CFP:
Chet Nagle:
Biological warfare research began in the United States in 1943 by order of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. The U.S. Army Chemical Warfare Service then began a large-scale research and development program at Fort Detrick in Frederick, Maryland. That research continues to this day. more
I think, according to Vladimir Vladimirovich, the number of labs in the Ukraine along the border with Russia has been greatly underestimated.
Related:
https://www.emerald.tv/p/classic-takes-project-veritas-confirms?utm_source=profile&utm_medium=reader2
We also imported the War Criminals from Unit 731 after the war to work there.
(can’t blame Roosevelt for that)
mortem tyrannis
izlamo delenda est …
I assume the deep state will authorize a bio-disaster to disrupt the election… there is nothing the government won’t use, to go after American citizens… from infecting black men with syphilis, without their knowledge to MK Ultra, to Ruby Ridge… government kills people…
If you’re a physically fit, high IQ psychopath, the US gibmint has a whole plethora of satisfying careers available to you.
Don’t forget about Plum Island. Directly across Long Island Sound from Old Lyme CT.
Anyone heard of “lyme disease”?
https://youtu.be/TunNIAGN8Ac?si=N9PtMoM6OI2BW3O6
.
At time when we could trust our government. Peppridge Farm remembers…
Fauci got rich by keeping the secrets.
there
is a Level IV biolab smack dab in the middle of Back Bay in Boston. it’s a brick cube with no windows in the middle of a residential neighborhood.
if it ever breeches look for a minimum of 100k infected people.
I remember when there was a push to destroy the last samples of Smallpox and the argument was they needed samples in case Smallpox came back. I was thinking,if Smallpox came back, you would have all the samples you wanted, So get rid of the risk.
United States Human Radiation Experiments
https://allthatsinteresting.com/human-radiation-experiments-united-states-government
TIM
Can I blame Jarheed hater HST?
Again have dog in this fight. HST forbade the Corps to celebrate Tuns Tavern 11/9/75. 2 Col risked their carriers in Korea and told their Regs. ” bake the g– d— kake! Fuck HST! ” HE DONNE US DIRT WHEN He THREW DUgIE (A DOGIE) under the bus!
Had I been they I’d done same thing. As 3 tethers sending me to Detention for OPERATION WETBACK attests!
Burn Harry!
I can only speak to the DoD up to about 2005. The tests in public areas were using a relatively but not entirely benign simulant agent that was still used, very infrequently, as recently as 20 years ago, to test dissemination of and protection from bacteriological agents — in heavily restricted and controlled environments.
Unfortunately, a small percentage of the population will likely have an allergy or sensitivity, sometimes deadly, to something the rest of us will not notice. Unannounced public testing of simulant agents seemed like a good idea at the time, as did a lot of other things.
Much of the work done in these supposedly hidden DoD related biolabs (the stateside ones) has been multi-use. The facilities in Hamilton, Montana, for instance, have been critical in understanding and treatment of a number of diseases.
Biological warfare is a stupid idea (The CCP may yet be taken down by the unanticipated effects of creating and releasing Covid-19). Unfortunately, there have always been stupid leaders. Being able to defend against bacteriological attack is important. To properly defend, you have to anticipate what you will be facing. This makes a defensive use lab equal to an offensive use lab. It becomes a question of intent. I think the government went too far in conflating public health with biological defense. There are similarities, but there are key differences, especially in priorities.
Virologists are a special breed. They can tend toward a kind of god-complex when they start manipulating viruses. Giving them managerial control over both defense research and public health was probably a big mistake. Giving that control to a (alleged) psychopath like Fauci was a fatal mistake.