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Corrupticut Hysterical Over Their Own $$-Losing Crymes.

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Mort Zuckerman

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Mar 12, 2010, 8:31:30 AM3/12/10
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Subject: Corrupticut Hysterical Over Their Own $$-Losing Crymes.

Date: Mar 12, 2010 8:29 AM

ARTICLE BELOW
--------------------------------------

Awww, poor THINGS!!!

Think of all the people they murdered
with their Lyme crymes... and they
still haven't owned up to it. They
never cooperated with Blumenthal
at all, ever:
http://www.actionlyme.org/080430_RICO_CABAL_CAVES.htm

UConn sics the DCF on parents when UConn
themselves are not only criminal kid-murderers
by participating in the Lyme/LYMErix crymes, they'll
*kill* kids with Lupus-Lyme, just to hide their
crimes
http://www.actionlyme.org/CHP_9_IDSA_REVIEWS.htm
(It's in ^^ there, the Lyme/Lupus connection,
published by Yale and Allen Steere.)

UConn stated at one of the Blumenthal Lyme
Hearings that "a kid with Leukemia was misdiagnosed
and mistreated for Lyme," when in fact, Lyme,
LYMErix and the mycoplasma that starts growing
unchecked in the blood and bone marrow of Lyme
and LYMErix victims all CAUSE LEUKEMIA:
http://www.actionlyme.org/Pam3Cys_Version15.htm

Are ya kidding?

No way.

UConn will get no reward for their
crimes against humanity. Not only that,
the investors, the biggest banksters, scouts,
insurance companies and head hunters are
and have been are all over my website.

Not to mention all of Europe, Asia,
South America, Muslim countries...
blah, blah, blah. I ain't kidding;
they're listening and their reacting
and they already got a jump on all
the data IDSA, Yale and UConn refused
to turn over to Richard Blumenthal.

They have already moved on to Stage
III- *APPLICATIONS* of the LYMErix
immunosuppression data/mechanisms.


Too late.

Why doesn't someone ask UConn what was
the data they refused to turn over
to Mr. Blumenthal and why did they
blow off their deal with him?

Why doesn't *THAT* story ever make it
into the newspapers?

Too Big for ya?

Too Heady for ya?

Then don't plan on winning anything
with your investments, cuz you haven't
gotten the same word the BIG GUYS got.

I guarantee it.


Kathleen M. Dickson
http://www.actionlyme.org
========================================
http://www.courant.com/news/health/hc-green_uconnhospital_0312.artmar12,0,1610077,print.column

A New UConn Hospital Is Vital

Rick Green

March 12, 2010
300x250
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It's obvious why Gov. M. Jodi Rell, in one of the most dramatic
turnabouts of her career, is now supporting the University of
Connecticut Health Center project.

• UConn Presents Health Center Proposal To Legislators


Without the $352 million job-creating initiative — or something like
it — central Connecticut will be in the economic toilet for years to
come.

Are you worried that so many of our young college graduates leave?
Just wait.

It's why Rell, in an equally surprising move, is very likely the most
prominent Republican in the land now rooting for Congress to pass
President Obama's health care reform package. Tucked within the Senate
version of the reform bill is a $100 million grant opportunity that
Rell says is essential for the UConn project.

"The tremendous benefit," Rell said the other day, "is a more robust
health care sector that stands to gain 5,000 new jobs in the years to
come."

An expanded UConn research hospital in Farmington, a regional cancer
center, combined with other collaborative efforts with hospitals in
Hartford and a "bioscience enterprise zone" in the city will create
the estimated 5,000 jobs over the next decade. It's what Hartford
should have been doing, instead of building a convention center and a
still-unfinished entertainment district.

• Fox CT Video: Gov. Rell Announces Plan For UConn Health Center


This isn't a matter of holding off and holding our own. If we don't do
this, we slip backward: UConn declines as a medical and research
school and we miss the change chance to build a new economy centered
on bioscience and medical technology.

"You have got to create a magnet to bring these people into the
community," said Martin Gavin, president of the Connecticut Children's
Medical Center, echoing comments that the leaders of other Hartford-
area hospitals made to me.

UConn President Michael Hogan told me that not doing anything risks
losing established university researchers — and the research dollars
they control — who might leave for more prestigious institutions. Once
the slide begins, it's hard to stop it.

I talked to legislators and some of our candidates for U.S. Senate and
governor who said they were worried about the expense of this project
when we're facing a $3 billion deficit. Yes, this would require $227
million in bonding money and force the cancellation of a lot of
already approved bridges and other public works projects in
municipalities throughout the state. So be it.

This isn't an expense. It's an essential investment we can't afford
not to make. We have lost more than 100,000 jobs. The employment we
are creating too often consists of low-paying "leisure and
hospitality" service-sector jobs. Those old-school, high-paying
manufacturing jobs are going and gone, replaced by maids at Foxwoods
and Mohegan Sun.

"We in central Connecticut are in an extraordinarily deep hole.
Without this initiative or ones of a similar scale, we are never going
to climb out of the hole," said UConn economist Fred Carstensen. "We
don't have any credible [employment] drivers."

As legislators consider this dramatic proposal from Rell and UConn,
they might also want to consider that Connecticut has whiffed on a
series of recent efforts to win more federal assistance, from roads to
trains to schools. This is the reason why partisan, petty opposition
to health care reform no longer seems so important to a practical
politician like Rell. We need to do something instead of just assuming
that things will return to normal.

Four of the five candidates for Senate told me that they'd take the
federal money — although Republicans Linda McMahon and Rob Simmons
take the untenable view that they're still against the health care
reform package. That $100 million, tucked inside of whatever health
care bill Congress votes on in coming weeks, won't get here on its
own.

It's deceptively simple when Senate candidate Peter Schiff says that
"the federal government should cut spending, lower taxes and allow
Connecticut taxpayers to decide how to spend their money." That's
noble, but it won't fund an expanded research hospital. That won't be
a problem for Schiff — he invests his money overseas and lives in a
mansion in Weston.

Gov. Rell, to her credit, understands what is at stake.

"We need that $100 million," Rell told me. "It's going to be a tough
sell without it."

The reality is, legislators must act to approve the hospital proposal
and accompanying network of research and health care institutions,
whatever happens with that $100 million from Washington.

Because an even tougher sell is a state without jobs.

Copyright © 2010, The Hartford Courant

"[Real] scientists are *fiercely* independent. That's the good
news."-- NIH's Top Fool, Anthony Fauci

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