The Health Threat of an Open Border, by Robert W. Malone, MD, MS

The U.S. is under invasion not just from illegal migrants, but from their diseases as well. From Robert W. Malone, MD, MS at rwmalonemd.substack.com:

The risk is real

The Biden White House is determined to have open borders, which not only threaten our economy and overwhelm our existing support systems which are funded by and for US citizens, but also expose Americans to deadly diseases. This focus has politicized federal agencies such as Centers for Disease Control (CDC), the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

US Customs and Border Patrol have encountered 3.2 million illegal aliens crossing our borders in 2023, and these are just the ones who were processed. How many more came over without notice? And this is just in the past year…

These agencies are working with the Biden administration to ensure that these illegal aliens are “processed” rapidly. Vaccine records are not required, and health status – including being positive for vector-spread communicable diseases, such as chikungunya virus, dengue, leprosy, yellow fever, malaria, hepatitis A, sexually transmitted disease and salmonella variants – are overlooked/not tested for. Even a basic physical is not required.

The Case of Yellow Fever:

It was 1793 in Philadelphia and the summer was proving to be one of the hottest on record. A blanket of humidity covered the city, fed by putrid swamps that served as breeding grounds for the Aedes aegypti mosquito. While smaller outbreaks of yellow fever had occurred in the U.S. since 1693, this year would prove to be different. The capital city would be decimated. In just a matter of months, 10% of Philadelphia’s population was dead and a greater proportion had fled the city in fear for their lives.

Outbreaks of yellow fever in the USA were once feared, with the 1904 major outbreak of yellow fever in the U.S. in New Orleans being the most recent. Yellow fever is still endemic in tropical and subtropical regions of South America and Africa.

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