It hasn’t even been a week since the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the Zika virus a global emergency, and already the conspiracy theories are piling up. Of course they are. A pandemic that’s sparked an abortion rights dystopia and legit discussion of genetic warfare? The Rockefeller family must be involved.


Here are a few “theories” on the origin of the Zika virus, culled from the bastion of rational scientific discourse also known as the internet.

GMO Mosquitos / Oxitec

Perhaps the most ubiquitous rumor circulating online is that the Zika outbreak was caused by genetically modified mosquitos released by insect control company Oxitec. While it’s true that Oxitec is in the business of making GM mosquitos, and it’s also true that Oxitec has conducted GM mosquito trials in Brazil, that’s where this theory’s links to reality end.


Oxitec’s GM mosquitos carry a heritable genetic trait which renders any offspring unable to survive without the antibiotic tetracycline. When a wild female breeds with a GM male, the larvae die long before reaching adulthood. For the Oxitec plot to work, a bunch of GM mosquitoes would have had to be released with an ample supply of tetracycline.

GM Aedes aegypti mosquito, via Oxitec

And then, also, the insect control company had a bunch of Zika virus on hand? And somehow the epicenter of the Zika outbreak occurred hundreds of miles from where Oxitec was conducting GM mosquito trials? Moreover, in what world are mosquitos programmed to self destruct also likely carriers for a pandemic?


These are questions that don’t have simple answers.

Rockefeller Monkey Experiments / Illuminati

Did you know that the AMERICAN GOVERNMENT has had the Zika virus in biological archives since 1947? Did you know that Zika was originally isolated from monkeys created in a secret Rockefeller laboratory experiment and is now “available for order” online?


Here, check out some proof:

The idea that the current Zika epidemic stems from samples taken from the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC) is a special brand of paranoia. Yes, the ATCC has known pathogenic samples in its biological culture collection, and yes, Zika virus is one of them, and YES, scientists can request access to these specimens for research purposes. But it isn’t exactly like ordering a pizza. If you put in a request for any specimens that are even mildly pathogenic, you need to show a lot of credentials, and you need to back those up with legal documents signed by representatives of your research institution.


Then again—can we really trust any organization associated with the man who sank the Titanic?

Population Control / Vaccines / Bill Gates


Of course population control—why else would the virus’ main victim be pregnant women? And what better way to cull the sheeple than with vaccines?

There are a few different versions of this theory out there, and it’s all a bit nebulous. But here are some “facts” I’ve managed to glean through my “research”:




In late 2014, the Brazilian government added Tdap (Tetanus, diphtheria, and pertussis) to its list of routine vaccinations for pregnant women



Zika virus broke out in Brazil in 2015

The Bill and Melinda Gates foundation recently launched a program to study the immune responses of pregnant women to tdap. Purportedly, this was to “test to the safety of the vaccine regimen.” However:

Bill Gates is a Known Eugenicist

I’ll let you draw your own conclusions.

UPDATE 2/16/16: Another scientifically bogus, Zika-inspired theory is sweeping the internet, my friends. Turns out, the birth defect microcephaly isn’t, and never was, being caused by a virus. That’s just what Big Ag wants you to think, as it continues to dump deadly chemicals into your drinking water. Wake up, sheeple!




That, at least, is the foregone conclusion of an informative new report by the “Physicians in Crop Sprayed Villages,” who claim that microcephaly—which the World Health Organization has tentatively linked to Zika virus—is in fact being caused by the chemical larvicide pyroproxyfen. This may sound rather alarming, until you learn that the supposed physicians behind the report are an anti-GMO activism group.

Already, many objective medical professionals (Monsanto shills??!) have come forth to debunk the claim, explaining that pyroproxyfen has extremely low toxicity in vertebrates. But props to the activists for capitalizing on an international health scare to promote their agenda. That takes some gall.


[Discovery News, Science Blogs]

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