
**BAT BLOODLUST: Why the CDC Is Quietly Terrified of the Flying Rats That Are Spreading a 99.9% Fatality Rate Among the Unwoke**
You think you’re safe because you don’t live in a cave? Think again. The mainstream media has been feeding you a sanitized narrative about the “harmless, misunderstood” bats that flutter around your backyard at dusk. They want you to believe these creatures are just bug-eating, echolocating, COVID-releasing little friends of the ecosystem. But here’s the truth that the CDC and the Department of Agriculture don’t want you to Google: Rabies is back, and it’s riding into your neighborhood on wings of unholy terror. This isn’t a zombie movie. This is your local park at sunset.
I’ve been digging into the data that the “public health experts” keep buried under layers of bureaucratic jargon. They don’t want a panic. They don’t want you to know that the rabies virus, specifically the bat-borne variant, is the most terrifying biological weapon nature has ever designed. And guess what? It’s spreading faster than the government can cover up.
**The Silent Spillover: Why Bats Are the Perfect Potentates of Pathogens**
Let’s get one thing straight. Bats are not “flying mice.” They are primitive, immune-system-defying bio-drones. They can carry rabies for months without showing a single symptom. A rabid bat doesn’t foam at the mouth like a cartoon dog. It acts *weird*. It flies during the day. It lands on the ground. It lets you walk right up to it. That’s not “cute.” That’s a biological trap designed by evolution to infect the unwary.
The CDC will tell you that only about 1% of bats carry rabies. They will tell you that human deaths are “rare” – maybe one or two a year. But that’s a statistical lie. They are only counting the cases where the victim was smart enough to go to the hospital and get the post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP). They are not counting the rural suicides, the mysterious “cardiac arrests” in hikers, the “sudden encephalitis” deaths in the Appalachian backwoods that get quietly coded as “unknown cause” to avoid a panic.
Wake up. The rabies virus doesn't need a massive outbreak to be a catastrophe. It has a 99.9% fatality rate once symptoms appear. That’s worse than Ebola. That’s worse than any airborne flu. And the bat variant? It’s often undetectable. You can be bitten by a tiny silver-haired bat while you sleep, feel a tiny pinprick, and wake up with a scratch you mistake for a mosquito bite. By the time you feel the fever, the confusion, the *hydrophobia* (an irrational fear of water that makes you thrash and choke), it’s too late. The virus has already reached your brain. The vaccine is useless. You are a walking corpse.
**The Cover-Up: Why the USDA Is Spraying Your Neighborhood**
You’ve probably seen the “mosquito spraying” trucks. You’ve heard the official line: “West Nile prevention.” But I’ve seen the internal memos. The real target is a different vector. Look at the maps. The areas with the most aggressive “aerial insecticide campaigns” are not coincidentally the areas with the highest bat colony densities: the Texas Hill Country, the caves of Missouri, the deep forests of the Northeast.
Why spray poison from the sky if you’re just trying to kill mosquitoes? Because you’re trying to collapse the food chain. You kill the bugs, the bats have nothing to eat, they get stressed, they get sick, they fly into populated areas looking for food, and then… the accident happens. It’s a sterilization-by-chemical-warfare program, and they are calling it “public health.” They don’t want you to know that the real problem is the bats themselves, and they are using your tax dollars to starve them into extinction while pretending to worry about your dog’s heartworm.
**The “Cute” Bat Boxes: A Trojan Horse for the Woke**
Now here’s where it gets really dark. The same environmental groups that told you to “save the bees” are now telling you to put up “bat houses” in your backyard. They tell you it’s “green pest control.” They tell you it’s “helping bats recover from white-nose syndrome.” They show you pictures of adorable little fuzzy faces peeking out of a wooden box on a pole.
Do not fall for it. I’ve tracked the housing permits. These bat boxes are designed to attract migratory species like the Mexican free-tailed bat. These are the same bats that carry the most aggressive strain of rabies in the Western Hemisphere. By installing a bat box, you are creating a high-density viral incubator fifty feet from your daughter’s bedroom window. You are inviting a creature with a brain the size of a pea that has no moral compass, no capacity for empathy, and a jaw full of razor-sharp teeth that can deliver a bite you won’t even feel until it’s too late.
The woke environmentalists will call you a “speciesist.” They will tell you that bats are “vital to pollination and insect control.” And maybe they are. But so is a nuclear reactor. Both are incredibly useful until they melt down. And the meltdown is happening.
**The Deep State Connection: Why the Pentagon Studies Bats**
Don’t think this is just a nature problem. This is a national security problem. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has been funding bat-related research for decades. They are studying their immune systems to understand how to create anti-aging drugs. They are studying their flight patterns for drone technology. But they are also studying how to weaponize the rabies virus itself.
Think about it. A bat is a perfect stealth delivery system. It’s small. It’s silent. It can enter a building through a crack smaller than a dime. It doesn’t set off metal detectors. And it can carry a payload of
Final Thoughts
After decades covering zoonotic outbreaks, what strikes me most about the rabies-bat nexus isn't the fear it stokes, but the quiet negligence it exposes: we've built our homes and cities without accounting for the ancient viral passengers sharing our airspace. The real story here isn't the handful of tragic deaths, but the glaring public health blind spot—a species that flies under the radar of routine surveillance, leaving us with a vaccine that works perfectly, yet is deployed far too late. Ultimately, this isn't a tale of monstrous creatures, but of our own failure to respect the boundary between the wild and the domestic, a line that bats cross every night while we sleep.