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THEY'RE POISONING THE WATER SUPPLY: THE EXPLOSIVE DIARRHEA PARASITE OUTBREAK YOU'RE NOT SUPPOSED TO KNOW ABOUT

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THEY'RE POISONING THE WATER SUPPLY: THE EXPLOSIVE DIARRHEA PARASITE OUTBREAK YOU'RE NOT SUPPOSED TO KNOW ABOUT

THEY'RE POISONING THE WATER SUPPLY: THE EXPLOSIVE DIARRHEA PARASITE OUTBREAK YOU'RE NOT SUPPOSED TO KNOW ABOUT

The mainstream media wants you to believe this is just a "stomach bug season." They want you to accept that your tap water, your local swimming hole, and even that organic salad mix you paid a premium for are all perfectly safe. But I've been digging into the CDC's data dumps, the FDA's quietly withdrawn advisories, and the local health department reports that never make the evening news. What I've found is a pattern so disturbing, so coordinated, that it forces us to ask the question no one in Washington wants you to ask: Is the explosive diarrhea parasite outbreak a natural disaster, or is it a weaponized attack on the American gut?

Let me connect the dots for you, because the dots are everywhere.

We're talking about *Cryptosporidium*—a microscopic parasite that turns your digestive system into a battlefield. Symptoms? Explosive, watery diarrhea that hits you like a freight train. Stomach cramps that feel like a demon is twisting your intestines. Nausea so severe you can't keep water down. And it doesn't go away in a day or two. This thing can last for weeks. The CDC's own website admits there's no treatment for healthy people—you just have to ride it out. But who are "healthy people"? In a country where over 60% of the population is on some form of prescription medication, where gut health has been systematically destroyed by processed foods and antibiotic-laden livestock, "healthy" is a myth.

Now look at the timing. The first major outbreak reports started popping up in late spring 2024. By summer, it exploded. I'm talking about multiple states—California, Texas, Florida, New York, Illinois—all reporting clusters of *Cryptosporidium* cases that are 300% to 500% above the five-year average. The CDC quietly updated their website in August to say "increased surveillance" was needed. Increased surveillance? That's code for "we have no idea what's happening, and we're scared."

But the real story is where these outbreaks are happening. Forget the third-world countries you see on TV. This is happening in your backyard. Public pools in suburban communities. Splash pads at your local park. That trendy farm-to-table restaurant that uses "natural spring water" in their cocktails. And here's the kicker: *Cryptosporidium* is resistant to chlorine. You read that right. The same chemical that's supposed to keep our water safe is utterly useless against this parasite. It can survive in a fully chlorinated pool for days. It can live in your tap water for weeks if the treatment plant isn't using ultraviolet light or ozone filtration—which most aren't.

Now ask yourself: Who profits from a population that is constantly dehydrated, constantly sick, constantly running to the bathroom? The pharmaceutical companies, of course. There's no vaccine for *Cryptosporidium*. No magic pill. But there are billions of dollars in anti-diarrheal medications, electrolyte powders, and IV bags. The same corporations that own your local water utility are the ones who own the companies selling you the cure. It's a closed loop. They poison you, then they sell you the antidote.

But it gets deeper.

Let's talk about the water treatment infrastructure in America. Most of it was built in the 1950s and 1960s. It's crumbling. The American Society of Civil Engineers gives our drinking water infrastructure a grade of C-. That's being generous. In cities like Flint, Michigan, and Jackson, Mississippi, the water is literally toxic. But even in wealthy suburbs, the pipes are leaking, the treatment plants are understaffed, and the filtration systems are outdated. *Cryptosporidium* can pass through standard chlorination and even some microfiltration systems. It's the perfect biological weapon for a government that wants to keep you weak and distracted.

And here's where the conspiracy gets even more chilling. In July 2024, the Department of Homeland Security quietly awarded a $2.3 million contract to a biotech firm for "waterborne pathogen detection and mitigation research." Why is Homeland Security involved in a water parasite outbreak? That's not a public health issue—that's a national security issue. They know something they're not telling us. Either they're preparing for a bioterror attack, or they're covering up the fact that one has already begun.

I've also been tracking the FDA's food recalls. Over the past six months, there have been 12 recalls linked to produce that could carry *Cryptosporidium*—bagged salads, cilantro, green onions, and berries. But these recalls are issued quietly, often on a Friday afternoon, and never make it past the local news cycle. The FDA's own database shows that "no contamination source found" in 8 out of 12 cases. That's a lie. They found the source. They just won't tell you because it would reveal a systematic failure in the food supply chain.

Now connect this to the broader agenda. The World Economic Forum, the same group that wants you to eat bugs and live in 15-minute cities, has been pushing for "centralized water monitoring" for years. They want to track every drop of water you use. They want to control the flow. A parasite outbreak that makes people afraid to drink tap water is the perfect excuse to push for government-mandated water filtration systems that are "smart" and "connected." You'll pay for it. They'll control it. And you'll thank them for it.

But the most damning evidence? The CDC has been actively suppressing data. In August 2024, they changed the reporting criteria for *Cryptosporidium* outbreaks. Instead of requiring labs to report every confirmed case, they now only require reporting if there's a "cluster" of five or more cases. That means any outbreak in a small family, a tiny daycare, or a rural town simply disappears from the official numbers. The public health crisis is being erased in real-time.

I've talked to nurses off the record. They're seeing patients—young, healthy adults—hospitalized for dehydration because they can't stop the diarrhea. They're seeing children

Final Thoughts


As a journalist who's covered public health crises for decades, this outbreak underscores a grim truth: we are dangerously complacent about the pathogens lurking in our water and food supply chains. The rapid spread of this crypto-like parasite should be a wake-up call that "mild stomach bugs" can cripple communities and hospitals when infrastructure fails to filter microscopic threats. Ultimately, this isn't just about a bad case of diarrhea—it's a glaring reminder that our sanitation systems are only as strong as the invisible enemies we refuse to see coming.