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Science Forum Index » Medicine - Lyme Forum » SICK VETERANS--End run around the Negative Data Rule...
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| Mort Zuckerman... |
Posted: Thu Jun 12, 2008 7:30 am |
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Subject: SICK VETERANS--End run around the Negative Data Rule
Date: Jun 12, 2008 1:27 PM
ARTICLE BELOW
========================
Negative Data Rule: Don't follow up on what you don't want data on.
Examples:
1) Congenital Lyme Disease (4 reports):
http://www.actionlyme.org/MOMS_CAN_GIVE_LYME_TO_BABIES.htm
)including the Yale Dead Baby Autopsy)
2) Gulf War Illness (Dot Guv deployed Simon Wessley, the psychiatric
whore selected
to Blame The Victim)
http://www.actionlyme.org/PSYCHIATRIC_BS_UPDATE_13_AUG_06.htm
LOOK HERE ESPECIALLY--
Data which shows real illness signs in the Gulf War Veterans:
http://www.actionlyme.org/ROCKET_SCIENCE.htm
3) BIOMARKERS OF DISEASE, discovered and reported by the crooks, but
not deployed
by Mark Klempner:
http://www.actionlyme.org/KLEMPNER.htm
who instead used on of these fairy-assed, whoring psychiatric "check
lists"
and then later published that there was no such thing as Lyme brain,
but that we're
all "psychiatric"
This is criminal FRAUD on the part of Mark Klempner, as you can see
with your own
eyes"
http://www.actionlyme.org/Mark_Klempner_Fibroblasts.htm
http://www.actionlyme.org/Retro_Klempnerization.htm
Klempner publishes a clearly "bogus article"
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12821733?ordinalpos=1&itool=EntrezSystem2.PEntrez.Pubmed.Pubmed_ResultsPanel.Pubmed_RVDocSum
It's AMAZING that Mark Klempner first we have brain damage from the
nerve degrading
enzyme MMP130, with persisting spirochetes past cef (that's CEF for
CEF equaling
BRAIN infections) -triaxone treatment with ot without human cells to
hide in, but
now he says that we don't have any kind of brain destroying disease,
but just...
Femzalsteria.
Or maybe it's Feminohysterichondria...
http://www.actionlyme.org/dictionary_of_connecticutisms.htm
to go with the retrochondria and confragulation.
3) BigPharma, BigInsurance, and the US Military routinely deploy
psychiatrists
to blame the victim, even insofar as to blame the victims of
psychotropics-induced
brain damage:
http://www.actionlyme.org/BUNNEY_YALE_BRAIN_DAMAGE.htm
Remember, BigPharma, speaking through their whores, psychiatrists, say
the agitation
caused by SSRIs is to be blamed on the victim as "unmasking an
underlying disorder."
ERGO, for the Veterans to discover any data related to any damage they
received
as guinea pigs, have to look elsewhere, and above all NEVER from the
Institute of
Medicine since they're the back-up hoes (back-hoes).
Has the IOM ever published conflicts of interest or military
bioweapons training?
Remember, such applies to anyone who ended up working for Kaiser via
former CDC
employment, which ought to be illegal.
The CDC is the CIA of bioweapons, and as such, are not too smart.
Think "Allen Steere."
CIA, CDC, FBI... they're all Level II stupid bumblers, like Second
Order cops.
They're IDIOTS, for were they not all idiots, they would have figured
out who
they are working for.
We Lymies fully support the Veterans in pursuit of criminal charges
for false claims
made by vaccine manufacturers and the like, to include false
statements to the FDA
or the CDC or the US Military or in any Congressional testimony. They
need to ignore
all the Bullshit ever published in the United States or by any group
associated
with any of the Bigs, or by the US Military or DHHS, NIH, NCI, IOM,
etc.
Look elsewhere, gentlemen. Look in the foreign journals, NOT TO
INCLUDE Great Britain.
Kathleen M. Dickson
http://www.actionlyme.org
================================http://www.rawstory.com/news/mochila/Veterans_press_for_info_on_1960s_ch_06122008.html
Veterans press for info on 1960s chemical tests
Veterans press for information on 1960s chemical tests, complain of
health impact
ERICA WERNER
AP News
Jun 12, 2008 03:14 EST
Jack Alderson was ordered never to talk about the secret weapons tests
he helped
conduct in the Pacific during the 1960s. He kept quiet for decades.
Sparse attendance at a 1993 reunion prompted Alderson, a retired Navy
Reserve lieutenant
commander, to speak out. He learned that more than half of the 500 or
so crew members
who took part in the tests were either dead or suffering from cancer,
respiratory
problems or other ailments. Alderson wondered whether his own skin
cancers, allergies
and chronic fatigue were linked to those tests or were simply the
result of aging.
"I was told by my bosses and the docs and so forth that if you follow
these
routines ... you're going to be OK," Alderson, 74, said in an
interview.
"We did exactly as told. And we're finding out now that we're sick."
Alderson and other witnesses were to testify Thursday before a House
Veterans Affairs
panel considering legislation that would require more Pentagon
disclosure about
the Cold War-era germ and chemical weapons testing and extend benefits
to veterans
who participated in them. A similar bill is scheduled for a vote in
the Senate Veterans
Affairs Committee later this month.
Lawmakers say the legislation is needed because the Pentagon has not
acknowledged
a link between the tests and health problems, which has made it
difficult for veterans
to get health coverage. Pentagon officials don't rule out a health
link but
say it's tough to prove.
"We cannot say that this exposure 40 years ago had absolutely no
health effect,"
said Dr. Michael Kilpatrick, the Pentagon's deputy director for force
health
protection and readiness. "I don't think any physician would risk
saying
that. Because how do you prove that that's the case?"
A similar debate took place around Agent Orange, the chemical
defoliant used by
U.S. forces in Vietnam that was linked to cancer and other ailments in
those exposed
to it. At Congress' insistence in the late 1980s, the government
extended benefits
to veterans and their children suffering from Agent Orange-related
diseases.
The bill under consideration Thursday, by Reps. Mike Thompson, D-
Calif., and Denny
Rehberg, R-Mont., is patterned after the Agent Orange legislation.
In testimony prepared for the hearing, obtained in advance by The
Associated Press,
Bradley Mayes, the Veterans Affairs Department's director of
compensation and
pensions, calls the legislation unnecessary, "due to the lack of
credible scientific
and medical evidence that adequately demonstrates any statistically
significant
correlation" between the tests and participants' diseases.
Last year, the Institute of Medicine, which advises the government on
medical and
health matters, found no specific health effects as a result of
Project SHAD — Shipboard
Hazard and Defense. Alderson, Thompson and others argue that the
report was shoddily
done and left out key information.
"It started out being a secret project and turned into being a CYA
type of
thing, you know, cover your rear end. And an embarrassment," Thompson
said
of the tests and their aftermath.
Action from Congress would be a relief to Alderson, who lives modestly
in Ferndale,
Calif., among the redwoods north of San Francisco. His home is
decorated with stacks
of documents about his days in charge of a fleet of five light
tugboats that were
sprayed with biological agents and cleaned afterward with solvents,
some of which
now are considered carcinogenic.
During the tests, conducted amid Cold War concerns about the Soviet
Union's
weapons capabilities, the military tested germs such as bacteria that
could cause
tularemia and Q fever, serious diseases more commonly found in
animals. Also used
were nonlethal simulated agents, including E. coli, now known to pose
health dangers.
Test participants were given experimental vaccines but weren't told of
any risks,
only that the shots were a protective measure, Alderson said. Project
SHAD also
involved spraying service members aboard large Navy ships.
Kilpatrick acknowledges that some participants weren't fully informed
about
the project they were part of but says safety precautions taken then
were appropriate
for the time.
Alderson said he has pressed the Pentagon for answers about the secret
tests because
he feels he owes that to the crews he commanded.
In 1995, Alderson got a copy of a letter that the Navy's medicine and
surgery
bureau sent to his then-congressman, Rep. Frank Riggs, stating they
had no records
of Project SHAD. Six years later, after continued questioning from
Riggs and Thompson,
the Pentagon began to publicly release details on the existence of
Project SHAD
and its umbrella program, Project 112, which involved distribution of
nonlethal
bacteria and occasionally real chemical or biological weapons.
The Defense Department now says 6,440 service members took part in 50
tests under
Project 112 between 1962 and 1973, including open-air tests above a
half-dozen U.S.
states.
Source: AP News |
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