The Pandemic Script
Take 3
… Although the timing cannot be predicted, history and science suggest that we will face one or more pandemics in this century. The next pandemic is likely to come in waves, each lasting months, and pass-through communities of all sizes across the nation and world. While a pandemic will not damage power lines, banks or computer networks, it will ultimately threaten all critical infrastructure by removing essential personnel from the workplace for weeks or months. - President George W. Bush, November 1, 2005
No one expects a pandemic; unless they are part of the 1%, or they can connect the dots of past pandemics and watch them unfold in real time by the telltale signs. Hindsight is 2020.
For efficiency, we will focus on the last 2 pandemics:
1918 Spanish flu pandemic
Covid-19 pandemic of 2020
The Disclosures
“It seems that the returns of pandemic flu, every 30 or 40 years, are arbitrary.” —Alfred W. Crosby, America’s Forgotten Pandemic: The Influenza of 1918
Many aspects of history are unanticipated and unforeseen, predictable only in retrospect…Yet, in one vital area, the emergence and spread of new infectious diseases, we can already predict the future—and it is threatening and dangerous to us all. —Laurie Garrett, The Coming Plague, 1994.
According to reports, congressional hearings, speeches, planning documents, Op-Eds, books, and films, the events of the COVID-19 pandemic were indeed foreseen even as a litany of public disclosures warned about unseen viruses.
Emerging infectious diseases present one of the most significant health and security challenges facing the global community. —Vice President Gore, National Council for International Health Annual Meeting, June 12, 1996
History suggests … another novel influenza virus will emerge at some point in the future and threaten an unprotected human population. The economic and societal disruption of an influenza pandemic could be significant. —Homeland Security Council, November 2005
An easily transmissible, novel respiratory pathogen that kills or incapacitates more than 1 percent of its victims is among the most disruptive events possible. Such an outbreak would result in a global pandemic that causes suffering and death in every corner of the world, probably in fewer than six months. This is not a hypothetical threat. —James R. Clapper, Director of national intelligence, “Worldwide Threat Assessment of the US Intelligence Community Senate Select Committee on Intelligence.” Dni.Gov/Files. March 12, 2013
It takes just one infected airline passenger to introduce an infection into a country. We need the WHO more than ever. It alone has the mandate and legitimacy to serve as a health protection agency for all countries, rich and poor. —Lawrence Summers, Opinion. The world can’t hide from pandemics, The Washington Post, 10 November 2014.
A pandemic flu could be spread easily and quickly, carried by individuals with no obvious symptoms. —Ronald Klain, Washington Post, “Opinion | Stopping the next Pandemic Today, June 5, 2015.
Influenza viruses, coronaviruses and hemorrhagic fever viruses are examples of infectious disease agents that are passed from animals to humans and can quickly pose regional or global threats. —James Clapper, “Worldwide Threat Assessment of US Intelligence Community,” Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. February 9, 2016
Pandemics are everyone’s problem—and as leaders, we cannot ignore it. Imagine if I told you that somewhere in this world, there’s a weapon that exists—or that could emerge—capable of killing tens of thousands, or millions, of people, bringing economies to a standstill and throwing nations into chaos. —Bill Gates, Munich Security Conference, Münchner Sicherheitskonferenz, 17 February 2017.
I would love to be able to bring back our country into a great form of unity. Without a major event where people pull together, that’s hard to do. But I would like to do it without that major event because usually that major event is not a good thing. —President Donald Trump, hours before the State of the Union Address, January 30, 2018
Coincidence or Distraction?
As part of the script, outbreaks of serious influenza strains seem to originate in a shipyard or on a ship:
After WW2, between 1918 and 1920, the U.S. Naval shipyard was first to experience the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic.
In 1996, the Navy ship, USS Arkansas, an outbreak of flu in a highly vaccinated population was blamed on the 1995-96 influenza vaccine. [not a pandemic].
In March 2020, while at sea, (SARS-CoV-2), the ‘cause’ of the COVID-19 pandemic, was detected on the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt
Hantavirus is tracked to a cruise ship.
Viral Contagion or Electrical Toxin?
Each new president continues the Script. Same clown different makeup. But, is the problem a contagion (virus) or the introduction of a new electrical technology disguised as a contagion?
If influenza is primarily an electrical disease, a response to an electrical disturbance of the atmosphere, then it is not contagious in the ordinary sense… In each case—in 1889, 1918, 1957, and 1968 [pandemics]—the electrical envelope of the earth…was suddenly and profoundly disturbed. —Arthur Firstenburg, “The Invisible Rainbow,” 2020. p.110
The frequent lack of respiratory illness was also noted in the even deadlier 1918 pandemic. In his 1978 textbook Beveridge, who had lived through it, wrote that half of all influenza patients in that pandemic did not have initial symptoms of nasal discharge, sneezing, or sore throat.—Arthur Firstenburg, “The Invisible Rainbow,” 2020, p. 91
U.S. data centers in 2030 could contribute to nearly 1300 deaths annually, resulting in a public health burden of more than $20 billion. —Han, Yuelin, et al. “The Unpaid Toll: Quantifying and Addressing the Public Health Impact of Data Centers.”2024.
Changing Narratives
“My Body My Choice” changed to “Your Body My Choice.” The unifying narrative is that pandemics are now everyone’s problem.
“We are all in this together, and we will be better for it.”
“Together we will get through this.”
“We are only as strong as we are united, as weak as we are divided.” —J.K. Rowling
In 2020, predictions changed to the ongoing risk, pattern, and solution.
New pathogens will inevitably find a way to break through our defenses; and that there is the increased potential for intentional or accidental release of a synthesized agent. —Peter Sands, “From Panic and Neglect to Investing in Health Security: Financing Pandemic Preparedness at a National Level.” World Bank, December 2017.
A pandemic “will last 18 months or longer” and could include “multiple waves,” resulting in widespread shortages that would strain consumers and the nation’s health care system. —Jon, Brodkin, NY Times article on a leaked US Government Covid-19 Response Plan, 100 year Plan, Ars Technica, March 18, 2020
We do need more money. But we don’t just need more money for vaccines for children. We need more money to plan for the second pandemic. There’s going to be another pandemic. — Joe Biden, Expose News, June 23, 2022
The Latest Act: Hanta
The latest invisible threat is the Huntavirus (one word like Coronavirus), another ‘infectious disease’ from a “rare” and “deadly” ship outbreak.
While Covid-19 was blamed on multiple animal species, from dogs to raccoons, snakes, and bats, this time the blame goes to rodents. At least for now.
The takeaway of the latest pandemic threat is the “need to track people.” [Note: Is this the real reason for Data Centers; 24/7 surveillance]?
Hantavirus is listed as a vaccine side effect in Pfizer’s 2021 publication.
Dress Rehearsals
Before the main event is there is usually a dress rehearsal, called a Simulation, sponsored by the World Health Organization (WHO).
Event 201 On October 2019, Johns Hopkins + WHO + partners, simulation of a novel Coronavirus – the exercise took place just a few months before the real CO*VID-19 outbreak. This is officially documented. The WHO published all of this on its website on April 27, 2026
Polaris II On April 22 and 23, 2026, the WHO conducted the two-day Exercise Polaris II – a high-profile pandemic simulation exercise featuring a fictional novel bacterium as the outbreak scenario. Involved were 26 countries and territories, around 600 health emergency experts, as well as more than 25 global health agencies and response networks.
The exercise was part of the multi-year WHO program HorizonX, which specifically trains for emergency zoonotic outbreaks (i.e., diseases that jump from animals to humans) and tests international collaboration. Exercise Polaris II builds directly on Polaris I of April 2025.
Incidentally, it was The WHO that sang “Won’t Get Fooled Again.”
The Finale
This transformation was already well on its way before the pandemic, but COVID-19 supercharged the genetics revolution—just as World War II massively accelerated electronics and space travel. This revolution will soon touch our lives ever more intimately. Our health care systems will embrace personalized treatments and predictive modeling to prevent health problems that have yet to materialize. —Jamie Metzl, member of WHO, Op Ed, Newsweek February 12, 2021
In the end, the serum doesn’t work as a vaccine to protect against the flu.—1918 Flu vaccine

