DEMYELINATION (ACQUIRED DISEASE)
Exponentially reproducing pycnogonid parasites that have gained access to an infected host’s brain and neural network quickly learn (or already have knowledge of) the language of signal code used by the human nervous system to command the host’s executive functions. In “Acquired” diseases, a host or host has been demyelinated and the viral infection has acquired the ability to intercept, interpret, and send electrical signals to and from an infected brain of an infected host. A host of an acquired disease becomes a puppet of varying degrees of control to a type of “middle-man attack" by the virus population. Acquired hosts stand for the well-documented appearance of schizophrenia, delirium, mental inertia, physical prostration, psychosis, mental collapse, mental disturbances, and general insanity documented after the appearance of most historical influenza and virus outbreaks.
MENTAL HEALTH REPORT POST ANALYSIS
REPORT
At the U.S. Army’s Walter Reed Hospital, physician Dr. Egbert Fell reported via the June 1919 issue of the Journal of the American Medicine Association, that patients possessed “Delirium occurring at the height of the Disease”, and that these symptoms did not “clear with cessation of fever”.
ANALYSIS
Patients developed severe mental health symptoms during influenza infections which did not pass even when other symptoms of the virus had.
REPORT
Doctors in Britain reported, “profound mental inertia with intense physical prostration. Delirium has been very common … It has varied from more confusion of ideas through all grades on intensity up to maniacal excitement”.
ANALYSIS
Influenza patients were having and communicating wild ideas that may not have existed before a virus infection. These hosts became motivated by these ideas from an unknown origin to the point that they became excited and overcame physical inhibitions in response. These symptoms resulted from the presence of alien virus infections.
REPORT
Dr. G Draggeti of Italy reported to “Politico” in a February 8, 1919, article titled "Nervous Manifestations of Influenza” that “The [influenza] psychosis however may pass into a state of mental collapse, with stupor which may persist and become actual dementia”.
ANALYSIS
Those who had become infected with the 1918 H1N1 virus variant in many cases mentally broke down into a daze and lost control of previously held mental abilities.
REPORT
Dr. Henri Claude of France reported in a May 31, 1919, issue of JAMA, in an article titled "Nervous and Mental Disturbances Following Influenza” that patients suffered from “Frequent and serious mental disturbances during convalescence from and as a result of Influenza … The mental disturbances sometimes took on the form of acute delirium with agitation, violence, fear, and erotic excitation and … fear of persecution”.
ANALYSIS
Patients in recovery from the 1918 virus infection became violently delirious, agitated, paranoid, and severely aggressive. While sexual aggression may have been a manifestation of the virus's will to spread. The host feared repercussions of activities associated with their previously held moral control, yet they could often not control these new immoral urges.
POST ANALYSIS
These reports detail an event in 1918 in which millions of people worldwide simultaneously experienced thoughts, motivations, and excitement that had not existed before the virus infection. Our population began exhibiting thoughts and intentions that were not our own and of an alien source and nature. These new symptoms were found via observation of the human nervous system, a symptom of electrical signals, during infection by foreign parasites. These parasites were mobilized via nervous networks powered by tritium produced by the virus's digestive systems after feeding on human blood. According to the basic sciences of chemistry and physics, the laws related to the conservation of energy clearly state that energy cannot be created or destroyed, and that energy can only be transferred from one location to another via entropy. According to laws of conservation of energy, symptoms of mental inertia, motivation, and physical prostration experienced during the 1918 influenza infection could not have originated or been created within a host's nervous system without the transfer of energy in the form of entropy from phage virus signaling withing neurological systems of infected persons. Viruses that have eaten away the Myelin lining of the white matter in the cerebrum expose the raw zinc wiring of the brain and nervous system. Demyelinated neurons in the brain become an exposed communication network that is highly vulnerable to third- party “man in the middle” attacks by foreign parasites. Exothermic signaling via controlled beta decay of the tritium within the virus parasite’s cells is the most likely source of exothermic signals received endothermically by the nervous system of a human host.