Carla, this may not mean much to anyone else, but it sure got my attention. I only wish that I had research skills like yours. I have been dxed with CFS,FBM, and EBV, I can't remember all of your earlier post about Mycroplasma, but I am going to search all the links you posted, and see how this might be linked to me, and probably many others. I may not have made any sense in this post at all(been up all night, my daughter has broke out with a rash from head to toe), but I was just saying "Thank You", because as I said, I do not yet have great research skills(I am working on them) and what you are talking about here definitly relates to me.....thanks

Niecy


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Originally Posted by tara Testing the Dispersal Methods Documented evidence proves that the biological weapons they were developing were tested on the public in various communities without their knowledge or consent.
The government knew that crystalline Brucella would cause disease in humans. Now they needed to determine how it would spread and the best way to disperse it. They tested dispersal methods for Brucella suis and Brucella melitensis at Dugway Proving Ground, Utah, in June and September 1952. Probably, 100% of us now are infected with Brucella suis and Brucella melitensis.8
Another government document recommended the genesis of open-air vulnerability tests and covert research and development programs to be conducted by the Army and supported by the Central Intelligence Agency.
At that time, the Government of Canada was asked by the US Government to cooperate in testing weaponised Brucella, and Canada cooperated fully with the United States. The US Government wanted to determine whether mosquitoes would carry the disease and also if the air would carry it.
A government report stated that "open-air testing of infectious biological agents is considered essential to an ultimate understanding of biological warfare potentialities because of the many unknown factors affecting the degradation of micro-organisms in the atmosphere".9 http://www.nexusmagazine.com/articles/mycoplasma.html |