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Subject: Fort Detrick: From Biowarfare To Biodefense
Date: Aug 6, 2008 9:47 PM
(ARTICLE BELOW)
Yeah, well that's just crap and nonsense.
They're all dually offensive/defensive weapons and
always have been. This was just a wording change.
And if they were messing with Brucella, and Incline
Village was a real outbreak area for Chronic Fatigue
Syndrome, and the Brucella have the same immune
suppressing antigens as LYMErix, Lyme, E. coli and
HIV (which they do), then let's think...
http://www.actionlyme.org/BIOWEAPONEERS_CORIXA_YALE_TLRS.htm
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17984211?ordinalpos=2&itool=EntrezSystem2.PEntrez.Pubmed.Pubmed_ResultsPanel.Pubmed_RVDocSum
"Moreover, a synthetic lipohexapeptide that mimics the structure of
the protein
lipid moiety also inhibited MHC-II expression, indicating that any
Brucella lipoprotein
could down-modulate MHC-II expression and Ag processing. Inhibition of
MHC-II expression
and Ag processing by either HKBA or lipidated Omp19 (L-Omp19) depended
on Toll-like
receptor 2 and was mediated by interleukin-6. HKBA or L-Omp19 also
inhibited MHC-II
expression and Ag processing of human monocytes. In addition, exposure
to the synthetic
lipohexapeptide inhibited Ag-specific T-cell proliferation and IFN-
gamma production
of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from Brucella-infected patients.
Together,
these results indicate that there is a mechanism by which B. abortus
may prevent
recognition by T cells to evade host immunity and establish a chronic
infection."
CONCLUSION:
Chronic infection; no antibodies.
Just like Lyme.
A stealth disabler.
The CDC and NIH can continue to be assholes, but people from all
over the world go to my website. Researchers in the Czech Republic
called them incomprehensible and stupid.
I'm thinking: Perhaps now that the FBI are experts on strains,
they can investigate what Steere did in Europe with the high-passage
G39/40 and the FRG strains:
http://www.actionlyme.org/CRYMEDISEASE_CHP3_B.htm
If some top level person in the CDC authorized Steere to commit that
crime, then it won't be investigated and prosecuted, which will
send a message, if ya know what I mean. Then we will know who the CDC
is really working for.
And so will all the other nations.
Kathleen
-----Original Message-----
>From: Miguel <
miki...@pacifier.com>
>Sent: Aug 6, 2008 7:44 PM
>To:
Spin...@yahoogroups.com
>Subject: [SpinLyme] Fort Detrick: From Biowarfare To Biodefense
>
>
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=93196647
>
>Fort Detrick: From Biowarfare To Biodefense
>by Tom Bowman
>
>NPR.org, August 1, 2008 · Fort Detrick, Md., was created in the middle of World
War II and became the center for America's biological warfare efforts.
But that
role shifted in 1969, the government says, to focus solely on defense
against the
threat of biological weapons.
>
>Then called Detrick Air Field, the science and research facility housed four
biological agent production plants.
>
>Anthrax was considered the most important agent. Simulants were tested, and
one bomb was readied for production in 1944. One million bombs were
ordered, though
the order was canceled when the war ended in 1945.
>
>During the 1950s, the biological weapons program was among the most classified
within the Pentagon. There was an emphasis on biological agents for
use against
enemy forces as well as plants and animals.
>
>The Army says no biological weapons were used during the Korean War, though
such allegations were made by the Chinese and the Koreans.
>
>Growing Protests
>
>One plan at Fort Detrick in the late 1950s was to use the yellow fever virus
against an enemy by releasing infected mosquitoes by airplane or
helicopter. Detrick's
labs were capable of producing a half-million mosquitoes per month,
with plans for
up to 130 million per month.
>
>The military also tested bombs in Utah with brucella suis, a bacterium that
can lead to fever and influenzalike sickness. And scientists at Fort
Detrick also
worked on a number of possible pathogens that could destroy crops or
trees.
>
>By the 1960s, the U.S. biological warfare program had begun to decline, with
funding gradually decreasing. There were growing protests in the
United States over
the use of defoliants in Vietnam and anger about a sheep-kill incident
in Utah.
That incident occurred in 1968, when 3,000 sheep were found dead in
the Skull Valley
area, adjacent to the Army's Dugway Proving Ground. Although the
findings were
not conclusive, it was believed that nerve agents had somehow drifted
out of Dugway
during a test of aerial spraying.
>
>In 1969, the Army announced that 23 U.S. soldiers and one U.S. civilian had
been exposed to a sarin nerve agent on the Japanese island of Okinawa,
while cleaning
sarin-filled bombs. The incident created international concerns and
revealed that
the Army had secretly positioned chemical munitions in Southeast
Asia.
>
>That same year, President Nixon took action against biological and chemical
weapons. He reaffirmed a no-first-use policy for chemical weapons,
renounced the
use of biological weapons and limited research to defensive measures
only.
>
>Leading Researcher
>
>The Army fort that had its beginnings during World War II is now a sprawling
campus of brick government buildings outside Frederick, Md., located
an hour's
drive north of Washington, D.C.
>
>Government scientist Bruce E. Ivins worked at the heart of Fort Detrick, inside
the main building of the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute for
Infectious Diseases.
It was there that he was one of the leading researchers on anthrax
vaccines. The
building houses a number of highly secure labs where anthrax spores
would be used.
>
>Ivins, who died on July 29, helped investigate the deadly anthrax attacks in
2001. He apparently had been notified that he was to be prosecuted for
the five
deaths connected to the anthrax attacks.
>
>What Is The USAMRIID?
>The U.S. Army Medical Research Institute for Infectious Diseases was established
by the Office of the Surgeon General of the Army on Jan. 27, 1969, to
develop medical
defenses against biological warfare threats. It is located at Fort
Detrick, Md.
>
>The institute's scientists develop vaccines, drugs, diagnostics and information
to protect U.S. service members from biological warfare threats and
endemic diseases.
It is the only laboratory within the Defense Department to study
highly hazardous
viruses requiring maximum containment.
>
>The institute has helped to contain deadly diseases, such as Lassa fever, SARS
and human monkeypox, since the 1970s.
>
>Source: U.S. Army Medical Research Institute for Infectious Diseases
>
>
>
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