A pandemic of the vaccinated or Ivermectin ignored?

The World Health Organization stood ready to declare smallpox eradicated following the last known case in 1977 in Somalia. However, another human being contracted the dreaded disease in Birmingham, England.

Janet Parker, 40, a medical photographer who worked in the anatomy department at Birmingham Medical School, began showing symptoms on Friday, August 11, 1978. Her case would ignite a fierce controversy about whether variola, the scientific name for the smallpox virus, had escaped a medical laboratory.

After the disease was confirmed as smallpox, her immediate family, including her parents were quarantined and vaccinated as were a total of 500 contacts. Although her mother developed a mild infection, she survived. None of the others in direct contact with Janet contracted the disease, the nursing staff, the orderlies, nor anyone else. The vaccines were nearly perfectly protective against transmission.

Parker’s condition progressed relentlessly, leaving her almost blind in both eyes, with pneumonia and renal failure. She died on September 11, 1978.

But how did Janet get exposed? Professor Henry Bedson directed the smallpox laboratory at the medical school where Janet Parker was employed. It was one of only a few worldwide that conducted WHO-related smallpox research. Professor Bedson was a virologist who headed the Microbiology Department at the University of Birmingham, and his area of specialty was poxviruses.

Reginald Shooter investigated the case for the Department of Health and Social Security. And his report, “one of the most damning documents ever produced by an official inquiry in Britain,” was leaked to the press.

It found that Bedson’s Smallpox lab did not meet basic Dangerous Pathogens Advisory Group (DPAG) guidelines. For example, it lacked an airlock, a shower, the necessary double-door sterilizing autoclave, and proper changing facilities—the WHO had ordered the lab’s closure by year-end in 1978.

But this did not come in time for Janet Parker, who contracted the deadly virus just four months before it was scheduled to close.

Nigel Hawkes, a journalist, felt she contracted it “from a laboratory situated on the floor below her darkroom in the university medical school.”

Hawkes described it this way in his 1979 article “Smallpox Death in Britain Challenges Presumption of Laboratory Safety,”

“It shows that Mrs. Parker probably came into contact with the smallpox virus while making telephone calls from a disused office next to her darkroom. This office was linked to Bedson’s animal pox room below a service duct, with access to the duct on each floor provided by inspection panels.

On both floors, the panels were loose, and tests showed that a virus released in the animal pox room could find its way above… Shooter’s thesis is therefore that the virus escaped from the smallpox room and from there through the service duct into the office above.”

As further evidence, the strain of smallpox contained in Bedson’s laboratory was known as the “Abid” variant. That is the same version subsequently identified in the fluid from Parker’s body. Many felt this evidence was equivalent to a fingerprint and accused the University and Bedson of negligence in Parker’s death.

However, Birmingham University fought back, attacking the leaked Shooter report as prejudicial, and they appealed to the High Court. They were represented by Brian Escott-Cox QC, a legendary Barrister and England’s version of America’s Racehorse Haynes.  In October 1979, a three Magistrate panel ruled in favor of the University and dismissed the safety violation charges. Over the past 40 years, Barrister Escott-Cox maintained his silence, but recently he spoke about the case.

In 2020, at age 88, Escott-Cox, announced his theory of what happened,

“It was clear to me before the case even started that we were going to be able to prove absolutely beyond any question of doubt whatsoever, that airborne infection of smallpox cannot take place other than between two people who are face to face, less than ten inches apart.”

He continued,

“Unhappily, inevitably, once you have proven beyond any question of doubt that the smallpox could not have escaped from the laboratory and gone to Janet Parker, the overwhelming inference is that Janet Parker must, in some way or other, have come to the smallpox.”

However, what is more troubling than the University’s dismissal, is the Shooter report’s contention this had happened before with this same lab and same disease. In 1966 another smallpox outbreak occurred in Birmingham that affected 73 people, killing one, another photographer performing exactly the same job as Parker. Because smallpox was still relatively common in the 1960’s, it did not draw the same scrutiny and was never linked to the University. Hawkes wrote,

“There now seems little doubt. It was the source.”

A man of the highest standards, both scientifically and ethically, Bedson was a quiet man who loved trout fishing and cricket. However, after realizing the only logical explanation for Janet’s disease was an escaped virus from his lab, he became despondent and took his own life. Professor Bedson and Janet died on the same day, September 11, 1978.

Today, the world finds itself in the throes of another pandemic and, unfortunately, based upon the evidence, another lab-leaked virus. However, unlike the smallpox vaccine, the COVID-19 shots are proving to be far from perfectly protective.

See more here: thedesertreview.com

Header image: Chatham House

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Comments (3)

  • Avatar

    gerald brennan

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    The smallpox vaccine was a disaster. Do research.

    Reply

    • Avatar

      Jerry Krause

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      Hi Gerald,

      Don’t just don’t tell PSI Readers “Do research.”. Explain to us how it is that you claim: “The smallpox vaccine was a disaster.”

      Have a good day, Jerry

      Reply

  • Avatar

    T. C. Clark

    |

    But but but….I have heard from a scientist that viruses do not want to kill their hosts because the host is needed to reproduce the virus……and of course the virus wants to live…despite some biologists not attributing “life” to viruses since they are not capable of reproduction by themselves.

    Reply

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