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"US tests bio weapons on citizens"

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Mort Zuckerman

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Jun 9, 2010, 7:48:24 AM6/9/10
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Subject: "US tests bio weapons on citizens"

Date: Jun 9, 2010 7:46 AM

"In the 1950s and 1960s alone there were easily about two dozen
experiments conducted in the New England area," added Watson.

(Yeah, we know:
http://www.actionlyme.org
They call it "Lyme Disease," which is
PsyOps for "the accidental release of
Relapsing Fever 'vector-pathogen competence
study' with hard ticks." PI did not count on
http://www.actionlyme.org/PIIB.htm
the birds.)
===============================
http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=129613&sectionid=3510203

US tests bio weapons on citizens

Tue, 08 Jun 2010 17:40:36 GMT

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The United States is using its citizens as guinea pigs to test
biological weapons and simulate germ warfare attacks in different
locations across the country, reports say.

With the spread of some unknown diseases in the US, speculations
started soaring that Washington is engaged in covert biological
warfare activities which involve the use of chemical and biological
weapons against human beings.

According to Dr. Hanley Watson, a former military scientist, the US
Army, "from 1950 to at least mid-1976" conducted "numerous experiments
simulating biological or germ warfare attacks in dozens of locations
across the country."

"Previously these experiments were downplayed by the Pentagon as
'harmless tests' occurring in about 8 areas in the US and employing
benign substances, but this couldn't be further from the truth."

In 1976 the Pentagon revealed in a press conference that the US army
had conducted a series of "simulated germ warfare attacks, using non-
disease [sic] causing biological substances in 8 areas of the US."

The biological tests included a 1950 operation off the coast of San
Francisco; a 1966 biological warfare experiment in Manhattan in which
"the vulnerability of the New York subway system was tested"; and at
least three tests conducted in Pennsylvania, Fort McClellan, Alabama,
and California with "fungal substances" to "perform field evaluations
to determine vulnerability to enemy biological attack."

Reports in mid-1970s widely indicated that at least one person was
perished in the San Francisco biological test.

Moreover, the 1952 Alabama experiments caused a hike in the spread of
pneumonia cases in the surrounding neighborhoods.

However, the US army remained defiant, arguing that no clue had been
found relating the experiments to the spread of infectious diseases or
deaths.

"There is nothing we have that shows any links between these tests and
any outbreak of infection or any deaths."

According to Watson "The experiments conducted from the early 1950s
through 1976 were many more in number than officially stated, and they
were conducted in many more locations than the reported eight."

"In the 1950s and 1960s alone there were easily about two dozen
experiments conducted in the New England area," added Watson.

RB/MMN

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

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