Coming soon to a location near you leprosy… A ghastly, often fatal disease

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Written By Jim Moore

Rats coming into your home would be welcome guests compared to the horrible disease that’s coming into your country.

We’re not talking here about influenza, pneumonia, or even small pox.

We’re talking about leprosy; a ghastly, often fatal disease that has been practically non-existent in the U.S. for the past 40 years.

No more.

Leprosy has now become a ticking bomb in America, brought to us compliments of the illegal aliens crossing our borders at the rate of two per minute–800,00 annually–from unsanitary, poverty-stricken “third world” countries.

And just so you know what we’re dealing with, here are some facts about it.

Leprosy is a chronic, infectious disease that attacks the skin, the nerves, the upper respiratory tract, and the eyes. It has affected humanity since the beginning of time and left a terrifying image in history of mutilation, rejection, and social exclusion.

The total number of people who have suffered its incurable disfigurement and physical disability is too large to be known. In short, leprosy has been a hell on earth ever since Bible days.

And now it’s here.

In a worrisome report, research/writer Frosty Woodridge informs us that by giving illegal immigrants ID cards and other “assistance”, even mid-western cities like Detroit, Grand Rapids, and Lansing are falling prey to leprosy and other diseases, creating a health care crisis the likes of which we have never known. And by so doing, are writing our own obituary.

Moreover, the disease is showing up in other locations as well.

Dr. John Levis at Bellevue Hospital’s Hansen’s Disease Center in New York, informs us that the rare cases of leprosy he has treated have traditionally come from global “hot spots” like Mexico, Brazil, India, and the Caribbean, where exotic diseases are relatively commonplace.

Yet, in the past six years, Dr. Levis has proven that some of his leprosy patients-including a 73-year-old man from Queens, who has never been out of the country, and another elderly man from Westchester County New York, –contracted their leprosy right here in the states.

This has given the disease the dubious honor of being endemic to the Northeastern United States for the very first time in history.

But leprosy, though a horrid and lethal disease, is not the only bug coming in with the bodies of our unwelcome guests. Tuberculosis has also gained a foothold in America, thanks to the flood of unrestricted illegal immigrants coming across our Southwest borders.

In the 1990’s, cases of TB among foreign-born Americans nearly doubled. And the march of death goes on. Anti-biotic resistant strains of TB from Mexico have crossed over with their “carriers” into Texas, Arizona, New Mexico and California. Whether they move north or not, remember, the killer bugs in their bodies move with them.

But why should we care? How does that affect most of us? If we don’t have physical contact with “unchecked” alien immigrants, what’s the difference?

The difference is, you can’t isolate yourself, and probably wouldn’t if you could.

That being the case, you will continue to do what you’ve always done: eat in a restaurant once in a while, shop regularly, use public washrooms occasionally—all at your own risk.

Risk? Yes. Because, as you may have noticed, many immigrants, legal or otherwise, are employed (if they are at all) as cooks, dishwashers, waiters and waitresses, and food handlers. And it’s a fact that Hepatitis A, B, and C show up in fast food environments.

You can’t escape all this unless you live in a cave.

Woodridge reports, and I rightly so, that rare diseases are just another price we pay for not closing off our borders. And it’s a price that will cost this nation untold hardship in lives and money.

It’s bad enough that illegal immigrants are jumping the borders and taking our jobs, but when they bring disease and death with them, it comes down to one thing: us or them. Which will it be?

Published originally at EtherZone.com : republication allowed with this notice and hyperlink intact.”

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