Tuesday, July 18, 2017

Cynthia, the Runaway Fleshing Eating Bacteria, is Claiming American Lives

78345234234The Alabama Department of Public Health has recently announced that it’s been observing a new pandemic situation with a potentially deadly flesh eating virus spreading like fire in the Michigan area. The majority of those who got infected were swimming in the Mexican Gulf, while having minor cuts and bruisers or would eat raw seafood from this area. Upon infecting a human being the so-called vibrio compromises kidney and liver functions before spreading further.


It’s been reported that symptoms include nausea, vomiting, fever, chills, blisters around the wounded areas that got infected, swelling and redness. American health officials claim that 80% of the time, if people get to the doctor within first 24 hours of infection, they should be fine. They suggest treating the affected area immediately after contamination, including thoroughly washing the area with soap and water and disinfecting it with rubbing alcohol. However, this infection is highly resistant to antibiotics and if a person infected fail to seek medical assistance within the above mentioned time window, his chances of surviving the so-called vibrio in most cases barely reaching 50%.


However, it’s rarely reported that if a person was infected via cuts or bruisers on his limb, the infected areas are going to transform into untreatable swelling ulcers that would force medical practitioners to amputate the infected limb in a bid to save patient’s life. Colonies of this bacteria would grow rapidly in warm water, so the majority of infection cases occurs in summer. Those who are living along the Mexican Gulf coastline are getting increasingly concerned for their wellbeing, so they stop eating raw seafood and going to the seashore altogether. Local health authorities report dozens of infection cases this year alone.


However, there’s a number of journalists that remain convinced that those who were infected by a flesh eating bacteria are not suffering from the relatively harmless Vibrio Vulnificus, instead they’re suspecting that local population is suffering from the spread of Cynthia, the runaway flesh eating bacteria that was bred on demand by the British Petroleum to combat a major oil spill that occurred in the Gulf of Mexico back in 2010.


The fact that Cynthia in secret US laboratories only to be unleashed in the region without any prior studies into the possible consequences has already been reported by NEO. It’s crystal clear now that oil spills were only the beginning, since now this bacteria is eating sea creatures and humans alike. The artificially created monster leaves little chance for survival to fish or seal, since they got covered in swelling ulcers within hours after entering an infected area.


“Cynthia” is the world’s first synthetic bacteria, an artificial organism with an artificially engineered genome that contains of natural DNA. Such artificial cells are rapidly multiplying, due to the properties of self-reproduction that were provided with during the early stages of their design.


It’s curious that the entire coastline of the Gulf of Mexico is now covered with brownish, oily balls. According to a local chemist Bob Naman, those would infect anyone stupid enough to break them with his bare hands or would otherwise contact them. Should a person have open wound, the contents of the ball will go straight into your system, warns the scientist.



A local blogger and activist, Alexander Higgins is siting a study conducted by to the Columbia University study, according to which after the oil spill in 2010, 40% of residents of the Gulf of Mexico acquired respiratory and skin diseases, and one in four thinks of leaving their current place of residence.


Cases of massive bird deaths, like the one in Arkansas that would claim the lives of no less than 5000 species, then the same sort of disaster that occurred in New Orleans that resulted in the death of at least 500 species, just like massive fish death cases, like the one in northern Louisiana that resulted in at least 100,000 dying off shore of northern Louisiana, is usually associated by the American media with Cynthia. However, when those individuals would get covered in ulcers only to die in agony after swimming in the Gulf of Mexico are being described as the victims of unknown decease. Those infected have little chance of survival since Cynthia would compromise internal organs of a human being, causing profuse internal bleeding and death. Yet, the true scale of the tragedy remains hidden, while any mentions of human deaths caused by Cynthia being suppressed on the governmental level.


Jean Périer is an independent researcher and analyst and a renowned expert on the Near and Middle East, exclusively for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook“.

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