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Thread: Chemical warfare - Legionnaires’ disease

  1. #1

    Chemical warfare - Legionnaires’ disease

    According to the state propaganda, people get Legionnaires’ disease by breathing mist that contains the legionella bacteria, but not by drinking water or contact with infected people. How can anybody with half a brain believe this?
    The symptoms of an infection with legionella are even known: Pontiac fever. It only causes a fever for a few days, with no dangerous hazards. The legionella bacteria had been around for ages before 1976, so it´s very unlikely that suddenly in 1976 the first outbreak in Philadelphia would occur.
    In 1970 Dr. MacArthur was supplied with $10 million from the Department of Defense (DoD) to “produce a synthetic biological agent, an agent that does not naturally exist and for which no natural immunity could have been acquired”. This sounds more like AIDS, but could also apply to Legionnaires’ disease.

    When the first outbreak in 1976 (among legionnaires) at the Bellevue Stratford hotel in Philadelphia was investigated - an anonymous letter informed F. William Sunderman that it was caused by Nickel carbonyl. Sunderman concluded this was probable: www.annclinlabsci.org/content/7/3/187.full.pdf
    Sunderman had sent the letter to the FBI by August 2, 1976, but the FBI only started an investigation, after reporter Jack Anderson from October 28 on published several articles:
    http://bayhdolecentral.com/3_DIV_SCA...01_OCR_DIV.pdf
    https://archive.org/stream/nsia-FBIM...20186_djvu.txt

    An expected effect of Nickel carbonyl poisoning is a high level of nickel in the victim. Dr. Jerrold Abraham found high concentrations of nickel in the lungs of the victims of Legionnaires’ disease in 1976, but not in the kidneys. The conclusion must be that the legionnaires were poisoned by Nickel carbonyl through inhalation.
    The state invented another explanation – that metal autopsy instruments were the source of nickel in the lungs. This explanation is ridiculous, because the autopsy of the control group and of the kidneys of the victims of Legionnaires’ disease were performed with the same instruments: http://www.biostat.umn.edu/~brad/645...egionnaire.pdf
    I don’t see how anybody, after reading this evidence, could think that the first outbreak of this “disease” wasn’t caused by Nickel poisoning. Autopsies of later victims of Legionnaires’ disease didn´t show high levels of Nickel, this can only mean that new chemical weapons were created.

    All the reported large outbreaks have been in the developed world: 1976 Philadelphia (USA), 1985 Stafford (GB), 1999 Bovenkarspel (Netherlands), 2000 Melbourne (Australia), 2001 Murcia (Spain), 2002 Barrow-in-Furness (GB), 2005 Toronto (Canada), 2012 Quebec (Canada), 2012 Edinburgh (GB), 2014 Lissabon (Portugal), 2015 New York (USA), 2015 Quincy (USA), 2015/2016 Flint (USA). It is clear that developed countries have the technology to use chemical weapons.
    People often get sick during holidays, during their travel or in the hotel: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legionnaires%27_disease
    Because of all the “preventive” measures the number of victims of Legionnaires’ disease is steadily rising:

    In the Netherlands, where the government has repeatedly tried to poison me, there is even legislation to poison “Targeted Individuals”. Read my translation of art. 52 Drinkwaterwet: “If according to the judgement of the inspector, the delivery of drinking water to consumers can be hazardous to the health, he can forbid the delivery thereof or can allow it to be used only in indicated situations, in an indicated manner”.
    According to art. 29 Drinkwaterbesluit drinking water that contains more poison than legally allowed can be delivered. To be able to “deliver” water that’s “hazardous to the health” of “indicated” individuals, just about all the public buildings built before 1990 have been demolished or renovated. According to art. 37 and 38 Drinkwaterbesluit (and NEN 1006) buildings that do not meet the legal requirements must be destroyed. In Bouwbesluit is also legislation for ventilation.
    I wouldn’t be surprised if other countries in the “civilised” world have similar legislation to poison Targeted Individuals.



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  3. #2
    Legionnaires’ disease was not distributed randomly among people exposed to the Legionella bacteria, as contagion should.
    Legionnaires’ disease doesn’t meet the first 3 requirements of Koch’s postulates: 1) The microorganism must be found in abundance in all organisms suffering from the disease, but should not be found in healthy organisms; 2) The microorganism must be isolated from a diseased organism and grown in pure culture; 3) The cultured microorganism should cause disease when introduced into a healthy organism: https://answersingenesis.org/biology...-fallen-world/
    The first postulate states the bacteria must be found in all cases of the disease and must be multiplying actively enough to explain the symptoms. But in the 1976 outbreak, 10% of the victims weren’t infected by Legionella. Since CDC scientists often do not think to exclude other bacteria, "limited testing for other bacteria may have inflated the frequency of Legionella infections."
    Koch's second postulate could not be proved in those victims that were infected by the original germ. The microbe appears to be so inactive in the body that it cannot be found in the saliva or mucus. It is, indeed, hard to culture at all, even from the lung tissue it infects.
    Koch's third postulate requires the germ to duplicate the sickness in a newly infected host, usually an animal. Legionella will cause some symptoms, or even death if injected in large amounts,. While the germ successfully infects and grows in hamsters and rats, it does not cause serious disease in them.

  4. #3

    Epidemic Intelligence Service

    The following PDF, “A Snapshot of public health achievements” (2015), shows some of the highlights of the Epidemic Intelligence Service (EIS).

    1951 - CDC establishes the EIS training program in response to the threat of biological warfare during the Korean War.

    1976 - CDC investigators with the help of more than 20 EIS officers blame the legionella bacteria for Legionnaires’ disease for the 1976 outbreak in Philadelphia. Retroactively also “outbreaks” in 1965 and 1968 are labelled Legionnaires’ disease: https://www.cdc.gov/eis/downloads/ei...ne-booklet.pdf


    EIS was the brainchild of Alexander Langmuir. In 1949, the CDC was interested in expanding beyond its mandate for malaria control. Federal officials granted millions of dollars, and the first EIS class started in July 1951.
    Nearly 2,000 EIS trainees occupy key positions in national and international health care. Former US Surgeon General William H. Stewart is a member, as are 2 other assistant Surgeon Generals. Jonathan Mann and Michael Merson, past and present heads of the World Health Organization's global AIDS Program, both trained with the EIS.
    The New York Times’ chief medical correspondent, Lawrence Altman, is a member, like Bruce Dan, former ABC News medical editor and former senior editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association. Marvin Turck, the editor at the University of Washington'' Journal of Infectious Diseases, joined EIS in 1960.

    In 1976 there were some troubles in getting the “swine flu” vaccine accepted by Congress, over some concerns of adverse effects.
    Then in July 1976, in one of those strange coincidences, a group of pneumonia cases suddenly appeared in Philadelphia, days after American Legion members had returned home. On August 2, after receiving word of this outbreak, personnel in the CDC's swine-flu war room established contact with Jim Beecham, an EIS officer on assignment in the Philadelphia health department.
    When the CDC personnel arrived, pre-positioned EIS members such as Beecham and top health adviser Robert Sharrar began following orders from the incoming CDC team.
    With a nationwide hysteria rapidly developing, Congress quickly approved the “swine flu” vaccine. Some 50 million Americans were vaccinated over several months, producing at least 1,000 cases of severe nerve damage and paralysis, dozens of deaths, and nearly $100 million in liability claims.
    Within days of the legislative approval, the EIS team finally acknowledged that the pneumonia was not related to swine flu. Later this was called Legionnaires’ disease.

    In 1981, the White House was considering cutting the CDC budget by 23%, but then in one of those strange coincidences, AIDS arrived.
    EIS officer Wayne Shandera, on active assignment in the Los Angeles health department, received a call from Michael Gottlieb, from the UCLA, about 4 patients with pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and serious immune deficiencies. Shandera had already heard about a 5th case. All 5 were young homosexuals; this was the official start of what later was called the Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) “epidemic”.
    Within just 11 days after the first report of AIDS appeared in June 1981, EIS member Donald Francis placed a telephone call to Myron Essex. Francis already “knew” that the new syndrome must be caused by a retrovirus - with a long latency period between infection and disease. Francis had already mapped out the entire future of the disease…

    After Montagnier's paper on the “HIV virus” was published in 1983, Robert Gallo was pushed by the EIS to discover the same virus. He didn’t, but by April of 1984 Gallo was ready to announce having found a similar retrovirus, which he dubbed HTLV-III. By 24 April, EIS member Lawrence Altman in the New York Times named it the "AIDS virus".
    In 1992, some scientists reported HIV-free AIDS cases. The unexplained AIDS cases were simply relabelled Idiopathic CD4+ Lymphocytopenia (ICL): http://www.virusmyth.com/aids/hiv/beeis.htm
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    The Order of the Garter rules the world: Order of the Garter and the Carolingian dynasty



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