Thursday, August 13, 2009

H1N1 Swine Flu Scenarios: Best Case, Worst Case Predictions

(NaturalNews) When it comes to swine flu, the public predictions are all over the map: On one hand, governments don't want you to be so worried that you start to panic and stay home from work, but they want you to be worried enough to submit to a vaccine injection.

Beyond the vaccine propaganda and the WHO's agenda to prop up the profits of drug companies by seizing control of the intellectual property of influenza viruses, what's reallylikely to happen this year as the virus spreads?

Here, I present some educated guesses on the best case / worst case scenarios we may see unfold with the H1N1swine flu pandemic.

Best Case, Worst Case for your kids in public schools

Best Case: A few sneezers at school get isolated or masks are slapped on their faces. Infections are mild and deaths are few.

Worst Case: Mutating strains of the swine flu storm like a wildfire through the public school system, infecting tens of millions of children, killing tens of thousands, and shuttering the school system for much of the 2009 / 2010 school year.

Likely Case: (By "likely" I mean my own educated guess on roughly what seems to be the more probable outcome.) Some schools close due to spreading influenza, but most stay open. Lots of children are infected, but more children are seriously harmed by the vaccines than by the virus itself.

Best Case, Worst Case for the H1N1 swine flu severity

Best Case: The flu remains mild, killing no more people than season flu (which the CDC claims kills 30,000 Americans a year).

Worst Case: The flu quickly mutates to become resistant to both Tamiflu and the vaccines being given to people. It ramps up through December then hits hard in January and February when most people are vitamin D deficient. Over a billion people around the world become infected, and millions die.

Likely Case: While this is a very difficult prediction to make, I wouldn't be surprised to see worldwide infections exceed one billion people. The total number of deaths is a wildcard. One million deaths worldwide from swine flu over the next two winters is not an unreasonable estimate based on historical accounts of pandemics.

Best Case, Worst Case for the Swine Flu Vaccine

Best Case: The vaccine performs as advertised by Big Pharma, protecting people from swine flu infections while harming no one.

Worst Case: The vaccine is worse than the swine flu itself. Rather than protecting people, it causes the death of many thousands (or even millions, if you subscribe to the population control theory on swine flu vaccines).

Likely Case: In my view, the vaccine itself is a real wildcard here. Testing has been extremely limited, and no long-term testing will be conducted at all before it is injected into people. The vaccine will most likely cause a few short-term deaths (people dying within 48 hours, for example), but the real issue may be the long-term risks of the vaccine. What happens six months later? Will it cause paralysis in some people? Will it harm immune system function or damage vital organs in a way that could not be detected in the short-term? That's what I think the real risk is with the vaccine: What it does to you over time (if you survive the first 48 hours).

Best Case, Worst Case for the infrastructure of society

Best Case: Zero disruptions. A few people get sick, but they sleep it off and return to work. The power, water, public safety, food supplies and other key infrastructure components remain fully intact, barely skipping a beat.

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