The Strange Truth- Bird Flu Update- What we know so far. No need to panic.
Prepper Broadcasting NetworkJanuary 31, 202500:38:4626.62 MB

The Strange Truth- Bird Flu Update- What we know so far. No need to panic.

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[00:00:36] Well, welcome to another episode of The Strange Truth. I'm your host, Carl B. And I hope that everyone's had a pretty decent week. It's been crazy up here, upstate New York, man. It's been crazy here. You know, on the brown homestead, so to speak, too.

[00:00:57] Last week, for about a week and a half, we've had not only severe weather, because it's been, I think that we stayed under 30 degrees for extensive periods of time, for days.

[00:01:21] But we've also, you know, my family, we've also had the flu. So it's been, you know, a really rough couple of days. And, you know, what can I say?

[00:01:36] Yeah, I'm just glad that, you know, we're feeling okay right now and everything is going well. While I'm recording this, we just lost power. The power just went off. And it's still off while I'm recording this.

[00:01:52] So I know I saved all my sources. And I'm hoping that everything is just saved and I have access to everything. But it's incredible that, yeah, you know, I just pretty much just lost power here. Oh, okay. There it is. It just came back. Right? You know, it's been crazy. It's been crazy. You know, the whole family had the flu for about a week and a half. You know, my wife still has a cough.

[00:02:22] And, you know, it's really rough when you're running a fever and it's like nine degrees below or something. So that was that was a week and a half of just misery. But we're we're feeling better now and everybody's over it. I think that the kids brought it home from school. And then, of course, we got it. I'm always the last one that, you know, gets it.

[00:02:46] It's amazing how it just cycles through the family. But I'm usually the last one that gets it. You know, it was it was rough. Right. So, you know, that was one of the reasons why we didn't have an episode last week, because I just could not do it. I couldn't do it. It was just too much. Anyway, I really wanted to talk about the bird flu. So this episode is all is going to be about the bird flu.

[00:03:14] That's what we're going to be discussing. It is something that, you know, like we in the, you know, in the preparedness community and homesteading community, we are aware of. We've we've been aware of the bird flu for the last going on. What now? Four years. We've you know, we've we've we've watched it take root both here and in Europe.

[00:03:40] We've watched it spread. We've watched it go through the animals, you know, the the farm animals and, you know, the chickens and the cows and everything else. And and now you see it is popping up in human beings and everything else. But, you know, it's just amazing that, you know, since Mr. Biden lost the election, now all the mainstream media, all of a sudden now they have found the bird flu.

[00:04:09] So it was there all this time and they did not really report on it. It was never anything of major concern to them. Right. Because, of course, they had to bury anything bad and they had to keep propping up their their candidate, so to speak. But now that he's gone right now, you know, you see it popping up all over the news and everybody's asking about it.

[00:04:32] It got to a point where even a co-worker of mine who, you know, this person has never expressed an interest in prepping, has never, you know, asked me any questions really as far as any preparedness, any type of, you know, anything like this. And, you know, this person came to me and said, hey, you know, what's going on with this bird flu?

[00:05:00] You know, because they were getting, you know, they obviously it's popping more and more, you know, popping more and more in the news and and and they've really become aware of it and they're becoming more and more alarmed. You know, and I told this person, well, this is something that personally I have been kind of like keeping tabs on for the last couple of years.

[00:05:22] And while, you know, we know that if this thing mutates and becomes more viral in terms of, you know, if it goes airborne or if it just becomes really easy for people to get it, then, yeah, it could cause a lot of problems, could be pretty lethal.

[00:05:43] Right. I think the lethality of this thing has been, what, 40 to 50 percent, you know, any animals that get it die, you know, so you just kind of translate that to human beings, at least initially. Right. Because usually what happens, it starts really strong and then it peters out. It becomes less and less. Right. But it's in the initial stages when people are getting it, it causes the most damage.

[00:06:11] That seems to be the way the virus goes. Right. Because they really don't want to kill the host. Right. They just want to spread. And eventually, you know, they become less and less, you know, lethal. Right. We even saw this with COVID as well. Right. Where, you know, initially, you know, people got sick really bad. And then after a while, it became less and less, you know, lethal.

[00:06:36] So, but, you know, so this person came to me and was asking me all kinds of stuff about it. And I was really surprised. You know, it's on people's radar now, folks. It's on people's radar. You know, the person also said to me, you know, that it's presenting. Right. A lot of times it seems to be presenting as pink eye.

[00:07:04] And they went to the they went to the pharmacy and they noticed that a lot of this, you know, like a lot of the medication for pink eye was gone. So if you go to the pharmacy and you notice that a lot of the pink eye medication is gone, you know, that that that could be telling you that maybe there is something going on in your neck of the woods, too. Right. So because, you know, it's all it's all about inferring. Right.

[00:07:29] You know, that's what we try to do to try and keep one step ahead is try to figure out and sense what's going on. Right. We try to read the tea leaves, so to speak, so that we can be at least one step ahead. So I'm going to I'm going to go to, you know, we're going to do some ads here, you know, because they keep the lights on. Right. So so let's listen to some of our sponsors here.

[00:07:59] And and then I'm going to jump right into these articles about the bird flu. So, you know, I'm going to try and bring you, you know, all my listeners, all PBN listeners up to date on it. And we'll try and keep this short. We'll try and keep this, you know, 25 minutes to 30 minutes. Right. And so let's get right into our sponsors.

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[00:10:59] Let folks know, you know, what we offer, because this is a very unique thing that we do here on PBN. Right. It's a very unique service, whether you are an old hand or you're new to the preparedness lifestyle. Right. You know, you know, please go on over to PBN, become a member. You know, that will open up a lot more resources to you. And no matter where you are in your prepping journey. Right.

[00:11:27] Right. It will help you get a little further. You know, it will help you get further ahead. OK. So back to the bird flu. Right. What we know so far. Right. We know that this thing has been spreading over the last five years. We know that it, you know, at first they were saying, you know, it was all about the game birds. Right. Or about wild birds all across the USA.

[00:11:54] And then it, you know, and then, of course, it's it's it's spread to, you know, you know, chickens and and it just made its way up through. They found it in different animals like they would find it in like foxes and different wild animals. And it's made its way right to cows and and different farm animals, you know, mice. They found it in mice, which is kind of worrying. Right.

[00:12:25] So we know that we've been tracking this over the last four years here on PBN. So so we know that this thing has been out there and it's been slowly mutating. One of the things I want to warn our audience about is, you know, is apathy. Right. I know that we've been burnt with covid. A lot of things happened with covid that shouldn't shouldn't happen at all.

[00:12:53] Now, that should not make us not pay attention very carefully to this whole bird flu thing. OK, because regardless of how we might feel about lockdowns and masks and different things, the virus is a virus. Right. And if this thing is out there and if it gets out and if it starts hurting people and if you know and people start getting sick, then it doesn't matter what you think about lockdowns or masks or anything like that.

[00:13:23] Virus is a virus. The virus is going to do its thing. And with a lethality right of, you know, 40 to 50 percent, then, yeah, we got we got to take this thing seriously. So while we're not going to go overboard with it and start running for the hills and start saying the sky is falling, it is something that I think that we have to be very, very prudent in tracking it and making sure that we are up to date with what's going on with it.

[00:13:48] So that if something happens, if this thing then, you know, starts, you know, infecting people, then we can take the steps necessary steps to protect ourselves and our families. OK, so I just kind of wanted to throw that out there. But I'm going to go through some articles now. Right. As I said, all of a sudden, our bird flu is is in the news. It wasn't in the news. Mainstream media, really, you know, when Mr. Biden was in office, but now with Mr. Trump, you know, all bad news.

[00:14:18] Now is going to take precedence. So let's just hear what they're saying here. This is from ABC News and it says first bird flu death in the United States reported in Louisiana. And this was published on January 6, 2025. And it says the first person has died of bird flu in the United States. The Louisiana Department of Health confirmed on Monday.

[00:14:41] The patient who was exposed to non-commercial backyard flock and wild birds was over age 65 and had underlying medical conditions, officials said. Last month, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed the patient was experiencing the first case of severe bird flu in the U.S.

[00:15:03] At the Times, a spokesman from the Louisiana Department of Health told ABC News the patient was experiencing severe respiratory illness related to bird flu infection and was in critical condition. The patient remains the only human case of bird flu confirmed in Louisiana. The U.S. has seen an increase in human cases of bird flu or avian influenza since April when the first human case was reported.

[00:15:34] Now, this is, you know, this, of course, they're talking about last April, right? This guy died in January 2025. So this is all current here. Let's see. In a statement on Monday, the CDC said the first bird flu death in the U.S. was not unexpected given the known potential for infection with these viruses to cause severe illness and death.

[00:16:00] The agency said its risk assessment has not changed that the risk to the general public remains low and no person to person transmission has been identified. As of January 3rd, there have been 66 human cases of bird flu reported in the U.S., according to the CDC data.

[00:16:20] Signs and symptoms of infections in humans often include sore throat, cough, fever, runny or stuffy nose, headache, muscle or body aches, fatigue and shortness of breath, the CDC says. Less common symptoms include nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and seizures.

[00:16:39] Infections can range from no symptoms to mild illness such as bird flu-like symptoms to more severe illness such as pneumonia, which could require hospitalizations, the CDC said. Almost all confirmed cases have had direct contact with infected cattle or infected livestock.

[00:17:00] Aside from the case confirmed in the Louisiana patient, cases have been mild and patients have all recovered after receiving antiviral medication, according to the CDC and state health officials. One previous case in Missouri was hospitalized, but health officials pointed to other health conditions aside from bird flu infection involved in the patient's admission to the hospital.

[00:17:27] The Louisiana Department of Health and the CDC say there is no evidence of person-to-person transmission and the risk to the general public is low. However, those who work with birds, poultry or cows or have recreational exposure to them are at higher risk. The CDC recommends staying away from sick or dead wild birds, poultry and other animals and if contact is unavoidable, using personal protective equipment.

[00:17:55] The agency also suggests not touching surfaces or materials contaminated with saliva, mucus or animal feces from wild or domestic birds and animals confirmed or suspected to have bird flu, as well as not consuming raw milk or raw milk products. The U.S. Department of Agriculture issued a new federal order last month that raw milk samples nationwide will be collected and shared with the department in order to test for bird flu.

[00:18:25] A few weeks later, the Food and Drug Administration announced that federal health officials have begun collecting samples of aged raw cow's milk cheese across the U.S. to test for bird flu. So, there you have that report from ABC News. Right? And let's go to CNN. CNN, right?

[00:18:52] You know, I think that this is probably one of the first times CNN has carried anything about the bird flu. Right? I wonder why. I wonder why. Right? But let's read. Let's read this article here. How America Lost Control of the Bird Flu, Setting the Stage for Another Pandemic. Right? This is CNN. And listen to the headline. How America Lost Control of the Bird Flu. So, Trump has been in office for about a week.

[00:19:23] And now we have this headline about how America lost control of the bird flu. So, you mean how the Biden administration lost control of the bird flu. Right? Setting the stage for another pandemic. Because the Biden administration for the last four years, right, should have been taking care of this. If there's any issues. But let's read the article. Right? A lab manager prepares milk samples for testing as the Animal Health Diagnostic Center of Cornell. Blah, blah. Well, let me just skip over that.

[00:19:49] Keith Paulson's jaw dropped when farmers showed him images of their cell phones at the World Dairy Expo in Wisconsin in October. A livestock veterinarian at the University of Wisconsin, Paulson had seen sick cows before with their noses dripping on others' slack. But the scale of the farmers' efforts to treat the sick cows stunned him.

[00:20:14] They showed videos of systems they had built to hydrate hundreds of cattle at once in 14-hour shifts. Now, I reported on this about two months ago. There was a report about this very same thing about two or three months ago that I reported on here on Estrange Truth on PBN. Right?

[00:20:42] So, this to us is old news. We reported this. But, you know what? It's good to read it again so that, you know, if you've missed, if you did miss that, you know, if you did miss that episode, right, then, of course, now you'll be able to hear it again. But I'll read this again. Keith Paulson's draw dropped when farmers showed him images on their cell phones at the World Dairy Expo in Wisconsin in October.

[00:21:09] A livestock veterinarian at the University of Wisconsin, Paulson had seen sick cows before with their noses dripping and their udders slack. But the scale of the farmers' efforts to treat the sick cows stunned him. They showed videos of systems they have built to hydrate hundreds of cattle at once in 14-hour shifts. Dairy workers pumped gallons of electrolyte-rich fluids into ailing cows through metal tubes inserted into the esophagus.

[00:21:36] It was like watching a field hospital on an active battlefront treating hundreds of wounded soldiers, he said. Nearly a year into the first outbreak of the bird flu, among cattle, the virus shows no sign of slowing. The U.S. government failed to eliminate the virus on dairy farms when it was confirmed to a handful of states. But by quickly identifying infected cows and taking measures to keep their infections from spreading,

[00:22:05] now at least 875 herds across 16 states have tested positive. Experts say they have lost faith in the government's ability to contain the outbreak. We are in a terrible situation and going into a worse situation, said Angela Razmussen, a virologist at the University of Saskatchewan in Canada. I don't know if the bird flu will become pandemic, but if it does, we are, you know, she used the explicative,

[00:22:34] you know, we are, you know, pretty much done for. To understand how the bird flu got out of hand, KFF Health News interviewed nearly 70 government officials, farmers and farm workers and researchers with expertise in virology, pandemics, veterinarian medicine and more. Together with emails obtained from local health departments through public records requests,

[00:22:58] this investigation revealed key problems, including deference to the farm industry, eroded public health budgets, neglect for the safety of agriculture workers and the sluggish pace of federal interventions. Case in point, the U.S. Department of Agriculture this month announced a federal order to test milk nationwide. Researchers welcomed the news, but said it should have happened months ago before the virus was so entrenched.

[00:23:24] It is disheartening to see so many of the same failures that emerged during the COVID-19 crisis reemerge, said Tom Bollick, director of the Global Health Program at the Council on Foreign Relations. Far more bird flu damage is inevitable, but the extent of it will be left to the Trump administration and Mother Nature.

[00:23:47] Already the USDA funneled more than $1.7 billion into tamping down the bird flu on poultry farms since 2022, which includes reimbursing farmers who have had to cull their flocks and more than $430 million into combating bird flu on dairy farms. In coming years, the bird flu may cost billions of dollars more in expenses and losses.

[00:24:11] Dairy industry experts say the virus kills roughly 2% to 5% of infected dairy cows and reduces a herd's milk production by about 20%. Worse, the outbreak poses the threat of a pandemic. More than 60 people in the U.S. have been infected, mainly by cows or poultry, but cases could skyrocket if the virus evolves to spread efficiently from person to person.

[00:24:36] And the recent news of a person critically ill in Louisiana with the bird flu shows that the virus can be dangerous. We know that that person has since died. Just a few mutations could allow the bird flu to spread among people because viruses mutate within human and animal bodies. Each infection is like a pull of a slot machine lever. Even if there's only a 5% chance of a bird flu pandemic happening,

[00:25:04] we're talking about a pandemic that probably looks like 2020 or worse, said Tom Peacock, a bird flu researcher at the Perbright Institute in the United Kingdom, referring to COVID. The U.S. knows the risk but hasn't done anything to slow this down, he added. Beyond the bird flu, the federal government's handling of the outbreak reveals cracks in the U.S. health security system that could allow other risky new pathogens to take root.

[00:25:36] So, you know, it's interesting now that all of a sudden, right, you know, they're now talking about, you know, the bird flu. It's popping into people's consciousness, right? But, you know, we've been tracking this over four years. And, you know, we've seen this thing spread through farms. Hundreds of cows, you know, thousands of cows died. Millions of birds culled, right? And now all of a sudden now they're talking about, oh, egg prices, egg prices are high.

[00:26:06] You know, Trump and Mr. Egg prices are high. But guess what? Egg prices have been high, you know, for the last pretty much three years because the bird flu has killed off, right, a lot of the chickens. And when you have less chickens, then you have, you know, you have less eggs. And, of course, less eggs leads to higher egg prices, right? So it's really interesting to me that all of a sudden all these people are crying about, you know, like the bird flu and egg prices and this and that,

[00:26:34] you know, when, yeah, well, this thing has been going on for a really long time. So they really need to go back into the history of all of this and do their research properly. We've been, you know, we've been tracking this thing, as I've said many, many times here, you know, for over four years. So this to us is like old news. To a lot of people on the other side, I think, of the political spectrum,

[00:26:59] this is new to a lot of them because they've never really heard any of this news. And now they're going to use it to do damage to the administration. You know, so it's so but we, however, we've got to be smart in the way we use this information. We've got to make sure that we're keep tracking, you know, the, you know, the extent of the, you know, the progress that it's making right zoonotically is it is a pathogen pretty much, you know,

[00:27:29] really becoming more transmissionable, you know, with, you know, with, you know, amongst human beings, you know, which is really, really seriously important for us. And if we notice an uptick here, then, of course, then we, of course, we all here act accordingly. Right. And, but, you know, we can't allow ourselves to be lulled or to be apathetic because of what happened with COVID.

[00:27:56] We've got to still be on our guard and make sure that we're tracking this and we're paying the proper attention to this. So while, you know, I'm not running for the hills here, we're not doing that. We're not saying the sky is falling. You know, we're not like CNN. We're not saying the sky is falling. But this is something that, yes, you know, we need to make sure we pay proper attention to. So what do we know about it?

[00:28:23] We know that for many years it's been traveling and spreading amongst farmers. We know that it has really taken a toll on the chicken industry, the poultry industry. We know that millions of birds have been culled over the last four years. We know that lots of cows have died, you know, it's probably in the hundreds of thousands of cows have died because of this. And it's really affected the cattle industry.

[00:28:52] And, you know, you know, there were all these reports of cows just being pretty much dumped on the side of the road out there in California. Right. Because, you know, the cows were dying. And this is something that never got any play in the mainstream media. Right. But there was a lot of, you know, reports of cows just being dumped because they couldn't keep up. The cows were actually dying. So, you know, we we know that this one person has died in the U.S.

[00:29:22] I believe that there's been other fatalities across the world in Canada and in the U.K. Other people have died because of it. The symptoms are flu like. Like the thing that you have to watch for is is it presents a lot of times like pink eye. So, you know, with people at work, you know, if you notice that they've got pink eye or whatever or whatever, you know, I would say, you know, be cautious. Be cautious.

[00:29:48] If if you if you notice, you know, people in a store, you know, whatever, you know, like it appears that they have pink eye. Right. If you've got kids and they come home with pink eye. Right. You know, which these days is not really common. Right. It's you know, it used to be, but it's not anymore. Or then it might be cause for concern. Maybe you might want to, you know, get get yourself or or that person tested.

[00:30:15] You know, if the person is in your family, maybe they really should get tested to see really what what's really going on with them, because you don't want this thing spreading and we're not really necessarily taking care of it. But it does present as pink eye and just mild, you know, just mild flu symptoms in some people, in some people. Take care of your backyard flocks, please, because, you know, you know, they'll use any excuse to come after homesteaders.

[00:30:43] They'll use any excuse for, you know, to make people less self-sufficient. So if this thing really if there is an outbreak, then, you know, they're going to come after the backyard flocks and they're going to give people a hard time. Make your plans accordingly. Make sure that if you do have backyard chickens, that you can take them inside. You can keep them inside. Right. That you have a place for your chickens to go, you know, in case anything breaks out.

[00:31:10] So if you're just free ranging and there's no real you don't have like chicken coops or or, you know, or if you if you have a chicken coop where it's not, you know, it can't be locked properly to prevent the chickens from getting out. Maybe you want to kind of start seeing to to all that. Right.

[00:31:30] So that you have a proper place, you know, it just in case this thing like evolves and then, you know, it hits the fan and they start coming for people's backyard flocks. You know, you should have a way to lock up your your chickens, your quail, you know, whatever you keep in your backyard and bring your animals in and out of the way. Right. And keep them healthy. OK, so, you know, that's what we know so far.

[00:31:59] Right. But, you know, it's popping in the news. I would say right now there is no real cause for major alarm, but I think that this thing is going to keep mutating and evolving and and we're just going to have to see how it goes. I do think that I give it another couple of months, another eight to 12 months to see where it all goes.

[00:32:26] You know, you know, Christmas, you know, by Christmas, by by December of this year, you know, if you know, if there's not you know, if there's no indication that this thing has evolved, then, you know, it'd be interesting. But yeah, that's what we know. OK. All right. So I hope that you you you got something from this.

[00:32:52] Right. We don't we don't try to tell you how to think here on PBN. Right. We just give you information and let you, you know, and let you decide how you're going to use that information. Please do your own research. You know, you can Google you can Google bird flu. Right. And if and if you do now, you're going to notice that. Wow. You know, it's not just in the alternate media anymore. You know, three months ago when I Google bird flu, it was you know, it was in mostly just the alternate media.

[00:33:22] Sources. Now it's in like ABC and CB, you know, CBS and NBC and, you know, the rest of them. Right. You know, it's in all of these mainstream media sources. It's amazing how how how that, you know, how how that just start, you know, becoming a source of major interest to folks.

[00:33:47] Right. OK. So do your own research and let people know. Right. You know, we're not panicking here. Right. We don't panic. Right. Right. You know, as as James would say, you know, it's all right. Calm within the chaos. Right. That's what we do here. Right. We give you the information. And just like with with covid, with covid folks here on PBN knew it was coming months before it hit the United States and were well prepared beforehand.

[00:34:15] I would say two, three months out, you know, folks on PBN were talking about covid and preparing for it. So when it did hit, it was like, OK, we were ready for it. So the same thing applies to this situation as well. OK, so keep listening to PBN. Thanks for listening. I know I know that your time is valuable and we valuable we you know, we value all our listeners here. If you like what you hear, please pass us around.

[00:34:43] OK, and of course, if you want to read a really, really cool book about people surviving an economic collapse, then you can go on over to you can go on over to Amazon dot com and you can download my book. Right. The Prepper Part One, The Collapse. That's the Prepper Part One, The Collapse by Carl A.D. Brown, you know, and that's on Amazon.

[00:35:09] And it's also available, you know, as an audible book where you can listen to it. So, you know, if you want to hear about a family surviving pretty much an economic collapse. Right. And and just what that might entail, what it might look like, then please feel free to go on over and check that out. It's a scary little book that every purple should read. OK, so that's all I have.

[00:35:34] I don't you know, and you know, and I'll see you, you know, I'll see you all you guys next week. Right. You know, these are serious time, folks, and serious times require serious people. So take care and good night. On the brink of blackouts again, as power demand reached an all time record high overnight, slivers of the golden state plunged into darkness. Com says it expects to continue with stage six running blackouts for the rest of the day.

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