Oct 1, 2024
3 mins read
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3 mins read

Whistleblower Exposes Lyme Disease as Potential Bioweapon in Interview with Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.

Whistleblower Exposes Lyme Disease as Potential Bioweapon in Interview with Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.

Kris Newby, an award-winning medical science writer, claims in a whistleblower interview with Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. that Lyme disease may have originated as a bioweapon.

By yourNEWS Media Newsroom

In a groundbreaking interview with Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., medical science writer Kris Newby exposed the possibility that Lyme disease could be a bioweapon. Newby, the producer of the documentary Under Our Skin and author of Bitten, has spent two decades investigating the origins of Lyme disease after contracting it herself in 2002. Her extensive research suggests that the disease may have been weaponized as part of U.S. military research.

In the interview, Newby and Kennedy discuss the origins of Lyme disease, pointing to the potential involvement of Willy Burgdorfer, the scientist who first discovered the disease in 1981. Burgdorfer admitted on camera that he was instructed to cover up key information about the discovery, revealing that another organism was present during the initial outbreak investigation. This revelation raises questions about whether Lyme disease was intentionally altered to create a more harmful strain.

Kennedy, founder of Children’s Health Defense, draws parallels between Lyme disease and other alleged bioweapons, including Covid-19. He and Newby explore the idea that the U.S. military may have experimented with ticks, injecting them with pathogens capable of causing severe disability and death. These experiments, they claim, were conducted between 1950 and 1975 as part of a broader biological warfare program.

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In 2019, the Inspector General of the Department of Defense launched an investigation into whether the Pentagon weaponized ticks as part of a bioweapons program. This inquiry seeks to determine whether these blood-sucking insects were morphed into military-grade biological weapons for use against enemy combatants.

Newby’s personal experience with Lyme disease began in 2002 when both she and her husband contracted the illness. It took over a year and ten doctors to finally receive a diagnosis, costing them more than $60,000 in medical bills. Her battle with the disease lasted more than five years, during which time she became determined to uncover the political and pharmaceutical corruption behind Lyme disease testing and treatment.

In her interview with Kennedy, Newby connects Lyme disease with broader patterns of U.S. bioweapons research, dating back to Project Paperclip and extending to modern-day efforts such as the Wuhan lab’s gain-of-function research, which led to the emergence of the novel coronavirus, Covid-19.

Both Newby and Kennedy argue that the public deserves to know the truth about these biological experiments. “If you think the U.S. government and the military industrial complex is not evil enough to use bioweapons against its own people, think again,” Kennedy asserted, citing documented cases of bioweapons testing on American citizens.

Newby’s revelations and her collaboration with Kennedy are part of a larger effort to expose the dark history of U.S. bioweapons research, calling for more transparency and accountability.

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