Wednesday, May 13, 2026

As with 5G in 2020, we are being beamed again creating the same respiratory illnesses as before

 As with 5G in 2020, we are being beamed again creating the same respiratory illnesses as before - instead of covid, they are calling Parvo B-19


This is one of their cover stories for it. The following is all scripted lies, as it was 6 years ago. No one is buying this bullshit.

This year, California has been facing an onslaught of lesser-known respiratory and gastrointestinal illnesses, and now, yet another highly transmissible virus is circulating throughout the region.   

According to recent wastewater surveillance data, parvovirus B19, a “very contagious” respiratory illness that can cause a distinct rosy rash in children and lead to severe complications in pregnant people, is swirling throughout the South Bay and several Northern California cities. Parvovirus type 2 infects dogs, but parvovirus B19 is transmitted from human to human. 

The virus, which typically causes mild symptoms like muscle aches, fever and runny nose, has a moderate presence in Davis, Sacramento, San Jose, Napa, Palo Alto, Redwood City and the southeast neighborhoods of San Francisco, WastewaterSCAN data shows. Children between the ages of 5 and 15 who contract the virus are also more likely to develop a rosy, “slapped cheek” rash over a week after infection, also known as fifth disease. Overall, though, symptoms are usually mild, and sometimes people display no symptoms at all. People who are pregnant, however, face higher risks of severe complications like miscarriage.

Usually spread through coughing and sneezing, “Parvovirus B19 is highly transmissible in respiratory droplets, with 50% of susceptible people infected after household exposure and 20–50% of susceptible students and staff infected during school outbreaks,” an August 2024 notice from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says, adding that people who work with children face higher risks of contracting the illness. According to a 2026 study from child healthcare experts, the virus is seasonal and peaks in spring, late winter and early summer, and it usually resolves on its own. 

Though parvovirus isn’t routinely monitored in the U.S., the CDC reported higher rates of the virus in 2024 and 2025 compared with earlier years — and local health experts say it could be a byproduct of the pandemic.  

 https://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/parvovirus-california-22255293.php