Subject: Blumenthal and Harvard (Velvel)
Date: May 20, 2010 2:22 PM
Actually, if you really knew
Mr. Blumenthal, you would
not say those things about him.
http://www.counterpunch.org/velvel05202010.html
He's the real deal.
Now, about Harvard, you neglected
to mention that that's where
Allen Steere is hiding out now,
not publishing anything because
nobody believes "Lyme disease
spirochetes have some sophisticated
microbial radar and will only
gravitate towards knees."
The other CDC "specialist," Alan
Barbour, former head of the NIH's
Rocky Moutains Bioweapons Lab, says:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC373079/pdf/microrev00055-0033.pdf
"The association of borreliae with ganglia or other nerve
tissue has also been noted in other tick species (102) and in
lice (116, 126). ***The propensity for borreliae to go to the brain
of infected mammals (see below) suggests that the relationship
between these spirochetes and neural tissues is not
trivial. Further study of this attraction and the interaction
that follows may reveal the basis for the significant nerve and
brain involvement in Lyme borreliosis (201, 206, 233; R.
Ackermann, B. Rehse-Kupper, and E. Gollmer, Zentralbl.
Bakteriol. Mikrobiol. Hyg., in press; A. R. Pachner and
A. C. Steere,*** Zentralbl. Bakteriol. Mikrobiol. Hyg. Ser. A,
in press).
CDC Officer Alan Barbour also says in
the same article that:
"When relapsing fever borreliae are no longer detectable in
the blood, they may still be found in organs (120). Although
borreliae can usually be recovered from such organs as the
spleen, liver, kidneys, and eyes of infected animals (37, 120),
the organ usually with the most persistent infections is the
brain. Humans with relapsing fever have had borreliae
recovered from the cerebrospinal fluid (72). Borreliae can be
recovered from the brains of animals that are immune to
challenge with that strain (119, 127, 148, 178). Detection or
isolation of borreliae from brains of animals that had been
infected several months and up to 3 years previously has
been reported (12, 181, 197, 223). Before the advent of
modem ultracold freezers, strains were kept in the brains of
rodents and passed once or twice a year (92)."
Barbour also says in the same article
that:
"A strain of B. duttonii that had been passed many times in
mice was found to have lost virulence for humans (212).
When using borreliae for pyrotherapy of neurosyphilis, the
authors of this report recommended that no more than 30 to
40 passages in mice be made before inoculation of the strain
back into humans (212)."
He says to "treat syphilis with Steere's
famous 'high-passage' strains because
http://www.actionlyme.org/STEERE_IN_EUROPE.htm
antibiotics don't work. These high-passage
strains will not be infectious, having dropped
plasmids (and the ability to generate antibodies
against the spirochete... or for Steere's
intended bogus Dearborn panel/criteria)
though multiple culture passages."
Kathleen M. Dickson
http://www.actionlyme.org
"[Real] scientists are *fiercely* independent. That's the good
news."-- NIH's Top Fool, Anthony Fauci