The Zika Virus
Those Conspiracy Guys - Podcast autorstwa Gordon Rochford
LIVE CHAT - On this episode, our first live chat episode, we talk about The Zika Virus and its implications on the human race. The olympics are coming to Brazil in 2016 and this virus is worrying visitors, and why wouldn't it? The side effects of this Zika virus, apart from muscle pain and flu like symptoms, include the chance of you giving birth to a baby with microcephaly, which is a malformity in the womb resulting in a baby with a much smaller brain and skull. This leads to many of it own complications, but the questions we ask are; is this virus man-made? If not made then at least manipulated into a nefarious purpose! Is it a method with which to frighten the world population into voluntarily steralising themselves so as not to have a generation of microcephalic children? Or is it a smoke screen, a ruse, and the deformities in the children are caused by very much more man made endeavours? Could crop manipulation, pesticides and GMOs be the cause of these abnormalities and the powers that be are merely pinning it on the Zika Virus? ________________________This show was recorded live and members of the public joined in to discuss the topic. You can listen to this episode if you support the show on Patreon. You can also get exclusive content, all other ad-free episodes, access to dozens more live chats and get access to private social media like Instagram and Discord and a whole load of other stuff too.Click here to support the show on Patreon http://bit.ly/TCG-PatreonIf you want to follow TCG on social platforms including the Discord, watch video versions of the livestream podcast and documentaries; or even join in on live chats about current events; buy TCG merch; get notifications of and buy tickets to upcoming live stage shows or to just support the show on Patreon; all the links, info and instructions you can find by clicking this link http://www.linktr.ee/thoseconspiracyguys Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices