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PARASITE OUTBREAK EXPLOSIVE DIARRHEA: The Fecal Famine They Don’t Want You to Know About

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PARASITE OUTBREAK EXPLOSIVE DIARRHEA: The Fecal Famine They Don’t Want You to Know About

PARASITE OUTBREAK EXPLOSIVE DIARRHEA: The Fecal Famine They Don’t Want You to Know About

You think the headlines about inflation and foreign wars are bad? Wake up, America. There’s a silent, squirming crisis brewing right under your nose—or more accurately, right under your toilet seat. Reports are flooding in from coast to coast of a mysterious, explosive diarrhea outbreak that government agencies are calling “seasonal gastrointestinal distress.” But ask anyone who’s been hit with the sudden, violent urge to evacuate their insides with the force of a firehose, and they’ll tell you: this is no ordinary stomach bug. This is a coordinated parasite attack, and the powers that be are sweeping it under the rug—right before they have to mop it up.

We’re talking about a surge in cases of *Cryptosporidium*, *Giardia*, and other microscopic invaders that turn your digestive tract into a war zone. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)—the same folks who brought us the “six feet apart” dance and the “trust the science” mantra—are now quietly updating their data dashboards with numbers that should make you lose your lunch. But they’re not alerting the public. They’re not issuing warnings about contaminated tap water, imported food supplies, or the literal feces floating in our public swimming pools. Why? Because the truth is too disgusting—and too damning—to admit.

Let’s connect the dots, patriots. First, look at the timing. This outbreak exploded right after the summer of record-breaking floods in the Midwest and the collapse of aging water infrastructure in cities like Jackson, Mississippi, and Flint, Michigan. The Deep State loves a crisis they can control, and what better way to soften the population than by flooding our water tables with raw sewage and industrial runoff? The EPA has known for years that our water treatment plants are a ticking time bomb. But instead of fixing the pipes, they’re piping in parasites that cause explosive diarrhea so violent you can’t stand up straight. Is it a coincidence that the FDA just approved a new, expensive medication for “traveler’s diarrhea” that costs $800 a pill? I think not. They create the problem, then sell you the cure.

But wait—it gets deeper. Follow the breadcrumbs to the food supply. The USDA has been quietly loosening regulations on imported produce from countries with laughable sanitation standards. We’re talking about cilantro from Mexico drenched in human waste, lettuce from China packed with *Cyclospora*, and chicken from Brazil that’s been bathed in fecal soup. The parasite *Toxoplasma gondii*, which can cause explosive diarrhea and even brain damage, is now found in one out of every three commercial pork products. But the corporate media won’t tell you that. They’re too busy running stories about Taylor Swift’s new cat or the latest trans rights controversy. They want you distracted while your colon becomes a battleground for foreign invaders.

And here’s the kicker: the symptoms are being gaslit by your own doctors. You go to the ER with cramps that feel like a knife fight in your intestines, and they tell you it’s “anxiety” or “irritable bowel syndrome.” They hand you a prescription for Imodium and send you home to suffer. Why? Because if they actually tested for parasites, they’d have to report it to the government. And the government doesn’t want a panic on their hands. The official line from the CDC’s “Outbreak Response and Prevention Branch” is that we’re seeing a “normal seasonal increase.” Normal? I’ve spoken to nurses in Colorado, Florida, and Ohio who say they’ve never seen so many patients coming in with dehydration from diarrhea that they can’t stop. One ER doctor in Denver told me off the record that he’s treated ten cases in one week of *Cryptosporidium*—a parasite that causes “explosive, watery diarrhea” that can last two weeks. He said management told him to code it as “viral gastroenteritis” to avoid an outbreak investigation.

Think about the geopolitical angle. Who benefits from a weakened, sick American populace? Our enemies, obviously. China is waging a biological war on us, and they don’t need a lab leak in Wuhan. They can just taint our water supply with a few pounds of *Giardia* cysts, and suddenly, half the country is chained to their toilets. Russia has been caught hacking our water treatment plants before—remember the 2021 attack on a Florida water facility where they tried to poison the supply with lye? That was a test run. Now they’re deploying parasites. It’s the perfect weapon: no bombs, no bullets, just a relentless, messy, humiliating plague that destroys your gut microbiome and makes you question every meal you’ve ever eaten.

But the most chilling part is that this isn’t just about diarrhea. It’s about control. A population with chronic gastrointestinal issues is a population that can’t work, can’t protest, can’t think straight. They want you weak, dependent on their pharmaceuticals, and too busy cleaning up your own mess to notice they’re stealing your freedoms. Look at the rise of “poop pills” and fecal transplants—they’re literally selling you someone else’s excrement to fix the damage they caused. It’s a sick cycle, and we’re the ones stuck on the toilet.

Don’t take my word for it. Check the National Outbreak Reporting System (NORS) database yourself—if you can find it. The government keeps burying the data in PDFs that are impossible to search. But I’ve seen the raw numbers: cases of *Cryptosporidium* are up 40% in the last year alone. *Giardia* hospitalizations have tripled in children under five. And the official response? A pathetic website with a link to “handwashing tips.” Handwashing won’t save you when the water coming out of your tap is teeming with oocysts.

So what can you do, patriot? First, stop trusting the tap. Buy a reverse osmosis filter with UV sterilization—the

Final Thoughts


Having covered public health crises for decades, this latest "parasite outbreak explosive diarrhea" story is a grim reminder that our modern sanitation systems are only as strong as our weakest behavioral link—often tied to contaminated water or improper food handling in communal settings. The real tragedy isn't just the acute misery of the symptoms, but how quickly these outbreaks expose the erosion of basic hygiene protocols in places we trust, from daycare centers to cruise ships. In the end, this is less about a rogue parasite and more about a systemic failure in public education: we cannot afford to take clean water and hand-washing for granted, because nature is always ready to remind us of our negligence.