BG’s experiment to cause mosquitos to carry “weird viruses” seems to have succeeded
NEW YORK
New York City Residents are Under Attack: They're Spraying People With Pesticide Poisons! No wonder we’re having headaches and sore throats. Unfortunately the potential effects of these highly toxic chemicals are, G-d forbid, much worse than that. All this poison, against a FAKE THREAT.
NEW ENGLAND
NEW ENGLAND Town put under night time lockdown as disabling horse virus that kills 1 in 3 runs rampant (Eastern equine encephalitis is a rare but potentially deadly virus that was first identified in horses) Everything you need to know about the mosquito-borne disease, from initial symptoms to signs of deadly brain swelling (article appeared on drudge (Sun))
TREES AND MORE TREES
Living in tree-filled neighborhoods may reduce risk of heart disease, study shows
Living in a tree-filled neighborhood may be as beneficial to the heart as regular exercise, new research shows.
Researchers at the University of Louisville designed a clinical trial that followed hundreds of people living in six low- to middle-income neighborhoods in South Louisville, Kentucky. They used blood and other samples to better understand how their heart risks changed before and after the team planted thousands of mature trees near their homes.
Results from
the Green Heart Louisville Project’s
HEAL Study, released Tuesday, showed that people living in neighborhoods with twice as many trees and shrubs had lower levels of a blood marker associated with heart disease, diabetes and some types of cancer compared with those who lived in more tree-bare neighborhoods.
[…some text omitted]
People living in the intervention areas had 13% lower levels of
high-sensitivity C-reactive protein, a blood marker associated with heart disease, including stroke, coronary artery disease and heart attack. The drop was similar to starting a regular exercise routine, Bhatnagar said.
“I wouldn’t have expected such a strong biomarker response, and that speaks to maybe something truly is causal here with how trees impact health,” said Peter James, director of the Center for Occupational and Environmental Health at the University of California, Davis School of Medicine, who wasn’t involved in the new research.
https://www.nbcnews.com/health/rcna168214
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