The mosquito-borne chikungunya virus has taken hold of China. Eerily reminiscent of the 2019 COVID-19 lockdowns, entire districts in Guangdong are completely sealed off. Drones are on duty, hospitals are locked down with mosquito nets, and residents are threatened with fines for noncompliance, all while being sprayed with toxic chemicals by an army tasked with moving through neighborhoods and, at times, walking straight into residences to stop the spread. All for a virus that does not spread person to person and is very rarely fatal. What is going on? Is Bill Gates’s World Mosquito Program causing this outbreak? Jennifer Zeng, International Press Association member assigned to CCP and China affairs, summed up the situation, writing on X:

“After a major outbreak of chikungunya and dengue fever in Guangdong, China, authorities sprayed insecticides everywhere. Netizens joked: “I don’t know if the mosquitoes are gone, but it feels like we’re being the ones wiped out.”

An August 8 article in NPR highlighted how health officials in China are waging an “all-out war against mosquitoes” in response to the outbreak, to combat a virus that it states has sickened thousands with fever, rashes, and joint pain over the past month. Yanzhong Huang, senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign Relations, confirmed with NPR that Chinese soldiers are fogging the streets and parks with insecticide, community workers are going door to door to look for stagnant water where mosquitoes can breed, and people who test positive for the virus are being forced to hospitalize and isolate themselves. NPR reported that, even though the virus can’t spread through the air, the actions are justified because the “population has no immunity” to the virus. Without question, the measures certainly sound precisely like the tyranny of COVID-19.

Like SARS-CoV-2, chikungunya is on the deep state’s index of pandemic menaces. In 2015, the World Health Organization (WHO) published a list of emerging diseases likely to cause major epidemics. The initial list did not include chikungunya (it does now), but it did designate the virus as “serious” and in need of swift action to promote research and development. A December 2, 2024, study published in Science Direct noted that the virus is “a neglected tropical disease of growing public concern with outbreaks in more than 114 countries in Asia, Africa, Americas, Europe, and Oceania since 2004.” While noting Bill Gates’s funding of vaccine research for viruses like chikungunya as well as his help in creating a “pathway toward public health impact” to inject the masses during these outbreaks (which ironically, occur shortly after a tabletop exercise or discussion), in pre-pandemic-staging fashion, the study declared:

“The high morbidity of chikungunya, combined with its high epidemic potential, makes it a public health priority. Unlike other mosquito-borne viruses such as dengue, Zika, or yellow fever, chikungunya typically induces symptomatic infection, leading to outbreaks with high attack rates. Chikungunya symptoms such as joint pain, along with asthenia and mood changes usually appear soon after infection. However, they can be long-lasting once patients enter the chronic phase of the disease, which can cause significant loss in health-related quality-of-life and economic productivity.

Initial work on estimating the economic burden of the 2013–2015 chikungunya epidemic in the Americas quoted a societal cost of $185 billion, far surpassing that of other circulating arboviruses during the same period. A study examining the 2014–2015 chikungunya outbreak in the U.S. Virgin Islands estimated a cost ranging from $14.8 to $33.4 million. Additional work is needed to generate reliable estimates of the cost of illness and the economic burden of chikungunya at the national, regional, and global levels. Furthermore, the average burden rates of chikungunya do not illustrate the high spikes of reported cases during epidemics, which overwhelm local health systems and disproportionately affect low-income populations.”

Wellcome’s Sanger Institute described the outbreak in Guangdong as one that has unfolded rapidly, and at a scale unprecedented for China. “The chikungunya outbreak in China is a timely reminder of the growing risks posed by vector-borne viruses in an era of climate change, global mobility, and shifting mosquito ecology,” remarked Professor Roger Hewson, Virus Surveillance Lead, Genomic Surveillance Unit at the Sanger Institute. In other words, he is letting us know that, if left up to outfits like Wellcome, the WHO, and the like, these types of pandemic-threatening calamities will continue to occur, and you can bet at a rapidly increasing pace. Why? Thanks to climate change, global mobility, and shifting mosquito ecology, of course.

The goal here, the endgame, is unmistakable. It is, quite simply, to justify the creation of vaccines against these pathogens, and then, ultimately, have society scared and brainwashed enough to be willing to be injected with them. No, thank you. Hard pass.

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Tracy Beanz & Michelle Edwards

Tracy Beanz is an investigative journalist, Editor-in-Chief of UncoverDC, and host of the daily With Beanz podcast. She gained recognition for her in-depth coverage of the COVID-19 crisis, breaking major stories on the virus’s origin, timeline, and the bureaucratic corruption surrounding early treatment and the mRNA vaccine rollout. Tracy is also widely known for reporting on Murthy v. Missouri (Formerly Missouri v. Biden,) a landmark free speech case challenging government-imposed censorship of doctors and others who presented alternative viewpoints during the pandemic.