscore the virus’s growing reach. Experts warn that without robust surveillance and biosecurity measures, the virus—already adapting in mammals—could evolve to spread between humans, echoing early COVID-19 missteps.
Since 2022, the U.S. has lost 168 million poultry to H5N1, spiking egg prices and destabilizing farms. But its jump to dairy cows this year alarmed scientists, as genetic changes in infected humans suggest increased virulence. Though most cases are mild, the CDC confirms infections in 14 states, primarily among dairy workers. Two mysterious cases—a Missouri adult and California child—lack clear exposure links, deepening concerns about undetected spread.
The Global Virus Network (GVN) urges governments to prioritize surveillance and biosecurity. "Initiatives should focus on enhancing biosecurity in agricultural settings and educating the public," said Dr. Peter Palese, a GVN influenza expert. Dr. Ab Osterhaus, a GVN virologist, stressed vaccine development: "Given H5N1’s spread among mammals, we need herd management and potential vaccination to interrupt transmission."
The Biden Administration allocated $590 million to Moderna for an H5N1 vaccine, but stagnant funding and an understaffed pandemic office have drawn criticism. While the U.S. has
20 million H5N1 vaccine doses stockpiled and antiviral reserves, experts say gaps in tracking leave the nation vulnerable. Dr. Marc Johnson, a University of Missouri virologist, warned on X: "This virus might not go pandemic, but it is really trying hard." As H5N1 probes weaknesses in global health defenses, the lesson from COVID-19 looms: unpreparedness costs lives.
The H5N1 outbreak, now entrenched in livestock and wildlife, tests the U.S. ability to avert another pandemic. With human cases rising and viral mutations accumulating, the window for containment narrows. As history has shown with past influenza threats, proactive measures—not reactive scrambles—determine survival. The question remains: Will the world panic and get injected with more deathly spike prions?
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Sources for this article include:
Pandemic.news
GatewayPundit.com
NaturalNews.com
DailyMail.co.uk