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Obviously our African Ancestors encountered sickness, otherwise there would have been no incentive to develop medical sciences. Fast forward to today and it is obvious there is a need in societies to continue to try to pretend Africans are genetically inferior and thus physically sicker. With just a little bit of paying attention and analyzing what is taking place and what is said to be taking place, it is quickly discovered that Africans are incredibly healthy under the challenges of circumstances. Ancestor Mama Henrietta Lacks proves that alone, on her own.
The following has been paraphrased from
History Unit Part A – Study Guide from “polk.k12.ga.us:”
When Europeans came to America, they brought diseases that killed a lot of the people who were already here before Columbus. Africans were brought to America to develop America because they were immune to diseases and worked hard.
When Europeans colonized Australia, many native people who were there first were killed by diseases such as smallpox and the advanced weapons such as guns.
The following is paraphrased from
A Great Deal Of Sickness by Peter Dowling:
From 1788 to 1900, diseases were introduced into Australian Aboriginal populations during the process of colonization.
Prior to contact with Europeans, the original people of Australia had endemic pathogens causing chronic diseases and limited epidemics. After early contact with Europeans, the original people suffered high rates of mortality due to severe epidemics of infectious and respiratory disease such as smallpox, syphilis, tuberculosis, influenza, and measles. Once the original people were institutionalized on government and mission settlements, they had a high level of mortality from the introduced diseases. During the period of institutionalization infectious and respiratory diseases were responsible for over 50% of recorded deaths on 8 separate Aboriginal settlements in Southeast Australia. The major diseases recorded as causes of death were tuberculosis, bronchitis, pneumonia, diarrhea and dysentery.
In the 14th century CE, the Bubonic Plague wiped out one third of Europe's population. The disease is spread through rodents and fleas
According to an article in
The Atlantic Magazine: ”The Indians in Peru, Dobyns concluded, had faced plagues from the day the conquistadors showed up—in fact, before then: smallpox arrived around 1525, seven years ahead of the Spanish. Brought to Mexico apparently by a single sick Spaniard, it swept south and eliminated more than half the population of the Incan empire. Smallpox claimed the Incan dictator Huayna Capac and much of his family, setting off a calamitous war of succession. So complete was the chaos that Francisco Pizarro was able to seize an empire the size of Spain and Italy combined with a force of 168 men.Smallpox was only the first epidemic. Typhus (probably) in 1546, influenza and smallpox together in 1558, smallpox again in 1589, diphtheria in 1614, measles in 1618—all ravaged the remains of Incan culture. Dobyns was the first social scientist to piece together this awful picture, and he naturally rushed his findings into print. Hardly anyone paid attention. But Dobyns was already working on a second, related question: If all those people died, how many had been living there to begin with? Before Columbus, Dobyns calculated, the Western Hemisphere held ninety to 112 million people. Another way of saying this is that in 1491 more people lived in the Americas than in Europe.
His argument was simple but horrific. It is well known that Native Americans had no experience with many European diseases and were therefore immunologically unprepared—"virgin soil," in the metaphor of epidemiologists. What Dobyns realized was that such diseases could have swept from the coastlines initially visited by Europeans to inland areas controlled by Indians who had never seen a white person. The first whites to explore many parts of the Americas may therefore have encountered places that were already depopulated.”
”In the long run, Fenn says, the consequential finding is not that many people died but that many people once lived. The Americas were filled with a stunningly diverse assortment of peoples who had knocked about the continents for millennia. "You have to wonder," Fenn says. "What were all those people up to in all that time?”
In 2015 CE, after oft repeated lies, now there's talk from worldwide disease spreaders of reducing disease-causing fluoride in water and poisons in milk. At the same time GMO is on the rise. The former is in hopes of saving themselves, the latter is in hopes of killing most nearly everybody else, including their podunk parasite puppets, which is why soy and corn were targeted first.