Is the rat-o-pocalypse upon us? Perhaps that old cruise
liner I mentioned last year really did crash into the rocks of the west coast,
see: http://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.co.uk/2014/01/ship-of-rats.html.
Rats are a perennial problem for mankind; they are our eternal parasites and
that will never change. There are very few places we have ever lived where they
have not lived with us. Recently though people in several locations across Britain
have been reporting the presence of very different rats to those we're familiar
with. An adult sewer or brown rat is on average ten inches long from nose to
tail. It can be killed by a wide variety of industrial poisons. These new kinds
of rats are very different; in several very frightening ways. Firstly they're
up to twice the size, a specimen was found that was twenty inches long. Also
they seem to be immune to normal rodenticides. Standard rat poison is odourless
and tasteless so when mixed in with bait the rat will consume a lethal dose
before it realizes anything is amiss. The poison works by containing an
anticoagulant, in other words is makes the blood very thin and watery so that
it leaks out of the blood vessels and kills its victim through internal
bleeding. However, along with the giant rats other rats have appeared where
these poisons are useless. What's more attempts to eradicate them could make
the problem worse by eliminating the ordinary rats and leaving the super-rats
alone to breed with themselves, thus accelerating natural selection. According
to biologists, the rats with poison immunity and the giant rats are both caused
by a genetic mutation, and both kinds have emerged at the same time, see: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2942740/Mutant-20-inch-super-rats-closing-Wiltshire-town-t-killed-poison-warn-pest-exterminators.html#ixzz3R4xoZHnL.
The immune rats are currently clustered in a wide area around Hampshire and the
southern Midlands ; unfortunately this includes Oxford
where I live. This could indicate that they arrived from abroad on a ship which
called at Southampton harbour. The giant rats are much
more widespread; they've been seen in Wiltshire, Birmingham ,
Liverpool , Bradford and County
Durham . Does this mean they've been
around longer? There's a traditional song from Great War which contains the
lyrics: "There were rats, rats as
big as bloody cats in the quartermaster's stores". Whoever composed
that song was probably exaggerating, but these new giant rats really are as big
as small cats, and a cat may not be enough to take one on; hence the plummer
terrier the rat-catcher is using in the video embedded in the article. I
question the coincidence of two types of rat appearing at the same time in the
same country. I wasn't really serious when I suggested that the Lyubov Orlova had actually crashed
ashore in the British Isles as I'd feared; I'm certain that the unfortunate
vessel is now lying at the bottom of the Atlantic, probably never to be seen
again, and that all the rats on board have perished. But were these new rats
introduced deliberately? If so, by whom, and for what purpose? As I explain the
article about the ship, there are plenty of other ways to go about the mission
the globalists have set themselves in relation to things like pseudolife, population
reduction and geoengineering; who needs pestilential rodents? The news story
talks about one of the first twenty-inch rats found in Swindon ;
that's not far from Porton Down, the UK 's
"former" biological warfare facility. The biologist in the article
talks about how the rats have a mutant gene, a "strain". It's
interesting how experts use the same terminology with rats as they do with
microbes; this is not how they talk about other animal species. They speculate
that these rats are going to become a bigger problem unless all the bloodlines
with this genetic mutation can be eliminated. These rats can cause serious hygiene
problems in kitchens and larders, restaurants and public buildings. They also
knaw water pipes and electric cables causing billions of pounds-worth of damage.
Pest controllers recommend disposing of rubbish
correctly and keeping food storage and service area clean.
"fleas the size of rats sucked on rats the size of cats" - David Bowie, Diamond Dogs 1974
ReplyDeleteI may be accused of having a one track mind but I can handle it...I'm thinking 20 minutes per pound plus 20 minutes over...Or remove the legs, toss in seasoned flower, bread crumbs and deep fry serve with sour cream and salsa...curry...the list is endless
ReplyDeleteNeil, that reminds me of Baldrick's recipes for rats in Blackadder. "Rat-au-Vin", a rat that's been run over by a van
ReplyDelete