Jessica A. Hockett Profile picture
Jul 8, 2023 32 tweets 10 min read Read on X
What happened with testing for SARS-CoV-2 happened before, with H1N1.
The 2008-09 season was nearly over when the WHO issued "a public health emergency of international concern" on April 2th.

Outpatient visits for Influenza-Like Illness visits shot up almost immediately.

Nothing gradual here. Image
Daily emergency department ILI visits in New York City at the time show an even more dramatic spike. Image
There were simultaneous jumps not only in different regions of the U.S., but in the U.K. and elsewhere. Image
A purported H1N1 outbreak on a college campus in Delaware likewise shows ILI visits going up after students heard there was something to fear and a campus-wide "alert" was issued pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19911964/Image
Shortly after the WHO announcement about the the FDA authorized the first H1N1 test for emergency use.

Good thing a test was ready for all those people coming into outpatient and emergency departments! cdc.gov/coronavirus/20…Image
The number of flu specimens tested immediately went vertical, tripling their seasonal peak in one week.

Similar to ILI, there was no gradual increase of flu specimens tested that might suggest people were sick with an “emerging” strain. Image
Virologic surveillance data for this period are comical.

How does a version of flu fail to show up in ILI or the number of specimens tested, and then light up on the radar after people are told it’s on the scene? Image
There is no plausible biological explanation for the explosion in positivity; it was driven by the test availability & testing.

This is why along with detection of the “novel” H1N1, we see increases in positivity of many other viruses in the flu stew. (See⬆️in red, blue, etc.) Image
AFAIK, a summer respiratory illness "outbreak" of this magnitude hadn’t been observed b4.

This was contrived.

1. Create a test for something that was already there.

2. Use fear to compel ppl to go to the doctor or hospital.

3. Test those ppl (plus older samples) and VOILA!
Some people say 2009 H1N1 as an example of viral interference, with H1N1 snuffing out or pushing aside other strains.

There was interference, but of an economic and political nature....
WHO & the pandemic preparedness complex had a solution in need of a problem.

That is, a shot in need of arms.

Michael Fumento explains in an October 2009 article that has serious deja vu vibes. forbes.com/2009/10/16/swi…Image
Looking back at the data, we see specimens tested for flu declined in December, as did positives and H1N1 positives.

The timing is curious, since ILI and flu testing climbs and peaks in winter.

(FYI, H1N1 is a separate test.) Image
Outpatient visits were also highest in October, as were ILI visits, w/public health authorities & media fomenting fear over a “second wave."

Then, ILI tanks.

In the winter.

Which makes no sense.

🧐 Image
Total visits for any reason remained high in that winter months (i.e., there was no shortage of people coming in).

Yet, ILI was lower than in past seasons.

Again, this makes no sense.

People were still dying of pneumonia, etc. Image
But the CDC, WHO, et al needed the shot to "work."

Dr. Laurie Kragie says she was part of the H1N1 leadership team and confirms that such a need existed.

(Stopping or reducing testing does the trick)
woodhouse76.com/p/setting-the-…Image
H1N1 infamously failed to generate excess death, or even impact total P&I deaths.

It’s hard to sustain mass-testing, panic, & profiteering over a pathogen if people aren’t dying from it.

Also hard if your shot doesn’t deliver -- or, worse, creates more harm than the disease. Image
So was H1N1 a failure?

Nope.

It was a HUGE success.

Massive.

Know why?
H1N1 showed that testing could be leveraged to

a) get the public’s attention,
b) justify the pandemic preparedness industry,
c) expand global disease surveillance programs

and...
d) pin more P&I deaths on influenza.

The proportion of flu-attributed deaths in the P&I category has shifted markedly toward the influenza codes since 2013.

(This also matches the overall increase in flu testing & flu positives in these years.) Image
Tangent:

Federal data from 1968 - 2019 shows the crude rate of respiratory disease deaths (including P&I) in the U.S. rose in the early 1980s, peaked in 1998, and remained fairly steady thereafter. Image
The raw number & rate of P&I deaths has declined since, though not by much.

(Same is true with P&I deaths Americans age 75 and older, who are more susceptible not only flu/pneumonia, but to death.😉) Image
Cause of death attribution is more fungible than people think. (Joy Fritz explains )

My example: the rise in Alzheimer's attribution & decline in P&I attribution among older Americans 🧐

Coincidence?
Priorites shift?
Incentives in both directions? 🤷‍♀️ americanmind.org/salvo/a-covid-…Image
Suffice to say, trends & patterns in cause-of-death attribution reflect myriad factors and forces.

What a death certificate says isn’t a simple matter of medical science.

(As we now know all-too-well from the Covid Era....)
You don't need believe in a "Plandemic" to acknowledge that H1N1 ushered in an era of more aggressive flu testing in the U.S.that shifted the proportion of P&I deaths toward influenza codes AND - in effect, if not intent, primed the pump for the same thing being done w/Covid.
The 2009 H1N1 scare is a prime example of how govt, health officials, & media are able to

✅influence healthcare-seeking behavior
✅capture results of the behavior via a new test for new detection of a pathogen
✅ point to the data to show a “need” for "treatment$"
They did the SAME THING with SARS-CoV-2 in spring 2020.

The difference was implementing policies & protocols that resulted in excess death & the alleged disappearance of flu.

No excess death plus MIA flu ➡️No scaring the world.

Simple as that.
The content in this thread is from my second post about the alleged disappearance of flu in 2020/21.
woodhouse76.com/p/setting-the-…
Tagging ppl who were or are engaged in the flu disappearance inquiry/convo (incl those w/whom I disagree).

@MartinNeil9 @contrarian4data @kerpen @Hold2LLC @Humble_Analysis @jengleruk @I_Am_JohnCullen @eugyppius1 @ClareCraigPath @Jikkyleaks @JordanSchachtel
P.P.S. Pretty sure the H1N1 "pandemic" was a test-demic, the curve of which had nothing to do with "avoidance response" or vaccine availability, like this paper seemed to be suggesting nber.org/system/files/w…
Adding on: 2009 Influenza Testing by NY State Public Health Labs

Says at the top exactly what they did.

1) Test all samples for what you want, including with the new test for the new thing
2) Phase out testing for the ones you don't want
3) Bring in new test later

Easy-peasy
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P…Image

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More from @Wood_House76

Sep 1
As fascinating as the CDC Satanist is, it's the departure of Dr Jennifer Layden that catches my attention.

1/ Image
Layden came to the CDC from the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH)

Her name is on two significant studies related to the COVID Era within my interest area...

2/
Layden is the lead author on the NEJM Vaping-Related Illness study, which focused on cases in Illinois and Wisconsin.

I emailed her about information in the supplemental materials. No response; I didn't realize she moved to CDC.

3/ Image
Image
Read 18 tweets
Aug 22
Dear Mr Drosten,

What do you mean here when you say "a new virus can be somewhat more or somewhat less new"?
Also for @c_drosten

Herd immunity is theoretical, yes?

Can immune memory be reliably measured? How? Image
@c_drosten Another for @c_drosten

First draft of the naming/classification paper (which you are on) concluded SC2 was not novel.

Either is was or it wasn't, right?

No in-between



Is there such a thing as a novel virus? (Don't think so)open.substack.com/pub/sanityunle…
Read 17 tweets
Aug 9
The SARS-CoV-2 story “began” in late December 2019, with Chinese health alerts evocative of a Medical Mystery Theatre prologue 🕵️‍♂️

There’s a cluster of pneumonia cases of unknown etiology in Wuhan… 😱🇨🇳

1/Image
Image
This was followed by a speedy succession of events in a 4-week span that included:

🤥claims of unique symptoms,
🤥ostensible discovery of a ‘new’ causal agent,
🤥development of a reliable test to ‘detect’ the agent,
🤥alleged ‘confirmation’ of the agent transmitting from human-to-human,
🤥speculation about possible sources of the agent (e.g., a market, a lab, a cave),
🤥the WHO declaring a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC)

2/
However,
🚩The purportedly 'unique' fingerprint of the agent is contradicted by research and known biological limits.
🚩No causal link to a new or severe disease was ever shown.
🚩Novelty, integrity, and stability of the agent remain unproven.
🚩"Tests" lacked specificity and cross-reacted with common viruses.
🚩Transmission/spread claims are unsubstantiated.
🚩Mortality data and field observations conflict with expectations for a true pandemic.

3/
Read 15 tweets
Apr 27
Was there ever any evidence for human-to-human transmission of 2019-nCoV?

From the looks of it, no.

A long 🧵
1. On 20 January 2020, it was reported that China had confirmed human-to-human transmission of 2019-nCoV, after finding “no clear evidence” six days earlier. Image
Image
2. In the days before the announcement, events unfolded ridiculously fast.

🪦China reported the first death.
🧬A genetic sequence for the "novel" coronavirus was rushed to GenBank.
🧪The WHO swiftly endorsed the newly developed Corman-Drosten testing protocol.
🦠A “very small amount of 2019-nCoV RNA” was detected in a man just returning to Japan.
🛬A legal permanent resident of the United States arrived back in the Seattle area after two months in Wuhan — soon to be identified as the first American “case.”
Read 25 tweets
Mar 15
Why I Can't Accept 'The World May Never Know' When it Comes to the COVID-19 Event

Remember this commercial? 🧵

A boy with a Tootsie Roll lollipop walks up to an owl (paragon of wisdom) and asks, “Mr. Owl, how many licks does it take to get to the Tootsie Roll center of a Tootsie Roll pop?”

The owl takes the stick, removes the wrapper and says, “Let’s find out!” He licks three times, bites to the center, and pronounces, “Three!”

An existential narrator closes with, “How many licks does it take to get to the center of a Tootsie Roll pop? The world may never know…”

1/Image
The ad comes to mind whenever someone says, literally or effectively, that ‘the world will never know’ where SARS-CoV-2 came from and how it got from point(s) of origin to everywhere else.

2/
Variations on this theme include

🙄There was a manmade virus and it came from a lab. But we’ll never know whose lab or how it got out.
🙄The virus was released. By whom or from where, we can never be sure.
🙄The virus emerged in Wuhan and could have come from anywhere in China. There is no way to know the animal or when it jumped to humans but we know it will happen again.

It’s a bit like Mystery Science Theatre, isn’t it?

3/
Read 12 tweets
Aug 21, 2024
Different spelling but I am loving the *Milgram Experiment* pun on this one.

Well done, U.S. intelligence community.

WELL. DONE. Image
Get this:

A guy with the last name of "Milgrim"
🚩graduates from communist bastion Brown University as a non-fiction writer (or something),
🚩covers the Boston Marathon bombings for Esquire Mag,
🚩decides to "become" a doctor,
🚩shows up at "epicenter of the epicenter" Elmhurst Hospital in the Corona health district of Queens (NYC),
🚩finds time during an ostensible "outbreak" emergency to write a dramatic essay for The Atlantic,
🚩which is published the day the CARE$ Act is signed,
🚩two days after apparent colleague/"Damsel in Distress" Colleen Smith's breathless video about Elmhurst is featured in the CIA Newsletter (aka New York Times) nytimes.com/2020/03/25/nyr…

🤡
x.com/MartinNeil9/st…
There is nothing authentic about this.

America got played, sorry to say.

Cooper: "What were the lessons of Italy that we did not listen to?" 🚩🎭

Milgram (paraphrase): "So I listened to an interview with an Italian doctor on a NYT podcast..."
Read 6 tweets

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