
Image: Defender Wildlife & Pest Control
Thousands of Americans now battle relentless fatigue, joint pain, neurological fog, and misdiagnoses that conventional medicine labels as "all in your head" or autoimmune mimics—yet declassified evidence points to U.S. military experiments releasing infected ticks during the Cold War, amplifying a stealth microbe that evades detection and destroys health from within.
The Borrelia Invasion and Its Hidden Vectors
Borrelia burgdorferi, the spirochete behind Lyme disease, operates as a stealth-type microbe that suppresses or evades immune response entirely. Dr. Edward Group describes these as pathogens that "invade" deep into brain, joints, heart, liver, and nervous system, mimicking rheumatoid arthritis, Parkinson's, multiple sclerosis, chronic fatigue, fibromyalgia, ALS, ADHD, Alzheimer's, anxiety, and depression.
Evidence shows transmission extends far beyond ticks: sexual contact, breast milk, saliva, tears, semen, and donated blood carry the risk, making containment impossible once established.
Standard tests fail up to 50% of cases because the immune system often mounts no detectable response, leaving chronic sufferers chasing symptoms for over a decade while dismissed by conventional practitioners.
Cold War Tick Releases Coincide with Northeast Outbreaks
Declassified records detail CIA deployment of pathogen-infected ticks on Cuban sugarcane workers in 1962 under Operation Mongoose to incapacitate labor through biological agents. A former operative recounted dropping infected ticks from low-flying aircraft, later ordered to burn all clothing after his infant son developed severe fever.
Between 1966–1969, the U.S. military released 282,800 radioactive-tagged lone star ticks across Virginia bird migration routes. Prior to these experiments, lone star ticks stayed below the Mason-Dixon Line; within years, populations appeared on Long Island. These releases aligned with initial outbreaks of tick-borne illnesses in the Northeast, including Rocky Mountain spotted fever in 1970 and Lyme arthritis in 1972.
Plum Island Animal Disease Center, run by the Army Chemical Corps from 1952–1969 and located just 13 miles from Lyme, Connecticut, bred hundreds of thousands of ticks—including African species—for biowarfare study. Wildlife movement between the island and mainland provided clear escape routes for pathogens. If mapped, the heaviest Lyme-impact zone centers directly on Plum Island.
Suppressed Discoveries Block Effective Recovery
Willy Burgdorfer, who identified Borrelia burgdorferi in 1982, left unpublished garage research revealing a second pathogen—Rickettsia helvetica, dubbed the "Swiss Agent"—in Lyme patients showing strong blood-test reactions. He was directed to exclude it from his landmark paper, contributing to 40 years of misdiagnosis and failed treatments for chronic cases. In a 2013 interview, Burgdorfer cryptically stated, "I didn't tell you everything," before refusing further details.
Congress responded in 2019 by mandating Department of Defense investigation into whether ticks and insects served as biological weapons from 1950–1975, and if accidental or intentional releases occurred. The push stemmed from mounting evidence, including Kris Newby's book documenting the secret history.
Terrain-Based Healing Counters the Damage
Borrelia and co-infections thrive in compromised terrain—toxic livers, altered gut microbiomes, metals, parasites, EMFs, and synthetic biology exposures weaken natural defenses. Dr. Edward Group positions Lyme among multiple vectors harming mind, body, and soul in an era of unprecedented synthetic assaults.
Recovery demands full detoxification to reactivate self-healing: address congested livers, restore microbiomes, and eliminate stealth microbes through natural protocols. Dr. Edward Group emphasizes terrain recovery over symptom suppression, using targeted cleanses to remove barriers and unleash the body's innate repair capacity.
Stevia extract (whole leaf or alcohol form) demonstrates potent activity against Borrelia, offering a natural tool in the fight.

