22-11-2009, 02:41 AM
Helen Reyes Wrote:I saw that before. The gel was supposedly pinkish-red. I'm not sure exactly where Oakville is, but the small town of Onalaska, Washington had a wild increase in childhood brain tumors around the same time. Many children died from brain cancers. It was slightly before 1994 iirc. There was also a spate of infections from "E. coli" at Jack-in-the-Box restaurants in Seattle around 1992 or so, affecting children mainly. I believe there were fatalities.
The pneumonic plague-type Ukrainian disease has reportedly popped up in Lithuania now, too.
The Seattle stuff reminds me of these events:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1984_Rajnee...ror_attack
And I recently re-discovered this quote whose source has been lost:
"One of the primary means of immobilizing the American people politically today is to hold them in a state of confusion in which anything can be believed and nothing can be known… nothing of significance, that is."
One of the things that concerns me with the story of the Oakwood jelly rain is not that it's not true... It's that its 'truth' (whatever thay may have been) -- having been previously noted, perhaps engineered, but certainly data-mined -- is now used as a launching pad for another wave of disinformation and propaganda and fear-mongering.
Perhaps I fall into the category of confusion -- except that we have known history and tactics, current technologies, and -- to some extent-- known motives and modus operandi.
"Where is the intersection between the world's deep hunger and your deep gladness?"