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waves. So, there are plenty of ingenious minds out there that are at work
finding ways in which they can wreak terror upon other nations. It's
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real.”
Famines and droughts. This tool can be triggered by Haarp. If you
control the weather, you control the growth of crop and the water
supply. If you create hunger and thirst, you will have needy, vulnerable
and scared people.
Plagues and diseases. Another plague that turned out to be highly
convenient was the Spanish flu. More people died of the Spanish Flu
than of bullets during WWI. Between 1918 and 1920, 50 million people
died and one third of the world population was infected. There are very
interesting things about the Spanish flu. First of all, it didn't start in
Spain, but in the U.S. Secondly, it wasn't a flu virus, but a bacterium.
According to a 2008 National Institute of Health paper: “Bacterial
pneumonia was the killer in a minimum of 92.7% of the 1918-19
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Pandemic autopsies reviewed.” The first cases of bacterial pneumonia
in 1918 traced back to a military base in Fort Riley, Kansas. In 1918,
an experimental bacterial meningitis vaccine cultured in horses by the
Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in New York — now
Rockefeller University — was injected into soldiers at Fort Riley.
Millions of American soldiers were vaccinated with this
experimental serum. Two million of them went overseas. They fought
on the poor sanitary conditions, so the bacteria spread wherever they
went. The official story was that soldiers came back with all sorts of
European diseases. The American population was vaccinated and then
the vaccines were distributed all over Europe. Only the vaccinated died.
The Rockefeller Institute was in charge of the distribution and mass
vaccination program. Dr Frederick Gates was the main scientist in
charge. According to him, they injected random dosages of an
experimental bacterial meningitis vaccine into soldiers. Those who
63 William S. Cohen, Secretary of Defense. April 28, 1997. Department of Defense
New Briefing. Url. https://educate-yourself.org/cn/
64 Morens David M. et al. (2008). Predominant Role of Bacterial Pneumonia as a
Cause of Death in Pandemic Influenza: Implications for Pandemic Influenza
Preparedness. The Journal of Infectious Diseases, Vol. 198, n. 7; 962–70. JSTOR. Url.
http://www.jstor.org/stable/40254221/
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