Re: 1944 book shows Spirochetes were weaponized 70 years ago by the Japanese
- From: the 3rd Man <sir_der05@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 21 Dec 2008 09:24:53 -0800 (PST)
On Dec 21, 4:25 am, anticorruption2...@xxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
==================================================
Borrelia, the microbes which cause Lyme disease, are a sub-type of the
wider biological classification of spirochetes. Now it has become
apparent that the spirochetes were weaponized over 75 years ago.
Yeah?
So?
Let's say, for the sake of argument that this is true...what
conclusion, then, does this "fact", then, suggest? What is this
supposed to tell us?
That the Japanese government was really dominated by some not-so-very-
nice people during WW II? Thanks, but most of us already had that one
figured out. That little drop-by unannounced visit on December 7th,
1941 was sort of a clue. And before that, there was Manchuria and
Nanking.
What's the point of repeating this, over and over and OVER?
So, again, let's say that the Japanese did try to see if they could
develop a nasty bio-weapon out of borrelia. Well, DID they?
As has been pointed out NUMEROUS times...a "bioweapon" that gives you
joint pain and headches and takes months to become fully
"incapacitating' hardly seems, logically, to be anything approaching a
weapon...let alone an effective weapon.
WHAT IS THE POINT? Look, tularemia is derived from ticks, isn't it?
And it is one of the nastiest bioweapons known. So is it logical to
assume that scientists have studied animal toxins, TICKS, even, for
this type of use...or DEFENSE?
I would hope so.
He then alleges that two to three years before Pearl Harbor,
"Nazi and Japanese scientists cooperated in warfare against or with
spirochetes - in Hawaii." (original author's italics). What he is
referring to is an exceptionally virulent outbreak of the spirochetal
disease leptospirosis, also known as Weil's disease, and known at the
time in Germany as "slime fever". With official reports of 44%
mortality from the outbreak, Newman states:
Leptospirosis...as I recall, 50% of the cases annually, occur in
Hawaii.
Why? Most likely because it is transmitted via animal urine and there
are a lot of pigs raised on Hawaii...and have been since its first
settlement by Tahitian migrants. (No pigs...no kalua, luau pig).
Pigs peeing upstream can cause bacterial transmission downstream. (One
of the more famous resorts on Maui...Kaanapali...literally means cliff
of the rolling pigs).
(Now, before, any conspiracy-itis sufferers start in with the business
about how I know too much about Leptospirosis...I had myself PCR'ed
for it...because I had been swimming in waterfall pools in Hawaii. Ah,
the days of Mai-Tais and frequent flier miles...). And yeah, there are
many naturally-occuring tropical diseases like "yaws" that are very
nasty...and I know about that one because I was reading a collection
of Tales of the South Seas while in Hawaii, once).
If that is an indication of how this guy reaches conclusions...well...
.
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