09/05/2025 / By S.D. Wells
When did Bill Gates release the infected GMO mosquitos from the laboratory? Are they carrying the chikungunya virus or preventing it? Who could ever trust Bill Gates who promotes vaccines as a key means to DEPOPULATE the planet by several billion people? Don’t believe it? Think it’s a conspiracy theory? Watch Bill Gates say it himself at his infamous TED talk.
Health officials are warning U.S. travelers about the rapid global spread of chikungunya, a mosquito-borne virus that can cause sudden, debilitating joint pain lasting for months. Since the beginning of 2025, over 240,000 cases and at least 90 deaths have been reported in 16 countries spanning the Americas, Africa, Asia, and Europe. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has expanded its Level 2 travel advisory — urging “enhanced precautions” — to include Kenya, Madagascar, Somalia, and Sri Lanka, in addition to previously affected regions such as China’s Guangdong Province, where an outbreak of more than 10,000 cases triggered local COVID-like containment measures.
The virus, spread by (Bill Gates’) GMO Aedes mosquitoes (which also transmit dengue, yellow fever, and Zika), is not contagious between people, but it poses a growing risk of local transmission in the U.S. via infected travelers. The U.S. has not experienced sustained local spread since 2019, but with 4.7 million international passengers flying daily, experts warn that an infected traveler bitten by a local mosquito could reignite domestic outbreaks. Currently, 55 cases have been reported in the U.S. in 2025 — all linked to travel.
Brazil and Bolivia are current hotspots in the Americas, with Brazil alone reporting more than 210,000 cases. In Asia, China remains a focal point, battling its largest-ever outbreak. Authorities there have deployed drones, insecticide, “cannibal” mosquitoes, and even electricity cuts in uncooperative neighborhoods to contain spread. In Foshan, patients have been quarantined and disinfectant sprayed across public areas — echoing pandemic-era restrictions.
Travel and cruise operators have joined the call for vigilance. Norwegian Cruise Line has advised passengers to Italy to wear insect-repellent-treated clothing after both dengue and chikungunya were locally detected there for the first time. In the U.S., some localities have taken precautionary action: one Massachusetts town last September closed parks nightly after a resident contracted eastern equine encephalitis, another mosquito-borne illness.
Chikungunya typically incubates for three to seven days. Symptoms include sudden high fever (over 102°F), rash, headache, nausea, muscle aches, conjunctival redness, and severe joint pain, particularly in the hands and feet. Though mortality is generally low (less than 1 in 1,000 cases), severe complications can affect the heart, brain, or organs, occasionally resulting in organ failure or irregular heart rhythms. Pregnant women infected near delivery may pass the virus to newborns, sometimes causing serious illness.
There is no specific treatment. Care focuses on symptom management with pain and fever reducers, though two vaccines are available for travelers heading to outbreak areas. The CDC classifies chikungunya as a “nationally notifiable” condition, allowing health agencies to track and monitor imported cases.
Chikungunya’s trajectory underscores how interconnected travel, climate, and vector biology are reshaping infectious disease risk. The current wave recalls the 2014 spike — when U.S. territories saw over 2,700 cases — but now with broader geographic reach and intensified global travel, officials stress that prevention (avoiding mosquito bites and heeding travel advisories) remains the most effective defense.
Bookmark plague.info to your favorite independent websites for updates on TWO HUNDRED new gain-of-function viruses NIH, CDC and WHO plan to release into the “wild” while blaming infected bat soup eaters at the Wuhan wet market.
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