08-05-2010, 11:11 AM
Sorry about that, I jumped the gun, it's Monday's program.
Fall of 2001, when there was a massive anthrax scare across the US. The first symptom of anthrax infection is difficulty breathing, as I remember it, same as Cryptoccocus.
I haven't looked into Morgellon's disease at all, just heard about it for a few years now, but it sounds like weaponized scrapie/eczema. Scrapie is a sheep and cow disease, again, if memory serves. Anthrax was detected in infected sheep and/or cattle in the British isles and then recruited as a germ-warfare agent, I believe. Interesting.
On the concurrent disinformation campaigns:
From everyone I've talked to, there was no massive outbreak of deadly flu in the Ukraine, there was a scare campaign in the run-up to elections there.
How convenient to blame ben Moshe for 60 years of US and British biowarfare research and covert operations that fell short of their goal in Ukraine. Was that his assigned role? Is he even a plant microbiologist, or is that his elder double's profession in Israel? We saw this during the H1N1 operation as well, totally contradictory statements from somewhat credible sources, probably designed to incite fear and uncertainty. Is that the hallmark of germ-warfare attacks against domestic populations in the early decades of the 21st century? Cognitive dissonance or information warfare alongside a good dose of a reasonably scary pathogen candidate?
According to Puharich in Sacred Mushroom this is about the same year the Army got interested in psychedelics, psychoactive compounds found in plants (in a bigger way; allegedly the Anthroposophists of Rudolph Steiner had rediscovered ergotamine before WWII and long before LSD was synthesized in Switzerland). Former J P Morgan vice-president Wasson was escorted to Mexico on his mushroom-cult research expeditions by US intelligence agents from the start, Puharich was part of the Army germ-warfare milieu, Huxley was popping in and out of the picture and then the 1960s came along. Cereal rusts were deployed against Castro's Cuba. So while kids were ingesting fungus alkaloids for experiments on their own psyches, the same researchers who made those available were also working on fungi that would attack and subsume the human organism. What a bad trip that would be.
Quote:Microbiologists and epidemiologists studying the strain say the mystery fungus came from an earlier fatal fungus that was first found on British Columbia's Vancouver Island in the fall of 2001, and perhaps as early as 1999.
Fall of 2001, when there was a massive anthrax scare across the US. The first symptom of anthrax infection is difficulty breathing, as I remember it, same as Cryptoccocus.
I haven't looked into Morgellon's disease at all, just heard about it for a few years now, but it sounds like weaponized scrapie/eczema. Scrapie is a sheep and cow disease, again, if memory serves. Anthrax was detected in infected sheep and/or cattle in the British isles and then recruited as a germ-warfare agent, I believe. Interesting.
On the concurrent disinformation campaigns:
Quote:Many of these reports are unconfirmed, but a few come from credible sources and have linked Moshe to the grossly underreported outbreak of flu in the Ukraine.
From everyone I've talked to, there was no massive outbreak of deadly flu in the Ukraine, there was a scare campaign in the run-up to elections there.
How convenient to blame ben Moshe for 60 years of US and British biowarfare research and covert operations that fell short of their goal in Ukraine. Was that his assigned role? Is he even a plant microbiologist, or is that his elder double's profession in Israel? We saw this during the H1N1 operation as well, totally contradictory statements from somewhat credible sources, probably designed to incite fear and uncertainty. Is that the hallmark of germ-warfare attacks against domestic populations in the early decades of the 21st century? Cognitive dissonance or information warfare alongside a good dose of a reasonably scary pathogen candidate?
Quote:Army biological warfare reports obtained through the Freedom of Information Act reveal that beginning around 1952 the Army mounted a huge research program involving numerous plant and fungi products, and that well over 300 long-term contracts and sub-contracts were let with over 35 US colleges and universities to carry out this multifaceted research. Examples of this early research in California included experiments and projects at Camp Cooke; Port Huemene; Harpers Lake; Oceanside, and extensive experimentation with wheat stem rust and "various spores" including "several from tropical locations" and cereal rust spores and dyed Lycopodium spores.
According to Puharich in Sacred Mushroom this is about the same year the Army got interested in psychedelics, psychoactive compounds found in plants (in a bigger way; allegedly the Anthroposophists of Rudolph Steiner had rediscovered ergotamine before WWII and long before LSD was synthesized in Switzerland). Former J P Morgan vice-president Wasson was escorted to Mexico on his mushroom-cult research expeditions by US intelligence agents from the start, Puharich was part of the Army germ-warfare milieu, Huxley was popping in and out of the picture and then the 1960s came along. Cereal rusts were deployed against Castro's Cuba. So while kids were ingesting fungus alkaloids for experiments on their own psyches, the same researchers who made those available were also working on fungi that would attack and subsume the human organism. What a bad trip that would be.