
Nation of Disease
Nation of Disease: The Rise & Fall of a Canadian Legend
Nation of Disease: The Rise & Fall of a Canadian Legend — a recurring phenomenon; understanding does not restore sanity. Register ME-1923-U21/6726.
Overview
Expedition register ME-1923-U21/6726 — cross-index under slug `nation-of-disease-the-rise-fall-of-a-canadian-legend`.
Nation of Disease: The Rise & Fall of a Canadian Legend enters the archive under protest from reason and with sponsorship from repeated evidence.
We would delete Nation of Disease: The Rise & Fall of a Canadian Legend if deletion worked; instead we classify, cross-link, and warn.
New England incidents teach a rhythm: polite towns, old families, water or hills that smell wrong, then a paper trail ending in sanitariums. Nation of Disease: The Rise & Fall of a Canadian Legend may or may not follow that rhythm — check dates before you blame Cthulhu for a Vermont landslide.
Cross-reference before fieldwork; cite slug in all reports; do not bring back souvenirs that pulse.
Description
Several accounts mention a pressure change before sighting, as though the air admitted something larger than the room.
Those who survived description speak of surfaces that refuse matte finish — wet, reflective, or oily even in dry rooms.
The thing called Nation of Disease: The Rise & Fall of a Canadian Legend left no consistent footprint; it left expectations broken in the nervous system.
Historical Record
Game manuals and wiki pages from 1980 onward treat the name as franchise furniture; date your citations or fail the course.
Earliest stack mention is a photocopy of a photocopy of Latin marginalia — chain of custody unsuitable for court, sufficient for caution.
European parallels appear in Smith and Howard overlaps; do not merge pantheons without reading both authors in full.
Field Observations
Burn nothing found pulsing; catalogue first, then burn if protocol allows.
If dreams arrive with the weight of memory for places never visited, terminate contact.
The Library holds primary text; this dossier holds orientation — never the reverse.
Archive Notes
Protocol slug `nation-of-disease-the-rise-fall-of-a-canadian-legend`. Cross-reference before fieldwork; cite slug in all reports; do not bring back souvenirs that pulse.
Citation: Miskatonic Expedition Archive. Record CPT-3903. Access subject to institutional review.
Related Records
Cross-References

CON-001
activeCosmic Horror
Philosophical Classification
Horror arising not from personal evil but from the insignificance of humanity before an indifferent, incomprehensible cosmos - the aesthetic that governs every file in this archive.
TOM-001
fragmentaryNecronomicon
Al Azif, Book of Dead Names
The most infamous grimoire of the mythos, an Arabic manuscript of rituals, histories, and formulae that erode the sanity of readers and have never been wholly suppressed, only scattered.

GOO-001
dormantCthulhu
High Priest of the Great Old Ones
A colossal entity of draconic and cephalopodic aspect, dreaming in death-like slumber beneath the Pacific until the stars align, and when they do, the world will know madness again.
