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Researchers consider infecting Americans with ticks to make them allergic to red meat
American Thinker ^ | October 18, 2025 | Eric Utter

Posted on 10/18/2025 11:13:04 AM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum

There have been countless examples of liberalism being a mental disorder.

Here is another one:

Two researchers from Western Michigan University have written a paper titled “Beneficial Bloodsucking,” which was published by the journal Bioethics this past July. (No, it isn’t about vampires.)

The paper argues that intentionally spreading alpha-gal syndrome (AGS), a potentially life-threatening allergy to red meat, could be not only morally defensible, but perhaps even necessary, in order to reduce animal suffering and combat climate change.

Here are the authors, Parker Crutchfield and Blake Hereth, in their own words:

Because promoting tickborne AGS prevents something bad from happening, doesn’t violate anyone’s rights, and promotes virtuous action or character, it follows that promoting tickborne AGS is strongly pro tanto (‘to that extent’) morally obligatory.

Say what?

Enlisting genetically engineered ticks to curb the consumption of hamburgers, steaks, and other red meats violates the hell out of everyone’s rights.

It is a “bad” thing in and of itself.

Ticks can carry Lyme disease, as well, which also can be deadly.

Who do they think they are? They have no right to force others to give up red meat … or drive a Prius for that matter, whether it be via overt or covert acts.

As one might expect, there were numerous negative online comments, prompting Crutchfield to characterize the paper as “just a thought experiment and not an endorsement of spreading the allergy-causing ailment.” 

A thought experiment? The hell it was!

The authors actually wrote that promoting tickborne AGS is “morally obligatory.”

Those in the “Earth would be better off if there were nobody here but me” crowd are enough to make the rest of us sick.

Pointy-headed academic asshats who live in a lab and/or bubble have already caused far too much damage.

These two really ticked me off. In fact, I’m seeing red (meat).

(Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...


TOPICS: Conspiracy; Health/Medicine
KEYWORDS: 1984; academia; ags; allergies; alphagalsyndrome; blakehereth; globalgovernment; globalism; globohomo; loonyleftists; meatallergy; mentalillness; parasites; parkercrutchfield; redmeat; ticks; worsethan1984
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Why do the depopulationists want to depopulate cows, too?


21 posted on 10/18/2025 11:30:53 AM PDT by 9YearLurker
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Makes me wonder if alpha-gal syndrome was engineered in the first place.


22 posted on 10/18/2025 11:33:23 AM PDT by piasa (Attitude adjustments offered here free of charge)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

“My body, my choice”. Oh wait… That only applies to killing babies not cows.


23 posted on 10/18/2025 11:34:17 AM PDT by married21 (As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.)
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear

Touché.


24 posted on 10/18/2025 11:35:25 AM PDT by married21 (As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

“Earth would be better off if there were nobody here but me” crowd are enough to make the rest of us sick.”

#1 of the Democrat party “Plank”
“Earth would be better off if there were nobody here but me”

They vote often, even when dead.


25 posted on 10/18/2025 11:36:31 AM PDT by rellic (No such thing as a moderate Moslem or Democrat )
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
Just the fact these monsters were willing to put this in writing makes me feel they aren't ever to be trusted on this earth and should be removed. You cannot guarantee that these evil characters won't end up in a position of trust and power 25 years from now and act on these feelings. Digging up this paper after hundreds or perhaps thousands of people have been infected does nothing to right a wrong. Little Faucis on steroids!
26 posted on 10/18/2025 11:37:22 AM PDT by liberalh8ter ( This tagline has taken the month off to attend the inauguration.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

> “Pointy-headed academic asshats”

Pointy-headed asshats sounds like a really painful combination.


27 posted on 10/18/2025 11:38:25 AM PDT by Flatus I. Maximus (I never left the Democratic Party. It left me, and every time I look it keeps going further left.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
... in order to reduce animal suffering...

God put animals on this earth to be eaten. If that were not the case, He would not have made them taste so good.

28 posted on 10/18/2025 11:42:46 AM PDT by econjack
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Those that want to end the beef industry, or the oil industry, need to understand the impact to product made from beef or oil. The list is massive. Just say goodbye to many of the things they love.


29 posted on 10/18/2025 11:43:18 AM PDT by Dutch Boy (The only thing worse than having something taken from you is to have it returned broken. )
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear

Maybe we need to ask which one is the wife?


30 posted on 10/18/2025 11:44:34 AM PDT by 4Runner ("I gotta join a union to get paid for loafin'?" " Sure ya do!" --Abbott & Costello)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Oh, sure, it sounds good. But we have to consider unintended side effects. What if it makes people unable to wear clothes? Do we really want to take even the smallest chance we could see Hillary Clinton and Nance Pelosi naked?


31 posted on 10/18/2025 11:45:02 AM PDT by EandH Dad (sleeping giants wake up REALLY grumpy)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
Causing mass starvation and compelling people to eat per their preferred menu. Some Bond villain stuff there. Or just normal leftist 'we must control every aspect of life' stuff.

I'd restrict these people from access to the material, they are justifying it as necessary, the next step it to just do it when nobody is looking.

32 posted on 10/18/2025 11:46:59 AM PDT by pepsi_junkie ("We want no Gestapo or Secret Police. F. B. I. is tending in that direction." - Harry S Truman)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

“Researchers consider infecting Americans with ticks to make them allergic to red meat”

For my wife who’s diabetic, this is some serious shit (it’s already quite widespread), as being forced to eat carbs will kill her - that simple.

However, for SOME HERE, that’s losing access to me is JUST FINE, as long as they feel good sitting out November elections because the Republican running for Senate is a RINO.

(for those who don’t get it, if the above happens regarding meat, it will be the Democrats, and the Democrats ONLY, that do this to Americans)


33 posted on 10/18/2025 12:05:44 PM PDT by BobL (Trusting one's doctor is the #1 health mistake one can make.)
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To: Veto!

I don’t believe any are used in beef. Pork yes.


34 posted on 10/18/2025 12:08:12 PM PDT by enduserindy
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
when someone threatens something you'd better damn well believe them.

would pre-emptive defense in the form of kinetic action against Western Michigan University also be morally defensible?
35 posted on 10/18/2025 1:01:03 PM PDT by wafflehouse ("there was a third possibility that we hadn't even counted upon" -Alice's Restaurant Massacree)
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To: wafflehouse
would pre-emptive defense in the form of kinetic action against Western Michigan University also be morally defensible?

I see what you did there: I say we take off and nuke the entire site from orbit...it's the only way to be sure.

36 posted on 10/18/2025 1:10:02 PM PDT by FateAmenableToChange
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To: x
They tried this with citrus juice. And gave us Lyme Disease.

The Hidden History Of Lyme Disease: Links To Biological Warfare Research

Although Pasteur, Koch, and others identified the causes of most common infectious diseases over a century ago, the cause of Lyme disease – so the ‘official’ story goes – was not identified until 1982. In findings published in the journal Science which received international media attention at the time, Willy Burgdorfer and colleagues reported that a newly discovered species of bacteria of the Borrelia genus may be the cause of the disease.

Lyme disease takes its name from the town of Lyme, Connecticut, a small, rural community of just over two thousand people. As the State of Connecticut’s official website tells the story, the history of Lyme disease began in 1975 when a cluster of children and adults residing in the town experienced uncommon arthritic symptoms. A circular letter sent by the State of Connecticut Department of Health’s Commissioner at the time, Douglas S. Lloyd M.D., describes how the disease was “characterized by usually short and mild but often recurrent attacks of pain and swelling in a few large joints, especially knees, with longer intervening periods of no symptoms at all.”

Lloyd added that “almost half the patients had only joint symptoms, others had fever, headaches, weakness and a skin rash as well.” Significantly, he also noted that: “One quarter of the patients had an unusual skin lesion before the onset of joint symptoms.” He concluded that: “The seasonal and geographic distribution of cases and the association with a skin lesion suggest that a virus carried by a biting insect may be responsible for this disease.”

Thus goes the official history of Lyme Disease. But as stated earlier, this version of the story fails to answer the decisive question as to how a pathogen of such significance could have escaped the serious attention of medical researchers for so long. For anyone seeking the answer to this question, there are several important facts that cannot be ignored.

The Plum Island connection

Plum Island (New York, USA)
By kyselak [GFDL or CC BY-SA 3.0], from Wikimedia Commons

The Plum Island Animal Disease Center (PIADC) describes itself as the United States’ “premier defense against accidental or intentional introduction of transboundary animal diseases (a.k.a. foreign animal diseases) including foot-and-mouth disease.” Established in 1954, it is located on Plum Island near the northeast coast of Long Island in New York State. Now part of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, access to its high-security facility is extremely restricted. A New York Times report in 2016 described how the visit of a small group of reporters, all of whom had undergone extensive background checks, began and ended with a search by armed guards. Not only were the reporters accompanied by the guards wherever they went, they were also prohibited from using laptop or tablet computers. Photography in unauthorized areas, most of them at the research center itself, which occupies only a small part of the island, was similarly forbidden.

While the PIADC claims that its facility “does not and has not performed research on Lyme Disease”, we should keep in mind that the existence of biological warfare experiments on Plum Island during the Cold War era was denied for decades by the U.S. government. In 1993, however, when Newsday unearthed previously classified documents proving that such experiments had taken place, the U.S. government’s denials were revealed to the world to have been a lie. As also confirmed by the New York Times, the documents uncovered by Newsday contained plans to disrupt the Soviet economy by spreading diseases to kill its livestock. In view of this history, any modern-day denials relating to the activities of PIADC should clearly be taken with the proverbial grain of salt.

The PIADC’s work on biological warfare is said to have been ended in 1969 by U.S. president Richard Nixon, who subsequently went on to resign in disgrace following the Watergate scandal. Notwithstanding claims and counterclaims over whether the experiments were ever truly brought to an end, one fact remains undeniable: the aerial distance between Plum Island and the town of Lyme is barely more than 17 miles. The distance to the harbor town of Old Lyme, which was also affected by the 1975 outbreak, is less than 12 miles.

A biological timebomb

Lyme disease is just one of at least four infectious disease outbreaks that have occurred in the vicinity of Plum Island. In ‘Lab 257’, a book published in 2004, lawyer Michael C. Carroll argues that outbreaks of the Dutch duck plague virus that devastated duck farms on eastern Long Island in the 1960s, Lyme disease in 1975, the West Nile virus in 1999, and the mysterious 1999 disease that killed most of the lobsters in Long Island Sound all occurred so close to the island’s laboratory that the facility simply cannot be ruled out as the common source.

Reviewing Carroll’s book at the time, the New York Times described how it was based on seven years’ research and hundreds of hours spent studying U.S. government documents and interviewing scientists, workers, government officials, journalists, and other individuals involved with or knowledgeable about the PIADC laboratory. Interestingly, Carroll said he originally had the cooperation of the U.S. government’s Agriculture and Homeland Security departments and was even given permission to visit Plum Island six times in 2001 and 2002. ”When they discovered where I was going and that I was going to write the truth, they pulled the plug and cut me off on the grounds of national security,” he said.

Describing the PIADC laboratory as a biological timebomb, Carroll cites a foot-and-mouth disease outbreak on the island in 1978 as proof that the facility could be the source of viruses. Saying he found U.S. government records reporting gaps around roof pipes – thus allowing contaminated air to escape or disease-transmitting insects to pass through – he suggests the 1975 Lyme disease outbreak might have resulted from experimentally infected ticks escaping the laboratory and reaching the mainland via swimming deer or birds.

Ironically, while U.S. Department of Homeland Security officials predictably dismissed the evidence presented in Carroll’s book, two further outbreaks of the foot-and-mouth disease virus occurred at the laboratory within just a few months of its publication. But as we shall see next, in our search for the truth about the Lyme disease epidemic, there are even darker corners of history that must be examined.

Nazi links

Erich Traub
source: Discovery

Carroll alleges that Erich Traub, a notorious Nazi scientist and virologist, had visited the PIADC laboratory on at least three occasions during the 1950s and that he may have performed outdoor field tests with poisoned ticks. According to Carroll, research with ticks was still ongoing at the Plum Island facility around the time of the 1975 Lyme disease outbreak.

Other writers have made similar assertions. In their 2008 book ‘The Nazi Hydra in America: Suppressed History of a Century’, Glen Yeadon and John Hawkins describe how, during WWII, Traub had served as lab chief at Insel Riems, a secret Nazi biological warfare facility in the Baltic Sea. Working directly under Heinrich Himmler, feared head of the SS, the Nazi Party’s paramilitary arm, Traub’s role apparently involved packaging weaponized foot-and-mouth disease virus for dispersal from a Luftwaffe bomber onto cattle and reindeer in Russia.

Following the war, Traub is said to have applied for employment under Operation Paperclip, the secret intelligence program that brought leading Nazi scientists to work in the United States. Yeadon and Hawkins allege that he was subsequently at Plum Island between 1949 and 1953 and that he continued to be an active collaborator with the facility thereafter. Describing Traub as a founding member of the Plum Island biowarfare program, Yeadon and Hawkins cite documents showing that he worked with more than 40 lethal viruses on large test animals.

Learning the lessons of history

Is it possible that the post-1975 Lyme disease epidemic has essentially resulted from top-secret experiments carried out on behalf of the U.S. government? Based on the evidence of history, such a possibility clearly cannot be discounted. As I pointed out in a previous article, ‘Forced Medical Treatment and Military Experiments with Toxic Chemicals: A Century-Long Criminal History’, for anyone assuming that such experiments had ceased after those carried out by Nazi doctors and the German IG Farben Cartel during WWII, evidence clearly shows that this is not the case. During the past century, not only have they been far more commonplace than most people realize, we already know for certain that they were still being carried out by the U.S. government at around the same time as the 1975 Lyme disease outbreak.

Between 1932 and 1972, in one of the most inhumane medical experiments known to have ever been performed in the United States, Public Health Service doctors enticed around 400 poor black men suffering from syphilis into a study whose secret aim, unknown to the participants, was to observe the natural progression of the disease when untreated. Throughout the entire 40-year period of the study the men were deliberately not told they had syphilis and were never treated for it. Known as the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, the experiment not only resulted in the deaths of many participants but also the infection of 40 wives and 19 children born with congenital syphilis. By May 1997 when U.S. President Bill Clinton finally made a public apology for what had taken place, only seven surviving patients were left alive to witness it.

With the number of reported cases of Lyme disease having tripled in the United States since the late 1990s, growing numbers of patients are criticizing the medical establishment for its failure to provide proper answers. But given the plausible evidence suggesting links between the post-1975 Lyme disease epidemic and biological warfare experiments, both patients and physicians alike would be well advised to recall the famous observation of philosopher George Santayana: “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” In medicine, just as in other fields, it is only through learning the lessons of history that we can create a better future.

37 posted on 10/18/2025 2:30:08 PM PDT by CharlesOConnell (Kucy)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Anyone that would suggest such a thing is no better than Dr. Mengele


38 posted on 10/18/2025 2:54:10 PM PDT by VTenigma (Conspiracy theory is the new "spoiler alert")
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To: piasa

When I first heard about it that very though crossed my mind.


39 posted on 10/18/2025 2:56:08 PM PDT by VTenigma (Conspiracy theory is the new "spoiler alert")
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To: CharlesOConnell

One of the best posts I have read in a long time. Thank you. Western Michigan University is only 50 miles from me in Michigan in Kalamazoo.


40 posted on 10/18/2025 3:14:09 PM PDT by healy61
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