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Nanobots and Morgellons (See "US Military watching MIT")

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Mort Zuckerman

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Apr 29, 2010, 6:34:39 AM4/29/10
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Subject: Nanobots and Morgellons (See "US Military watching MIT")

Date: Apr 29, 2010 6:32 AM

ARTICLE BELOW
=======================================
Thank you.
At first I thought these Morgellons
fibers must be lichens, particularly
because of LYMErix Disease, which is fungal
antigen tolerance:
http://www.actionlyme.org/Pam3Cys_Version15.htm
but later we learned the Military was
keeping an eye on MIT because they
created bots that produced fibers:
http://www.actionlyme.org/BOTS_MORGELLONS.htm

Because Kaiser is working with the CDC
to discover what Morgellons is (for how
many years, now?) we know there will be
an entirely new entry for it in the DSM-V.

Delusional Fibrofemino-Fiberitis.

We should really have a national contest
to name this new DSM disease... We *KNOW*
its etiology is going to involve penises,
since psychiatry has no other topics.

Kathleen
http://www.actionlyme.org
http://www.relapsingfever.org
============================

Subject: International Labour Organization warns of new health risks
from emerging fields like nanotechnology
Date: Apr 28, 2010 6:09 PM

http://www.nanowerk.com/news/newsid=16018.php
Posted: April 28, 2010
International Labour Organization warns of new health risks from
emerging fields like nanotechnology
(Nanowerk News) The World Day for Safety and Health at Work will be
observed widely this year against a backdrop of newly emerging hazards
in the world of work and growing concern over the impact of the global
economic crisis,” according to the International Labour Organization
(ILO).
Many events are planned, including marches and memorial services,
seminars, as well as conferences, exhibitions and workshops aimed at
promoting dialogue on occupational safety and health (OSH). All
activities aim to heighten awareness of OSH issues in the world of
work and promote a culture of prevention.
“On this World Day we highlight the emerging risks and new approaches
to prevention in a changing world of work,” said ILO Director-General
Juan Somavia in a statement issued for the day, adding that one of the
elements of concern was a “rise in psychosocial conditions linked to
new stresses and strains of work in the global economy.”
“Recently the adverse impact of the economic crisis on enterprises has
taken its toll on many workers,” Mr. Somavia said. “In building and
sustaining recovery, let us draw on the opportunity to shape
integrated decent work strategies in which safety and health is a key
component. In the wake of the crisis, let us act together to prevent a
downward spiral in labour conditions and build recovery founded on
safe work.”
A booklet entitled “Emerging risks and new patterns of prevention in a
changing world of work” published for the World Day summarizes key new
OSH issues, including those related to technical innovations such as
nanotechnology and biotechnology. The booklet says that OSH experts
have noted with concern a rise in work-related stress disorders
resulting from difficulties “coping with the changing patterns of
working life.”
In addition, the ILO recently adopted a new list of occupational
diseases which, for the first time, includes mental, behavioural and
post-traumatic stress disorders. The ILO Governing Body also adopted a
plan of action to achieve widespread ratification and effective
implementation of the occupational safety and health instruments
(Convention No. 155, its 2002 Protocol and Convention No. 187).
“Both this list and the existing ILO labour standards on OSH, provide
a common framework for ILO member States ”said Seiji Machida, Director
of the ILO’s Safe Work Programme. “The ILO calls for applying
internationally-agreed labour standards as a primary tool to reduce
human and economic burdens of work-related accidents and diseases.”
ILO estimates indicate that every day some 6,300 people die as a
result of work-related injuries or diseases, representing more than
2.3 million deaths per year. In addition, some 337 million workplace
accidents occur each year resulting in extended absences from work.
“The human cost of this daily tragedy is immeasurable“ Mr. Somavia
said. “But the economic cost of working days lost, medical treatment
and cash benefits paid out is estimated at 4 per cent of global GDP
each year. This exceeds the total value of the stimulus packages
introduced in the face of the economic crisis of 2008-09.“
Source: ILO

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

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