Jim Rarey picked this good one up .... and I have added a blurp re Linus
Pauling for this Swine Flu vaccine he was dead set against. Linus
Pauling worked with this Assassination Committee headed by Bud
Fensterwald of which I was member way back......he received Nobel Peace
Award too and shared with nobody...
This is real Doomsday Stuff - and I believe there are those out there
who know who is doing what, and are combating same - no more turn the
other cheek - are we going to let them destroy our country so strangers
can take it over not by law but by force by simply side-stepping the
Constitution and Washington DC is set for demolition too.
so the Mayor of New York is selling the Brooklyn Bridge and will then
make it a toll bridge alaong with 4 others....stealing our land for it
was ILLEGAL to sell the Twin Towers, hence the 99 year lease.
Larry Silverstein virtually got those buildings FREE for the insurance
of 7 billion dollars - 7 billion dollars plus the money from 7 World
Trade Center as well, which flourised in the flames thanks to the Mayor
causing to be placed 6000 gallos of fuel by its door.
Time to wake up.....
OSaba
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Saba,
Have you seen this from Australia? Another icon with feet of clay.
Jim Rarey aka Medium Rare
Burnet's solution: The plan
to poison S-E Asia By Brendan Nicholson Poltical
Correspondent March 10 2002
World-famous microbiologist Sir Macfarlane Burnet,
the Nobel prize winner revered as Australia's greatest medical research
scientist, secretly urged the government to develop biological weapons for use
against Indonesia and other "overpopulated" countries of South-East
Asia.
The revelation is contained in top-secret files
declassified by the National Archives of Australia, despite resistance from the
Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.
Sir Macfarlane recommended in a secret report in
1947 that biological and chemical weapons should be developed to target food
crops and spread infectious diseases.
His key advisory role on biological warfare was
uncovered by Canberra historian Philip Dorling in the National Archives in
1998.
The department initially blocked release of the
material on the basis it would damage Australia's international relations. Dr
Dorling sought a review and the material was finally released to him late last
year.
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The files include a comprehensive memo Sir
Macfarlane wrote for the Defence Department in 1947 in which he said Australia
should develop biological weapons that would work in tropical Asia without
spreading to Australia's more temperate population centres.
"Specifically to the Australian situation, the most
effective counter-offensive to threatened invasion by overpopulated Asiatic
countries would be directed towards the destruction by biological or chemical
means of tropical food crops and the dissemination of infectious disease capable
of spreading in tropical but not under Australian conditions," Sir Macfarlane
said.
The Victorian-born immunologist, who headed the
Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, won the Nobel prize for
medicine in 1960. He died in 1985 but his theories on immunity and "clonal
selection" provided the basis for modern biotechnology and genetic
engineering.
On December 24, 1946, the secretary of the
Department of Defence, F.G. Shedden, wrote to Macfarlane Burnet saying Australia
could not ignore the fact that many countries were conducting intense research
on biological warfare and inviting him to a meeting of top military officers to
discuss the question.
The minutes of a meeting in January, 1947, reveal
that Sir Macfarlane argued that Australia's temperate climate could give it a
significant military advantage.
"The main contribution of local research so far as
Australia is concerned might be to study intensively the possibilities of
biological warfare in the tropics against troops and civil populations at a
relatively low level of hygiene and with correspondingly high resistance to the
common infectious diseases," he told the meeting.
In September, 1947, Sir Macfarlane was invited to
join a chemical and biological warfare subcommittee of the New Weapons and
Equipment Development Committee.
He prepared a secret report titled Note on War from
a Biological Angle suggesting that biological warfare could be a powerful weapon
to help defend a thinly populated Australia.
Sir Macfarlane also urged the government to
encourage universities to research those branches of biological science that had
a special bearing on biological warfare.
A clinically scientific approach is evident in a
note he wrote in June, 1948.
He said a successful attack with a microbiological
agent on a large population would have such a devastating impact that its use
was extremely unlikely while both sides were capable of retaliation.
"The main strategic use of biological warfare may
well be to administer the coup de grace to a virtually defeated enemy and compel
surrender in the same way that the atomic bomb served in 1945.
"Its use has the tremendous advantage of not
destroying the enemy's industrial potential which can then be taken over
intact.
"Overt biological warfare might be used to enforce
surrender by psychological rather than direct destructive measures."
The minutes of a meeting at Melbourne's Victoria
Barracks in 1948 noted that Sir Macfarlane "was of the opinion that if Australia
undertakes work in this field it should be on the tropical offensive side rather
than the defensive. There was very little known about biological attack on
tropical crops."
After visiting the UK in 1950 and examining the
British chemical and biological warfare research effort, Sir Macfarlane told the
committee that the initiation of epidemics among enemy populations had usually
been discarded as a means of waging war because it was likely to rebound on the
user.
"In a country of low sanitation the introduction of
an exotic intestinal pathogen, e.g. by water contamination, might initiate
widespread dissemination," he said.
"Introduction of yellow fever into a country with
appropriate mosquito vectors might build up into a disabling epidemic before
control measures were established."
The subcommittee recommended that "the possibilities
of an attack on the food supplies of S-E Asia and Indonesia using B.W. agents
should be considered by a small study group".
It 1951 it recommended that "a panel reporting to
the chemical and biological warfare subcommittee should be authorised to report
on the offensive potentiality of biological agents likely to be effective
against the local food supplies of South-East Asia and Indonesia".
Dr Dorling said that while Sir Macfarlane was a
great Australian he was also a product of times when many Australians held deep
fears about more populous Asian countries.
He said the Menzies government was more interested
in trying to acquire nuclear weapons. "Fortunately this also proved
impracticable and Australia never acquired a weapon of mass
destruction."
The secretary of the Federation of Australian
Scientific and Technological Societies, Peter French, said he had not yet seen
the files but the whole notion of biological warfare was something that
Australian scientists would not be comfortable with today. "Viewed through
today's eyes it is clearly an abhorrent suggestion," Dr French said.