Death threats and Blow JOB TALK BY "cHUCK". VERY OFF TOPIC...Death threats and Blow JOB TALK BY "cHUCK". VERY OFF TOPIC...Death threats and Blow JOB TALK BY "cHUCK". VERY OFF TOPIC...
- From: "Foley Hearts Chuck" <oracle2actionlyme@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 8 Oct 2006 18:18:25 -0700
This is a complaint to "law enforcement" so we can
watch them all sit back and only catch the pedophiles
on the internet rather than Congress, because the Feds
did not get to witness the Congressional um,
indisgressions. (And FBI only has fun if they get to
participate.)
================================
Chuck discussing McSweegan's penis:
http://groups.google.com/group/sci.med.diseases.lyme/browse_frm/thread/e3434128f9b1acaf/e66a398e86657054?q=I+hear+he+is+hung+like+a+horse&rnum=5#e66a398e86657054
Chuck's blow job filth:
http://www.actionlyme.org/CHUCK_NANCY_BLOWJOB.htm
And the Lacy Peterson death threat
http://groups.google.com/group/sci.med.diseases.lyme/browse_thread/thread/737c59b6c5c3f481/940b6cbe6d735d5c?lnk=gst&q=lyme+roads+dangerous+lacy&rnum=2#940b6cbe6d735d5c
"Chuck P Adams" is a take-off on the character
Christopher Adams in "Deliberate Release" in which
the main character' adversary conducts an "anonymous
internet disinformation" campaign using a remailer,
just like "Chuck P Adams" does. See the review of
the Book by NIH' do-nothing scientist, Edward
McSweegan, review below.
Lyme was likely an accidental release from Plum Island
because on Plum, they conduct vector-pathogen
competence studies, like Yale's Durland Fish and
African Swine Fever Virus experiment. (See the African
Swine Fever on Plum Island experiment also, below and
note the similarities to an African virus in
McSweegan' book.) In the real world, Lyme was
likely an ACCIDENTAL RELEASE of an African Relapsing
Fever borreliosis (Lyme)... released on sea birds
carrying ticks across the Long Island sound to
southern New England.
The Deliberate Release Book is actually a dumb take
off of the reverse of what is actually going on there.
The NIH "Do-Nothing scientist" McSweegan and Yale are
the real villains, spreading disinformation about an
accidental release of an African disease (relapsing
fever is Lyme borreliosis) from Plum Island.
1) The US Army says ticks may be used to spread
diseases (Poughkeepsie Journal article below), 2)
UNSCOM was looking for "tick nursery equipment" in
Iraq before Duyba illegally invaded it, 3) and the
Department of Energy says Lyme is a stealth disabler
(thereby admitting that the current CDC testing for
Lyme is fraudulent, and only detects the non-stealth
kind, the inflammatory reaction, which is a genetic
difference, and not very common). Mark Klempner
tested 1800 people who previously were diagnosed with
Lyme and only 78 of those patients still tested
positive to the CDC's "Lyme is only a bad knee
disease" positive blood test criteria. That's 4%
accurate for late, treated Lyme.
Whenever we post anything about Lyme being a bioweapon
or congenital Lyme, Chuck goes ballstic, just like
McSweegan and Fish went ballistic on Karen Forschner
of the Lyme disease Foundation, when Karen found out
that Lyme transmits in 6-9 hours, instead of the
imaginary 48 hours that we have been told.
http://www.actionlyme.org/TICK_BITE_CONSPIRACY.htm
Deliberate Release
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
By Edward McSweegan
About the Book:
Washington, D.C. and the Internet are the settings for
this novel of modern terror and ancient disease. After
two Egyptian scientists release an African virus in
Washington local doctors misdiagnose the mysterious
infection.
Later they begin to suspect smallpox and terrorism.
They are only half right. Their initial suspicions are
fueled by anonymous disinformation
spread through the Internet and the media. Government
scientist Christopher Adams knows the Egyptians and
has been trying to track them through the Internet. By
the time he and the FBI cut through the fog of
deception and find the terrorists, residents are dying
and the city is in panic.
Any biological attack is, by definition, a successful
attack: witness the mayhem caused by a few
anthrax-contaminated letters. Unlike other novels of
bioterror and epidemic, Deliberate Release avoids the
use of biotechnical wizardry, chance mutations and
wide-eyed fanatics in order to convey a sense of our
vulnerability to assault and infection. Instead, most
of the ingredients for this modern-day detective story
of one man's efforts to stop a terror plot come from
the neighborhood library, the hardware store and the
local pharmacy. Even as we try to nail the front door
shut against future attacks, Deliberate Release
provides a fictional window into potential backdoor
vulnerabilities.
Deliberate Release (previously titled, Tomorrow's Pox)
won the grand prize in the 2002 Maryland Writers
Association-1st Books.Com Book Contest.
Edward McSweegan:
Edward McSweegan is an infectious disease expert in
the Washington, D.C. area. His writing credits include
numerous non-fiction articles and book reviews. A
fictional essay appeared in Science as part of the
magazine's millennial series, "Visions of the Future."
A short medical mystery won First Place in Writer's
Digest genre fiction contest and was published in The
Year's Best Writing 2001. Other writing awards include
two First Place prizes and the Grand Prize in the 2002
Maryland Writers Association-1st
Books.Com Book Contest.
====================================
http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/72/3/1711?view=long&pmid=9499019
J Virol, March 1998, p. 1711-1724, Vol. 72, No. 3
0022-538X/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology.
All rights reserved.
African Swine Fever Virus Infection in the Argasid
Host, Ornithodoros porcinus porcinus
S. B. Kleiboeker,1 T. G. Burrage,1 G. A. Scoles,1,2 D.
Fish,2 and D. L. Rock1,*
Plum Island Animal Disease Center, Agricultural
Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture,
Greenport, New York 11944,1 and Department of
Epidemiology and Public Health, Yale University School
of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 065202
Received 3 October 1997/Accepted 24 November 1997
ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References
The pathogenesis of African swine fever virus (ASFV)
infection in Ornithodoros porcinus porcinus was
examined in nymphal ticks infected with the ASFV
isolate Chiredzi/83/1. At times postinfection (p.i.)
ranging from 6 h to 290 days, ticks or dissected tick
tissues were titrated for virus and examined
ultrastructurally for evidence of virus replication.
The ASFV infection rate in ticks was 100% in these
experiments, and virus infection was not associated
with a significant increase in tick mortality. Initial
ASFV replication occurred in phagocytic digestive
cells of the midgut epithelium. Subsequent infection
and replication of ASFV in undifferentiated midgut
cells was observed at 15 days p.i. Generalization of
virus infection from midgut to other tick tissues
required 2 to 3 weeks and most likely involved virus
movement across the basal lamina of the midgut into
the hemocoel. Secondary sites of virus replication
included hemocytes (type I and II), connective tissue,
coxal gland, salivary gland, and reproductive tissue.
Virus replication was not observed in the nervous
tissue of the synganglion, Malpighian tubules, and
muscle. Persistent infection, characterized by active
virus replication, was observed for all involved tick
tissues. After 91 days p.i., viral titers in salivary
gland and reproductive tissue were consistently the
highest detected. Successful tick-to-pig transmission
of ASFV at 48 days p.i. correlated with high viral
titers in salivary and coxal gland tissue and their
secretions. A similar pattern of virus infection and
persistence in O. porcinus porcinus was observed for
three additional ASFV tick isolates in their
associated ticks.
===============
"The Army is contributing $4.8 million toward the
research because the government thinks ticks could be
used in a bioterrorist plot to spread infectious
diseases."
Speakers hail Lyme research
Awareness month is May
By Dan Shapley
Poughkeepsie Journal
April 27, 2006
The number of cases of ehrlichiosis and babesiosis,
both spread by the same black-legged tick that carries
Lyme disease, rose steeply in Dutchess County last
year.
The tiny blood-sucking arachnid already causes 1,300
documented cases of Lyme disease every year in
Dutchess, on average in the past decade. Lyme disease
causes a flu-like illness that can lead to severe
neurological, arthritic and cardiac problems if not
treated promptly and effectively with antibiotics.
And a new type of tick, the lone star tick, is making
inroads in the county, promising yet another way to
get ill from enjoying the outdoors in the Hudson
Valley.
But there is hope, speakers said at a press conference
in Poughkeepsie Wednesday that signaled an early
kick-off to Lyme Disease Awareness Month in May.
A federal bill supporting research has increased
support among local representatives, and scientists
are already making progress toward developing a
vaccine that would prevent black-legged ticks from
biting.
"There is a lot of research going on to solve this
problem," said Stephen Wikel, a University of
Connecticut scientist who was invited to speak by the
Hudson Valley Lyme Disease Association.
Tick-spit project
Wikel is working to sequence the genome of the
black-legged tick. The aim is to understand how tick
spit thwarts the human immune response, so that a
vaccine can be developed to thwart tick spit. The Army
is contributing $4.8 million toward the research
because the government thinks ticks could be used in a
bioterrorist plot to spread infectious diseases.
In Dutchess County, documented cases of the
malaria-like babesiosis were up to 31 in 2005, from
eight the past two years, according to preliminary
Department of Health data. Documented cases of
ehrlichiosis, which is now being called anaplasmosis,
were also up significantly - to 194 cases from an
average of 65 the previous three years.
Commissioner of Health Dr. Michael Caldwell said
concerted educational efforts have helped residents
and doctors better prevent and treat tick-borne
diseases.
"We're frustrated. We've done all we can, and we need
that research to push us forward," Caldwell said.
"Ultimately, we're going to need a vaccine that can
protect us from the bite of a tick."
A federal bill, the Lyme and Tick-Borne Disease
Prevention, Education and Research Act, would spend
$100 million over five years on research and
education. It has support from local Democrats and
Republicans, but it is unclear how much support it has
across the country.
"I'm hopeful we will be able to speed up the process
of finding ways that Lyme disease can be detected,
treated and prevented," said Lori Patricola, the
Hudson Valley representative of U.S. Rep. John
Sweeney, R-Clifton Park.
Dan Shapley can be reached at
dshapley@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Chuck Hearts Foley wrote:
Chuck discussing McSweegan's penis:
http://groups.google.com/group/sci.med.diseases.lyme/browse_frm/thread/e3434128f9b1acaf/e66a398e86657054?q=I+hear+he+is+hung+like+a+horse&rnum=5#e66a398e86657054
Chuck's blow job filth:
http://www.actionlyme.org/CHUCK_NANCY_BLOWJOB.htm
And the Lacy Peterson death threat
http://groups.google.com/group/sci.med.diseases.lyme/browse_thread/thread/737c59b6c5c3f481/940b6cbe6d735d5c?lnk=gst&q=lyme+roads+dangerous+lacy&rnum=2#940b6cbe6d735d5c
===================================
This is a complaint to "law enforcement" so we can
watch them all sit back and only catch the pedophiles
on the internet rather than Congress, because the Feds
did not get to witness the Congressional um,
indisgressions. (And FBI only has fun if they get to
participate.)
================================
"Chuck P Adams" is a take-off on the character
Christopher Adams in "Deliberate Release" in which
the main character' adversary conducts an "anonymous
internet disinformation" campaign using a remailer,
just like "Chuck P Adams" does. See the review of
the Book by NIH' do-nothing scientist, Edward
McSweegan, review below.
Lyme was likely an accidental release from Plum Island
because on Plum, they conduct vector-pathogen
competence studies, like Yale's Durland Fish and
African Swine Fever Virus experiment. (See the African
Swine Fever on Plum Island experiment also, below and
note the similarities to an African virus in
McSweegan' book.) In the real world, Lyme was
likely an ACCIDENTAL RELEASE of an African Relapsing
Fever borreliosis (Lyme)... released on sea birds
carrying ticks across the Long Island sound to
southern New England.
The Deliberate Release Book is actually a dumb take
off of the reverse of what is actually going on there.
The NIH "Do-Nothing scientist" McSweegan and Yale are
the real villains, spreading disinformation about an
accidental release of an African disease (relapsing
fever is Lyme borreliosis) from Plum Island.
1) The US Army says ticks may be used to spread
diseases (Poughkeepsie Journal article below), 2)
UNSCOM was looking for "tick nursery equipment" in
Iraq before Duyba illegally invaded it, 3) and the
Department of Energy says Lyme is a stealth disabler
(thereby admitting that the current CDC testing for
Lyme is fraudulent, and only detects the non-stealth
kind, the inflammatory reaction, which is a genetic
difference, and not very common). Mark Klempner
tested 1800 people who previously were diagnosed with
Lyme and only 78 of those patients still tested
positive to the CDC's "Lyme is only a bad knee
disease" positive blood test criteria. That's 4%
accurate for late, treated Lyme.
Whenever we post anything about Lyme being a bioweapon
or congenital Lyme, Chuck goes ballstic, just like
McSweegan and Fish went ballistic on Karen Forschner
of the Lyme disease Foundation, when Karen found out
that Lyme transmits in 6-9 hours, instead of the
imaginary 48 hours that we have been told.
http://www.actionlyme.org/TICK_BITE_CONSPIRACY.htm
Deliberate Release
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
By Edward McSweegan
About the Book:
Washington, D.C. and the Internet are the settings for
this novel of modern terror and ancient disease. After
two Egyptian scientists release an African virus in
Washington local doctors misdiagnose the mysterious
infection.
Later they begin to suspect smallpox and terrorism.
They are only half right. Their initial suspicions are
fueled by anonymous disinformation
spread through the Internet and the media. Government
scientist Christopher Adams knows the Egyptians and
has been trying to track them through the Internet. By
the time he and the FBI cut through the fog of
deception and find the terrorists, residents are dying
and the city is in panic.
Any biological attack is, by definition, a successful
attack: witness the mayhem caused by a few
anthrax-contaminated letters. Unlike other novels of
bioterror and epidemic, Deliberate Release avoids the
use of biotechnical wizardry, chance mutations and
wide-eyed fanatics in order to convey a sense of our
vulnerability to assault and infection. Instead, most
of the ingredients for this modern-day detective story
of one man's efforts to stop a terror plot come from
the neighborhood library, the hardware store and the
local pharmacy. Even as we try to nail the front door
shut against future attacks, Deliberate Release
provides a fictional window into potential backdoor
vulnerabilities.
Deliberate Release (previously titled, Tomorrow's Pox)
won the grand prize in the 2002 Maryland Writers
Association-1st Books.Com Book Contest.
Edward McSweegan:
Edward McSweegan is an infectious disease expert in
the Washington, D.C. area. His writing credits include
numerous non-fiction articles and book reviews. A
fictional essay appeared in Science as part of the
magazine's millennial series, "Visions of the Future."
A short medical mystery won First Place in Writer's
Digest genre fiction contest and was published in The
Year's Best Writing 2001. Other writing awards include
two First Place prizes and the Grand Prize in the 2002
Maryland Writers Association-1st
Books.Com Book Contest.
====================================
http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/72/3/1711?view=long&pmid=9499019
J Virol, March 1998, p. 1711-1724, Vol. 72, No. 3
0022-538X/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology.
All rights reserved.
African Swine Fever Virus Infection in the Argasid
Host, Ornithodoros porcinus porcinus
S. B. Kleiboeker,1 T. G. Burrage,1 G. A. Scoles,1,2 D.
Fish,2 and D. L. Rock1,*
Plum Island Animal Disease Center, Agricultural
Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture,
Greenport, New York 11944,1 and Department of
Epidemiology and Public Health, Yale University School
of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 065202
Received 3 October 1997/Accepted 24 November 1997
ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References
The pathogenesis of African swine fever virus (ASFV)
infection in Ornithodoros porcinus porcinus was
examined in nymphal ticks infected with the ASFV
isolate Chiredzi/83/1. At times postinfection (p.i.)
ranging from 6 h to 290 days, ticks or dissected tick
tissues were titrated for virus and examined
ultrastructurally for evidence of virus replication.
The ASFV infection rate in ticks was 100% in these
experiments, and virus infection was not associated
with a significant increase in tick mortality. Initial
ASFV replication occurred in phagocytic digestive
cells of the midgut epithelium. Subsequent infection
and replication of ASFV in undifferentiated midgut
cells was observed at 15 days p.i. Generalization of
virus infection from midgut to other tick tissues
required 2 to 3 weeks and most likely involved virus
movement across the basal lamina of the midgut into
the hemocoel. Secondary sites of virus replication
included hemocytes (type I and II), connective tissue,
coxal gland, salivary gland, and reproductive tissue.
Virus replication was not observed in the nervous
tissue of the synganglion, Malpighian tubules, and
muscle. Persistent infection, characterized by active
virus replication, was observed for all involved tick
tissues. After 91 days p.i., viral titers in salivary
gland and reproductive tissue were consistently the
highest detected. Successful tick-to-pig transmission
of ASFV at 48 days p.i. correlated with high viral
titers in salivary and coxal gland tissue and their
secretions. A similar pattern of virus infection and
persistence in O. porcinus porcinus was observed for
three additional ASFV tick isolates in their
associated ticks.
===============
"The Army is contributing $4.8 million toward the
research because the government thinks ticks could be
used in a bioterrorist plot to spread infectious
diseases."
Speakers hail Lyme research
Awareness month is May
By Dan Shapley
Poughkeepsie Journal
April 27, 2006
The number of cases of ehrlichiosis and babesiosis,
both spread by the same black-legged tick that carries
Lyme disease, rose steeply in Dutchess County last
year.
The tiny blood-sucking arachnid already causes 1,300
documented cases of Lyme disease every year in
Dutchess, on average in the past decade. Lyme disease
causes a flu-like illness that can lead to severe
neurological, arthritic and cardiac problems if not
treated promptly and effectively with antibiotics.
And a new type of tick, the lone star tick, is making
inroads in the county, promising yet another way to
get ill from enjoying the outdoors in the Hudson
Valley.
But there is hope, speakers said at a press conference
in Poughkeepsie Wednesday that signaled an early
kick-off to Lyme Disease Awareness Month in May.
A federal bill supporting research has increased
support among local representatives, and scientists
are already making progress toward developing a
vaccine that would prevent black-legged ticks from
biting.
"There is a lot of research going on to solve this
problem," said Stephen Wikel, a University of
Connecticut scientist who was invited to speak by the
Hudson Valley Lyme Disease Association.
Tick-spit project
Wikel is working to sequence the genome of the
black-legged tick. The aim is to understand how tick
spit thwarts the human immune response, so that a
vaccine can be developed to thwart tick spit. The Army
is contributing $4.8 million toward the research
because the government thinks ticks could be used in a
bioterrorist plot to spread infectious diseases.
In Dutchess County, documented cases of the
malaria-like babesiosis were up to 31 in 2005, from
eight the past two years, according to preliminary
Department of Health data. Documented cases of
ehrlichiosis, which is now being called anaplasmosis,
were also up significantly - to 194 cases from an
average of 65 the previous three years.
Commissioner of Health Dr. Michael Caldwell said
concerted educational efforts have helped residents
and doctors better prevent and treat tick-borne
diseases.
"We're frustrated. We've done all we can, and we need
that research to push us forward," Caldwell said.
"Ultimately, we're going to need a vaccine that can
protect us from the bite of a tick."
A federal bill, the Lyme and Tick-Borne Disease
Prevention, Education and Research Act, would spend
$100 million over five years on research and
education. It has support from local Democrats and
Republicans, but it is unclear how much support it has
across the country.
"I'm hopeful we will be able to speed up the process
of finding ways that Lyme disease can be detected,
treated and prevented," said Lori Patricola, the
Hudson Valley representative of U.S. Rep. John
Sweeney, R-Clifton Park.
Dan Shapley can be reached at
dshapley@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: Death threats and Blow JOB TALK BY "cHUCK". VERY OFF TOPIC...Death threats and Blow JOB TALK BY "cHUCK". VERY OFF TOPIC...Death threats and Blow JOB TALK BY "cHUCK". VERY OFF TOPIC...
- From: Foley Hearts Chuck
- off topic
- From: Chuck - The man who lays down the law in here
- Re: Death threats and Blow JOB TALK BY "cHUCK". VERY OFF TOPIC...Death threats and Blow JOB TALK BY "cHUCK". VERY OFF TOPIC...Death threats and Blow JOB TALK BY "cHUCK". VERY OFF TOPIC...