CDC trailers pop up in rural Illinois unannounced
There are many questions, but answers are hard to find as the CDC sets up shop in rural towns unannounced
The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) has set up shop unannounced in a rural Illinois town, and at least 14 other towns across America, for its National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES).
The CDC trailers were spotted in the Bureau County fairgrounds in Princeton, a north central Illinois town with a population under 8,000.
Tim Truth posted a video on YouTube of a series of TikTok videos of a Bureau County woman who said her family was offered money to take part in CDC testing as well as a video from an Illinois man who confirmed much of what the woman described in her video. In case of YouTube censorship, the first video and second video were both uploaded to Tim Truth’s Rumble channel.
In the first video, it shows several videos of the woman (whose name is never given) including when she first learned about the CDC trailers, her confirming the trailers were set up with her going on site showing four connected CDC trailers on the fairgrounds and her describing her family being approached to take part in the survey and testing.
The woman says her family was offered $150 per adult, $60 per child, to take part, and she said a CDC official approached them and said they were selected “because they knew that we were not vaccinated, and they asked what our stance on guns were.” She described herself as living in “the middle of nowhere,” and was shocked someone from the CDC would come to her home to invite them to be participants.
The second video shows a man who said he lives in an adjacent county and has family in the healthcare industry in Bureau County. He said he confirmed that the “CDC has chosen who they are sending these ‘invitations’ to out in the mail” and that invitees are offered money to participate. He could not confirm that the CDC was targeting those who did not take the experimental covid mRNA bioweapon shots or gun owners, but he confirmed the NHANES was being conducted in Princeton.
Something similar is also happening in Canada, as Tim Truth posted a video of government vans “harassing folks for blood, saliva and urine testing” and more:
So, what’s going on? I did my own research on the CDC’s NHANES, and transparency is hard to come by.
As I noted, these CDC trailers were unannounced. I searched for the TikTok page of the woman seen in the first YouTube video and found it. It should be noted that she was allegedly banned from posting live videos on TikTok until Dec. 3, 2023 after posting videos of the trailers.
In searching her TikTok page, the woman’s first video on the trailers was Feb. 23. The video where she goes out to film the trailers was March 12.
In searching the CDC’s website, it was impossible to find any information on specifics about when and where these surveys/testing will take place. At that point, I was a little hesitant to even write about this based off two videos of unknown people. But then I found a local radio station in Princeton which announced the trailers on March 17, well after the trailers were already set up. WGLC stated:
“A federal health survey program has made a stop in Bureau County. The National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey is a program of studies designed to assess the health and nutritional status of adults and children. The survey is unique in that it combines interviews and physical examinations. NHANES is a major program of the National Center for Health Statistics. NCHS is part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and has the responsibility for producing vital and health statistics for the country. The NHANES program began in the early 1960s and has been conducted as a series of surveys focusing on different population groups or health topics. Invitations to participate in the study were sent out to area residents for those who wished to participate. The exams will take place at trailers at the Bureau County Fairgrounds.”
I also found a March 9 piece from a Michigan-based website stating Kalamazoo County was one of 15 sites across the nation to take part in the NHANES.
Researching the CDC’s NHANES webpage, it’s hard to find specifics. It’s participants page confirms that 15 areas across the nation are chosen every year, but there’s little detail on why folks are chosen to participate.
Again, details are light on the “information collected” page which describes the process with only a few examples of what occurs during testing. Households are initially contacted through mail and prompted to complete an online survey. Selected households then do a phone interview, and if you’re selected after that you go to the trailers for testing.
The page states “some of the health exams” include: height, weight, and other body measures; blood pressure reading; body composition scan; balance test; and liver function scan.
The “participant benefits” page states the tests at the “Mobile Exam Center are unique and not done by your doctor during routine appointments.” I don’t know, but it seems like most of those tests described above are routine at doctors. Certainly, they’re all tests you don’t want to do for the government, but I digress.
I also found information about the NHANES from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) which described “COVID-19-Specific Content” that has been added to the NHANES survey since the scam began in 2020.
I cannot confirm that the CDC knows who has or has not submitted to the bioweapon shot as the Princeton woman described, but I can confirm it is a part of the survey questions as the NIH stated “questions were added on previous infection status and severity of symptoms, infection and antigens testing, vaccination, COVID-related hospitalizations, history of weakened immune system, and whether any household member ever tested positive for COVID-19.”
I cannot confirm, like the man in the second YouTube video, the suggestion of targeting the unvaxxed and gun owners. It doesn’t matter. The government doesn’t have a right to any of your medical information.
Regardless of any of the survey questions or testing, what is the CDC hiding? Why no details? Why set up trailers in towns unannounced? I tend to think the confirmation of these trailers and the lack of transparency from the CDC suggests the woman was telling the truth on targeting gun owners and the unjabbed.
Watch out for these. There’s no information on the towns where these are popping up accept for Princeton, IL and Kalamazoo, MI, but it apparently is happening in 13 other towns somewhere in America.
If invited, it should be a hard no on taking part. However, I am inclined to say if someone is brave enough to secretly video record the online survey, phone interview and testing at the trailers, I wouldn’t mind knowing more. I won’t encourage that because the government certainly would call that “illegal,” but it would be nice to have more information.
Biometric ID
I also want to touch on something the woman said in her earliest Tik Tok video. She addressed the East Palestine, Ohio train derailment and the rollout of medical bracelets to monitor East Palestine residents just before the derailment. What occurred in Ohio is scary, and I’m not talking about the alleged contamination. I’m talking about the possibility it was a premeditated derailment for the sake of a land grab. Tim Truth has covered that extensively:
There’s a lot there, and I wouldn’t expect anyone to watch it all. I haven’t watched it all. But if you take a little time to watch just some of it, you’ll see there’s some nefarious plots being ignored by the media.
I’ll note the fact that a movie, White Noise, that came out months before the train derailment depicted that exactly, a train derailment that caused an Ohio town to flee toxic clouds. And you know what, residents of East Palestine were extras in that movie.
That was fishy when I first heard that, but you can’t run with something like that. But then, I saw the news of the biometric tracking bracelets handed out to East Palestine residents a week before the derailment. Reclaim the Net described the device:
“MyID is a medical information system that is supposed to help first responders when someone is unresponsive. Users have to first upload their personal medical information onto the system.”
“The MyID devices will be key FOBs or wearable devices with QR codes that first responders can scan with a camera to access vital medical information like allergies, underlying medical conditions, and emergency contacts. Authorities insist the system is HIPPA compliant.”
The local media was priming the residents months before with propaganda calling East Palestine “way ahead of the curve on a program to provide better treatment for anyone in the event of an emergency,” and it can “help everyone in East Palestine” by allowing the government to track their health data in real time.
Then on Jan 26, a week before the derailment, that same outlet, WKBN, announced the rollout of the “small device” for the government to track residents with. And they laughably said all 4,700 residents were “excited.” Well, that wasn’t true.
A 70-year-old East Palestine farmer, Bob Moore, said the devices were specifically for tracking health data during a “major disaster.” He told The Gateway Pundit that
“It was exactly a week before the derailment happened. The people were asked to go to the local fire department in downtown East Palestine to get that MyID.”
“They began monitoring your physical activity, your heart rate, your respiration, anything you might be exposed to. I see this as the kind of censor you would put on an astronaut or on an athlete that you wanted to track to see how he’d react to stress or being winded, or in this instance chemical exposure. It’s a monitoring device.”
“I completely ignored it. But the way the media played it up — it was like East Palestine was a test town that they volunteered to be part of, that they were chosen and were going to implement it right after Jan. 23. I do find it odd. I find it a coincidence that we are having coincidences pile up around here.”
Mac Slavo noted other “coincidences.”
I don’t know, but how many “coincidences” are we expected to swallow without questioning them?