Awesome elena
I have a few questions if you get a chance:
Section: Weapons of Mass Infection
"After the war, the butchers of Unit 731 were shielded from prosecution by the US authorities, who wanted their expertise for the Cold War. [iv] The US government also protected and recruited German **** bioweaponeers under the aegis of the top-secret Operation Paperclip. [v]"Q: What are the asterisks in place of?
Section: The EIS and the 'Discovery' of Lyme
"Modern Lyme history begins in 1975 when a mother in the town of Old Lyme, Connecticut reported the outbreak of a strange, multi-system disease. The town lies directly opposite the Plum Island biowarfare research lab where, according to former Justice official John Loftus, **** scientists brought to the US after WW2 may have test-dropped 'poison ticks'. [vii]" Q: What are the asterisks in place of?
"In fact a high proportion of Steere camp Lyme experts are involved with the EIS. Given that the EIS is a small, elite force, (in 2001 the CDC revealed there were less than 2500 EIS officers in existence since the unit was first created in 1951 [xiii]), it seems incredible that so many of America's top Infectious Disease experts would devote their careers to what they themselves claim is a 'hard-to-catch, easily-cured' disease."Q:What does the last phrase mean? I would think the "hard to catch, easily cured" disease would not be lucrative…
"EIS man Barbour therefore became the first to isolate the prototype organism on which all subsequent Lyme disease blood tests would be based. [xx] This is very significant, as a huge body of evidence [xxi] indicates the unreliability of these tests, which are routinely used to rule out the disease. Additionally, all DNA detection of the Lyme agent in ticks and animals is ultimately based, directly or indirectly, on the genetic profile of the strain first isolated by Barbour."Q: What are the issues w/ the DNA fragments of the microbe as Barbour identified? I've understood that the issues with the tests are lack of a broad coverage of strains and the serology nature of a test for immunocompromised patients?
"The bacteria, named Borrelia lonestari, often evades detection on Lyme blood tests, is not found using DNA tests, and does not grow in Barbour's culture medium which is used world-wide for lab study. [xxiii] And yet, it appears to cause an illness identical to Lyme - down to the 'bullseye rash', which, though not present in all patients, is considered unique to Lyme disease."Q: Why is there not an equivalent controversy over Lonestar tick disease?
Q: And a general question… is there speculation that the volume of EIS specialists, particularly in light of all the anthrax scares after 9/11, has dwindled because of covert operations? Or the huge increase in big pharma and other private corporations that are doing this research instead?
Section: The Spread and the Spin
"However, we could legitimately wonder why, at lower levels of the CDC hierarchy, EIS officers - the nation's heavyweight infectious disease experts - continue to play such a major role in investigating the supposedly 'hard-to-catch, easily cured' Lyme. (For example, EIS officers Martin Schriefer and Captain Paul Mead.) [xxvii].[xxviii]"Q: I'm not sure I'm following this, why would CDC not proliferate their ranks w/ the EIS offers? What are the other viable pools for these positions?
"Klempner, however, concluded that persistent Lyme infection did not exist."Q: What were Kempner's conclusions based on?
"In 2005 the author discovered a document on the NIH website listing Lyme as one of the potential bioterrorism agents studied in BSL-4 (top security) labs." Q: What is a more relatable context for this? Not knowing any better, I would guess that most communicable diseases would be explored for biowarfare potential. So, is the issue that it was unexpectedly so successful? or that labs were so unexpectedly careless in operation?
Section: A Bug of Many Talents
"Lyme's ability to evade detection... Lyme's abilities as 'the great imitator' might mean that an attack could be misinterpreted as simply a rise in the incidence of different, naturally-occurring diseases such as autism, MS, lupus and chronic fatigue syndrome (M.E.). Borrelia's inherent ability to swap outer surface proteins, which may also vary widely from strain to strain, would make the production of an effective vaccine extremely difficult. (A vaccine developed for the public by the Steere camp in collaboration with Glaxo Smithkline was pulled from the market a few years ago amid class action lawsuits [xxxvi].) Finally, the delay before the appearance of the most incapacitating symptoms would allow plenty of time for an attacker to move away from the scene, as well as preventing people in a contaminated zone from realising they had been infected and seeking treatment. Often in the early period there is no rash, only vague flu-like or other non-specific symptoms which might be dismissed by GP's, or ignored by the patient."Q:
attacker do you mean an infected tick is the attacker?
Q:
naturally occuring why are these diseases referred o as naturally occurring? In my research, it's become clear that they are most all developments of an microbial infection …
Q: And another general question, what is the context for comparison of the lack of "update" or progress made w/ understanding lyme infection/diagnostics/treatment in revisiting the Steere camp assertions, compared to other comparable disease research?
Thanks so much!
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Post Edited (Pirouette) : 6/1/2015 9:38:42 AM (GMT-6)