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What Is The “Black Fungus” Sweeping Across India?

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You might want to become familiar with “black fungus”, because cases are popping up all over India right now.  In recent months, India has become the epicenter for the COVID pandemic, and many COVID patients are also developing Mucormycosis (also known as “black fungus”).  If “black fungus” attacks you, there is a really good chance that you are either going to be disfigured for life or die.  In fact, the mortality rate for “black fungus” is far, far higher than it is for COVID.  Even if you don’t die, the damage that “black fungus” can cause can be completely and utterly devastating.  The following comes from CBS News

The fungus attacks the nose, eyes, and brain causing blackening over the areas. In severe cases, doctors commonly have to remove the sinus tissue, and even the eyes. And when it attacks the brain, the chances of the patient’s survival diminish.

“The fungus eats whatever comes its way and causes necrosis because it attacks the blood supply to that area… turning them black,” Wattal said. “Mucormycosis was always a serious infection, even in non-COVID times… it has cropped up more in COVID times.”

What a horrible, horrible disease.

According to the New York Times, the number of cases in India was “negligible” three weeks ago, but now more than 30,000 have been reported and more than 2,100 victims have already died…

The number of so-called black fungus cases in India has shot up to more than 30,000 from negligible levels in just three weeks. The deadly disease has sickened former coronavirus patients across the country, and doctors believe that hospitals desperate to keep Covid-19 patients alive made choices that left them vulnerable.

Indian states have recorded more than 2,100 deaths, according to news reports.

Those that have had COVID seem particularly vulnerable.

In fact, it is being reported that 85 percent of those that have developed “black fungus” have some sort of a history with COVID…

More than 85% of the reported cases of mucormycosis, which has a high mortality rate, have a history of COVID-19, India’s Health Minister Dr. Harsh Vardhan said last week.

So will “black fungus” become a major problem outside of India?

At this point we just don’t know, and we will monitor future developments very carefully.

Meanwhile, the “Delta variant” of the COVID virus continues to spread rapidly all over the globe.

In Moscow, there was a huge explosion of newly confirmed COVID cases over the weekend, and the “Delta variant” accounted for the vast majority of them

According to government figures, Russia’s capital on Saturday registered 9,120 new coronavirus infections in 24 hours, a record high for a second consecutive day. Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said that the Delta variant accounted for nearly 90% of the new cases.

“We are starting to go through this story again but with more severe consequences,” Sobyanin told state TV, referring to the intensifying epidemic.

Scientists are very concerned about the Delta variant because it is more resistant to current treatments compared to the original COVID strains, and now we are being told that a new “Delta Plus” variant has also emerged

Now, the Delta-plus variant has been found to exhibit the K417N mutation. According to The New York Times, the K417N, along with another mutation called K417T, is a mutation in the spike protein of the novel coronavirus .

The spikes on its surface, which give the coronavirus its names, also helps the virus to invade human cells.

Reports say that the “mutation appears on the tip of the coronavirus spike, and may help the virus bind more tightly to human cells”.

The good news is that “Delta Plus” has not spread very widely at this point.

But the bad news is that “Delta Plus” appears to be highly resistant to current treatments…

Sharing preliminary details of the Delta-plus variant, researchers at CSIR-Institute of Genomics and Integrative Biology (IGIB) said that it may be linked with abilities to better escape immune response, which means the virus can potentially dodge vaccines and antibody therapies. In fact, Vinod Scaria, a scientist with IGIB, said that there is also evidence of the Delta-plus variant’s “resistance to monoclonal antibodies Casirivimab and Imdevimab”. The reference is to the monoclonal antibody cocktail that was recently okayed for the treatment of milder cases of COVID-19 in India.

So what does this mean for the future?

That is a very good question.  There is still so much that we don’t know about the original Delta variant that is now sweeping across the planet.  In recent days, the WHO has told us that the original Delta variant does have the potential “to be more lethal” than the original COVID strains…

The highly contagious delta variant is the fastest and fittest coronavirus strain yet, and it will “pick off” the most vulnerable people, especially in places with low Covid-19 vaccination rates, World Health Organization officials warned Monday.

Delta, first identified in India, has the potential “to be more lethal because it’s more efficient in the way it transmits between humans and it will eventually find those vulnerable individuals who will become severely ill, have to be hospitalized and potentially die,” Dr. Mike Ryan, executive director of the WHO’s health emergencies program, said during a news conference.

So if the Delta variant really is “more lethal”, what would happen if the “Delta Plus” variant starts to become dominant all over the globe in the months ahead?

Here in the United States, millions upon millions of Americans assume that they have all the protection they need now that they have gotten their injections, but scientists are discovering that Delta is an entirely different issue

As the mutant COVID-19 strain known as “Delta” picks up steam across Europe and the US, one of the WHO’s leading doctors has just expressed concern about recent research published in the Lancet showing that the first generation of COVID-19 vaccines aren’t as effective at protecting against “Delta”.

Answering a question from a reporter during the organization’s regular Monday briefing in Geneva, Dr. Maria Van Kerkhove said that there is data “showing a reduction in neutralization” for the Delta variant, but not as much as the “Beta” variant – better known as the mutant strain that was first discovered in South Africa.

As I have warned my readers so many times before, I believe that we have now entered a time when outbreaks of very dangerous pestilences will become commonplace.

I know that most people don’t want to hear that, because most people desperately want the COVID pandemic to be over so that they can return to their “normal” lives.

Unfortunately, it looks like the world is going to have to deal with Delta, Delta Plus and “black fungus” in the months ahead, and beyond that we could see even more dangerous outbreaks erupt as we head into 2022.

Article posted with permission from Michael Snyder


Matt Agorist

Matt Agorist is an honorably discharged veteran of the USMC and former intelligence operator directly tasked by the NSA. This prior experience gives him unique insight into the world of government corruption and the American police state. Agorist has been an independent journalist for over a decade and has been featured on mainstream networks around the world. Agorist is also the Editor at Large at the Free Thought Project.
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