What if I told you:
that 19th-century upgrades of European and American cities’ sewage and water systems were what killed diseases such as measles, whooping cough, diphtheria, smallpox, or scarlet fever?
that the effect of these upgrades lasted until well into the 1970s?
that antibiotics and vaccines (petrochemical-based products) are a total scam that *never* cured anyone?
that the oil industry was always behind pushing antibiotics and vaccines by fraudulently claiming the effect produced by upgrades to sewers and water systems? for example, by introducing the 1968 measles vaccine some 20 years after measles infections had already disappeared?
that oil, discovered in the USA, and widely in use by 1901 as lantern oil (replacing whale oil), lost its use due to the invention of the lightbulb and coal-powered electricity? that Rockefeller and others went looking to invent new markets for oil? that Henry Ford unintendedly gave oil a new purpose as a fuel for automobiles? that pharmaceutical companies then embraced oil in their production processes to produce antibiotics and, later, vaccines?
that by the time antiobiotics (1930s and on) and vaccines (1940s and on) became widespread, the diseases they were supposed to cure had already been cured naturally for decades, down by a factor 100 to a 1,000 or more, namely due to improved urban sanitation infrastructure that stopped the spread of diseases via water?
that the entire field of Western medicine (selling prescription drugs) is a gigantic fraud, still today pushing for petrochemical-based medication at racketeering prices, even though the real cure for most diseases is sanitation and cleanliness (clean, uninfected water)?
that most known contagious diseases don’t spread at all via air, proximity, or touch, but by consuming infected water or foods?
that viruses—alleged dead particles of RNA—aren’t real but a fine excuse to sell more vaccines in a dying vaccine industry struggling to stay profitable?
that vaccines were our 20th-century equivalent of Medieval bloodletting, doing more harm than good, but, in both cases, masked by improvements in urban infrastructure?
continued investments in sewers and sanitation in the Third World have been what cured global diseases the most throughout the 20th century?
that programs to send doctors and medication to the Third World have been greatly profitable but hardly effective, since the arrival of the doctors in places such as Africa coincided with the arrival of engineers working on improving sewage and water systems?
that smart, studious, intellectual people working in the field of medicine still think that doctors and medical specialists cured humanity from all aforementioned diseases when it was really engineers building improved sewers and waterways who cured humanity?
that the advice to “drink more water” is sensible, but absolutely fatal advice in case the water is the disease-carrier, namely in places with poorly developed sewers and waterways?
that aforementioned diseases are making a “mysterious” comeback by 2025, namely due to failing maintenance of said sewage and water systems worldwide?
that, therefore, we must predict a rise of diseases in every place where sanitations, cleanliness, sewers, or waterways come under attack due to the third-worldization of the West, i.e., due to lacking investments in maintenance of urban infrastructure?
that humanity is inherently stupid and can’t figure out the real cause of many diseases (namely, infected water or foods carrying the diseases)?
that intellectual smart people working in medicine will never admit their field was a total fraud benefiting the oil industry?
that in the foreseeable future, a large segment of humanity will succumb, once again, to the whooping cough, diphtheria, smallpox, measles, and scarlet fever?
that Western pharmaceutical companies will try to stay relevant by selling one after the other “cure” for diseases caused by water and food pollution?
Well, you’d be in on a helluva conspiracy theory.