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Re: Re: Fears of human bird flu cases rise in India's Assam

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lol I got the book by mercola called the great bird flu hoax... I should read it sometime. I'm glad it hasn't happened. But I'm also sort of glad for the scare because the flu kit I bought helped a bunch of times already for other illnesses :)

On Sat, Dec 13, 2008 at 12:56 PM, Brandegee <lightspirals@...> wrote:

They're still trying to re-ignite something that is a dead deal. The

Bird Flu epidemic, of course the manmade creation, is not going to

happen. They cannot reconcile this and have all those vaccines

sitting there wasted, schucks. Expect a few more attempts before it's

given up.

Liz

>

> One can compare this idiocy with the alleged AIDS epidemic in South

Africa -

> when a white or Indian person sneezes, it's a common cold - when a black

> person coughs it's automatically assumed that this person has AIDS,

> subsequently to be confirmed " without fail " by HIV-tests which,

according to

> the manufacturers themselves, have never been designed for HIV

testing in

> the first place, since it presupposes the existence of a virus, which

> according to the alleged discoverer, Luc Montagnier, has never been

purified

> (isolated) in his lab.

>

> Ingrid

>

> >>Health workers have yet to confirm any human cases of H5N1, but they

> said some patients were suffering from fever and respiratory infections,

> which are symptoms of the virus in humans.<<

> " Some " patients, with " fever and respiratory infections " ....

> Quick, this is the " pandemic " Big Pharma and assorted mafiosi have

long

> been hoping for, let's start a mandatory vaccination campaign!

> ========

> http://www.reuters.com/article/healthNews/idUSTRE4BB5YX20081212

> Fears of human bird flu cases rise in India's Assam

>

> Fri Dec 12, 2008 1:36pm EST

> By Biswajyoti Das

>

> GUWAHATI, India (Reuters) - India is sending bird flu experts to the

> northeastern state of Assam and setting up isolation units to treat

up to 90

> people showing signs of the virus, health authorities said on Friday.

>

> Health workers have yet to confirm any human cases of H5N1, but

they said

> some patients were suffering from fever and respiratory infections,

which

> are symptoms of the virus in humans.

>

> Veterinary officials in Assam state, which is rich in tea and oil,

have

> slaughtered more than 250,000 chickens and ducks in the past two weeks,

> after the virus was detected in poultry last month in a village close to

> Guwahati, the region's main city.

>

> New Delhi has rushed federal medical experts, including

epidemiologists

> and microbiologists, to the affected areas.

>

> " We have set up isolation facilities to treat those patients, " Himanta

> Biswa Sarma, Assam's health minister, said.

>

> " So far none of the patients has a history of contact with infected

> poultry, but we are taking no chances. If the disease is transmitted to

> humans it will be a big disaster, " Sarma said.

>

> The medical teams brought supplies of equipment as a preventative

measure

> in case the virus spreads to humans, including 10,000 Tamiflu capsules,

> 6,000 surgical masks and two ventilators.

>

> Experts suspect the disease was carried by migratory birds who are

immune

> to the virus.

>

> Officials said poultry owners took advantage of a shortage of trained

> health workers and hid their stock to evade culling and seizure, further

> complicating the situation.

>

> Another 150,000 chickens and ducks will be culled over the next

two days,

> said a senior veterinary official in the state capital Dispur who

did not

> want to be named.

>

> While no human cases have been reported in India, experts fear the

H5N1

> virus might mutate or combine with the highly contagious seasonal

influenza

> virus and spark a pandemic that could kill millions of people.

>

> Since the virus resurfaced in Asia in 2003, it has killed more

than 200

> people in a dozen countries, the World Health Organization says.

>

> The WHO described the January outbreak of bird flu in neighboring West

> Bengal state, when more than 4 million birds were culled, as the

worst ever

> in India.

>

>

>

> =====

>

> In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is

> distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior

interest in

> receiving the included information for research and educational

purposes.

>

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lol I got the book by mercola called the great bird flu hoax... I should read it sometime. I'm glad it hasn't happened. But I'm also sort of glad for the scare because the flu kit I bought helped a bunch of times already for other illnesses :)

On Sat, Dec 13, 2008 at 12:56 PM, Brandegee <lightspirals@...> wrote:

They're still trying to re-ignite something that is a dead deal. The

Bird Flu epidemic, of course the manmade creation, is not going to

happen. They cannot reconcile this and have all those vaccines

sitting there wasted, schucks. Expect a few more attempts before it's

given up.

Liz

>

> One can compare this idiocy with the alleged AIDS epidemic in South

Africa -

> when a white or Indian person sneezes, it's a common cold - when a black

> person coughs it's automatically assumed that this person has AIDS,

> subsequently to be confirmed " without fail " by HIV-tests which,

according to

> the manufacturers themselves, have never been designed for HIV

testing in

> the first place, since it presupposes the existence of a virus, which

> according to the alleged discoverer, Luc Montagnier, has never been

purified

> (isolated) in his lab.

>

> Ingrid

>

> >>Health workers have yet to confirm any human cases of H5N1, but they

> said some patients were suffering from fever and respiratory infections,

> which are symptoms of the virus in humans.<<

> " Some " patients, with " fever and respiratory infections " ....

> Quick, this is the " pandemic " Big Pharma and assorted mafiosi have

long

> been hoping for, let's start a mandatory vaccination campaign!

> ========

> http://www.reuters.com/article/healthNews/idUSTRE4BB5YX20081212

> Fears of human bird flu cases rise in India's Assam

>

> Fri Dec 12, 2008 1:36pm EST

> By Biswajyoti Das

>

> GUWAHATI, India (Reuters) - India is sending bird flu experts to the

> northeastern state of Assam and setting up isolation units to treat

up to 90

> people showing signs of the virus, health authorities said on Friday.

>

> Health workers have yet to confirm any human cases of H5N1, but

they said

> some patients were suffering from fever and respiratory infections,

which

> are symptoms of the virus in humans.

>

> Veterinary officials in Assam state, which is rich in tea and oil,

have

> slaughtered more than 250,000 chickens and ducks in the past two weeks,

> after the virus was detected in poultry last month in a village close to

> Guwahati, the region's main city.

>

> New Delhi has rushed federal medical experts, including

epidemiologists

> and microbiologists, to the affected areas.

>

> " We have set up isolation facilities to treat those patients, " Himanta

> Biswa Sarma, Assam's health minister, said.

>

> " So far none of the patients has a history of contact with infected

> poultry, but we are taking no chances. If the disease is transmitted to

> humans it will be a big disaster, " Sarma said.

>

> The medical teams brought supplies of equipment as a preventative

measure

> in case the virus spreads to humans, including 10,000 Tamiflu capsules,

> 6,000 surgical masks and two ventilators.

>

> Experts suspect the disease was carried by migratory birds who are

immune

> to the virus.

>

> Officials said poultry owners took advantage of a shortage of trained

> health workers and hid their stock to evade culling and seizure, further

> complicating the situation.

>

> Another 150,000 chickens and ducks will be culled over the next

two days,

> said a senior veterinary official in the state capital Dispur who

did not

> want to be named.

>

> While no human cases have been reported in India, experts fear the

H5N1

> virus might mutate or combine with the highly contagious seasonal

influenza

> virus and spark a pandemic that could kill millions of people.

>

> Since the virus resurfaced in Asia in 2003, it has killed more

than 200

> people in a dozen countries, the World Health Organization says.

>

> The WHO described the January outbreak of bird flu in neighboring West

> Bengal state, when more than 4 million birds were culled, as the

worst ever

> in India.

>

>

>

> =====

>

> In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is

> distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior

interest in

> receiving the included information for research and educational

purposes.

>

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