beefree@... wrote:
Thought some very interesting thought provoking info from the FORUM_FOR_DISCLOSURES groupYesterday I heard Dr. Bill Deagle talking about the flu 'PROPAGANDA' that's being spewed all over the so-called media.
He also verified that this flu was compartmentally built by 78 MURDERED scientists and readied to be released.
Yes, the 'avian BIRD flu' is B.S. but there is a REAL DANGER from this rebuilt 1918 Spannish Flu!
He also confirmed that you should NEVER FOR ANY REASON TAKE THEIR DAMNED VACCINES!
His website is: http://www.nutrimedical.com
I also heard on another 'news' broadcast saying the UN bleating that we may have entered a time where people shouldn't live next to domestic animals. Can you see what's coming people?? NO DOGS! NO CHICKENS! NOTHING!
I HIGHLY recomend you hear his info by clicking the URL below:
http://arc1.m2ktalk.com/nov2005/power7m56/1103052.mp3 Advance the time bar to 34:00 to reach Deagle.
He CONFIRMED that the CDC with the help of Rothschild, a miner was exumed to resurrect the 1918 'Spannish Flu.'
Stories saying David Rockefeller and others helped with this have aired on Discovery and History channels.
A caller into the show said Bill Cooper in his book: "Behold a Pale Horse" 1991 on pg 167-169 SAID we'd see a virus release AT THIS TIME! The book also says THEY HAVE THE CURE but it won't be administered until so many have died. He specifically WROTE that the outbreak would happen in FIFTEEN YEARS! Words from the grave!
Many will remember that Bill Cooper was MURDERED by the so-called 'authorities.'
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http://www.nutrimedical.com/news.jhtml?method=view&news.id=343
US GOV'T DIS-INFORMATION SITE:
National Strategy for Pandemic Influenza
http://www.whitehouse.gov/homeland/pandemic-influenza.html#section2
(The following are merely EXCERPTS. There is a LOT MORE at the URL above here.)
The National Strategy for Pandemic Influenza
Preparing for a pandemic requires the leveraging of all instruments of national power, and coordinated action by all segments of government and society. Influenza viruses do not respect the distinctions of race, sex, age, profession or nationality, and are not constrained by geographic boundaries. The next pandemic is likely to come in waves, each lasting months, and pass through communities of all size across the nation and world. While a pandemic will not damage power lines, banks or computer networks, it will ultimately threaten all critical infrastructure by removing essential personnel from the workplace for weeks or months.
This makes a (Planned) pandemic a unique circumstance necessitating a strategy that extends well beyond health and medical boundaries, to include the sustainment of critical infrastructure, private-sector activities, the movement of goods and services across the nation and the globe, and economic and security considerations. The uncertainties associated with influenza viruses require that our Strategy be versatile, to ensure that we are prepared for any virus with pandemic potential, as well as the annual burden of influenza that we know we will face.
The Strategy will provide a framework for future U.S. Government planning efforts that is consistent with The National Security Strategy and the National Strategy for Homeland Security. It recognizes that preparing for and responding to a pandemic cannot be viewed as a purely federal responsibility, and that the nation must have a system of plans at all levels of government and in all sectors outside of government that can be integrated to address the pandemic threat. It is guided by the following principles:
The federal government will use all instruments of national power to address the pandemic threat.
States and communities should have credible pandemic preparedness plans to respond to an outbreak within their jurisdictions.
The private sector should play an integral role in preparedness before a pandemic begins, and should be part of the national response.
Individual citizens should be prepared for an influenza pandemic, and be educated about individual responsibility to limit the spread of infection if they or their family members become ill.
Global partnerships will be leveraged to address the pandemic threat.
Pillars of the National Strategy
Our Strategy addresses the full spectrum of events that link a farmyard overseas to a living room in America. While the circumstances that connect these environments are very different, our strategic principles remain relevant. The pillars of our Strategy are:
Preparedness and Communication: Activities that should be undertaken before a pandemic to ensure preparedness, and the communication of roles and responsibilities to all levels of government, segments of society and individuals.
Surveillance and Detection: Domestic and international systems that provide continuous "situational awareness," to ensure the earliest warning possible to protect the population.
Response and Containment: Actions to limit the spread of the outbreak and to mitigate the health, social and economic impacts of a pandemic.
Planning for a Pandemic
To enhance preparedness, we will:
Develop federal implementation plans to support this Strategy, to include all components of the U.S. government and to address the full range of consequences of a pandemic, including human and animal health, security, transportation, economic, trade and infrastructure considerations.
Work through multilateral health organizations such as the World Health Organization (WHO), Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), World Organization for Animal Health (KILL YOUR ANIMALS!) (OIE) and regional organizations such as the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum, as well as through bilateral and multilateral contacts to:
Support the development and exercising of avian and pandemic response plans;
Expand in-country medical, veterinary and scientific capacity to respond to an outbreak; and
Educate populations at home and abroad about high-risk practices that increase the likelihood of virus transmission between species.
Continue to work with states and localities to:
Establish and exercise pandemic response plans;
Develop medical and veterinary surge capacity plans; and
Integrate non-health sectors, including the private sector and critical infrastructure entities, in these planning efforts.
Build upon existing domestic mechanisms to rapidly recruit and deploy large numbers of health, medical and veterinary providers within or across jurisdictions to match medical requirements with capabilities.
Provide guidance and support to poultry, swine and related industries on their role in responding to an outbreak of avian influenza, including ensuring the protection of animal workers and initiating or strengthening public education campaigns to minimize the risks of infection from animal products.
Pillar Two: Surveillance and Detection
Early warning of a pandemic and our ability to closely track the spread of avian influenza outbreak is critical to being able to rapidly employ resources to contain the spread of the virus. An effective surveillance and detection system will save lives by allowing us to activate our response plans before the arrival of a pandemic virus to the U.S., activate additional surveillance systems and initiate vaccine production and administration. (DO NOT TAKE THEIR DAMNABLE VACCINES FOR ANY REASON!!)
Ensuring Rapid Reporting of Outbreaks
To support our need for "situational awareness," both domestically and internationally, we will:
Work through the International Partnership on Avian and Pandemic Influenza, as well as through other political and diplomatic channels such as the United Nations and the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum, to ensure transparency, scientific cooperation and rapid reporting of avian and human influenza cases.
Support the development of the proper scientific and epidemiologic expertise in affected regions to ensure early recognition of changes in the pattern of avian or human outbreaks.
Support the development and sustainment of sufficient U.S. and host nation laboratory capacity and diagnostic reagents in affected regions and domestically, to provide rapid confirmation of cases in animals or humans.
Advance mechanisms for "real-time" clinical surveillance in domestic acute care settings such as emergency departments, intensive care units and laboratories to provide local, state and federal public health officials with continuous awareness of the profile of illness in communities, and leverage all federal medical capabilities, both domestic and international, in support of this objective.
(MONITORING WHO BUYS DECONGESTANTS PERHAPS????)
Develop and deploy rapid diagnostics with greater sensitivity and reproducibility to allow onsite diagnosis of pandemic strains of influenza at home and abroad, in animals and humans, to facilitate early warning, outbreak control and targeting of antiviral therapy.
Expand our domestic livestock and wildlife surveillance activities to ensure early warning of the spread of an outbreak to our shores. (IN OTHER WORDS PREPARE TO KILL OFF THE FOOD SUPPLY!)
Using Surveillance to Limit Spread
Although influenza does not respect geographic or political borders, entry to and egress from affected areas represent opportunities to control or at the very least slow the spread of infection. In parallel to our containment measures, we will:
Develop mechanisms to rapidly share information on travelers (PROPAGANDA) who may be carrying or may have been exposed to a pandemic strain of influenza, for the purposes of contact tracing and outbreak investigation.
Develop and exercise mechanisms to provide active and passive surveillance during an outbreak, both within and beyond our borders.
Expand and enhance mechanisms for screening and monitoring animals that may harbor viruses with pandemic potential.
Develop screening and monitoring mechanisms and agreements to appropriately control travel and shipping of potentially infected products to and from affected regions if necessary, and to protect unaffected populations.
Pillar Three: Response and Containment
Containing Outbreaks
The most effective way to protect the American population is to contain an outbreak beyond the borders of the U.S. (Here's the EXCUSE to lockdown borders PREVENTING ESCAPE FROM MARTIAL LAW!!) While we work to prevent a pandemic from reaching our shores, we recognize that slowing or limiting the spread of the outbreak is a more realistic outcome and can save many lives. In support of our containment strategy, we will:
Work through the International Partnership to develop a coalition of strong partners to coordinate actions to limit the spread of a virus with pandemic potential beyond the location where it is first recognized in order to protect U.S. interests abroad.
Where appropriate, offer and coordinate assistance from the United States and other members of the International Partnership.
Encourage all levels of government, domestically and globally, to take appropriate and lawful action to contain an outbreak within the borders of their community, province, state or nation.
Where appropriate, use governmental authorities to limit non-essential movement of people, goods and services into and out of areas where an outbreak occurs.
Provide guidance to all levels of government on the range of options for infection-control and containment, including those circumstances where social distancing measures, limitations on gatherings, or quarantine authority may be an appropriate public health intervention.
Emphasize the roles and responsibilities of the individual in preventing the spread of an outbreak, and the risk to others if infection-control practices are not followed.
Provide guidance for states, localities and industry on best practices to prevent the spread of avian influenza in commercial, domestic and wild birds, and other animals.
Leveraging National Medical and Public Health Surge Capacity
Rather than generating a focal point of casualties, the medical burden of a pandemic is likely to be distributed in communities across the nation for an extended period of time. In order to save lives and limit suffering, we will:
Implement state and local public health and medical surge plans, and leverage all federal medical facilities, personnel and response capabilities to support the national surge requirement.
Activate plans to distribute medical countermeasures, including non-medical equipment and other material, from the Strategic National Stockpile and other distribution centers to federal, state and local authorities.
Address barriers to the flow of public health, medical and veterinary personnel across state and local jurisdictions to meet local shortfalls in public health, medical and veterinary capacity.
Determine the spectrum of public health, medical and veterinary surge capacity activities that the U.S. military and other government entities may be able to support during a pandemic, contingent upon primary mission requirements, and develop mechanisms to activate them.
Work with state and local governments to develop guidelines to assure the public of the safety of the food supply and mitigate the risk of exposure from wildlife. (KILL THEM!)
(PUBLIC BRAINWASHING)
Identifying key spokespersons for the community, ensuring that they are educated in risk communication, and have coordinated crisis communications plans.
Providing public education campaigns on pandemic influenza and public and private interventions.
Individuals and Families (Breaking them up!)
The critical role of individuals and families in controlling a pandemic cannot be overstated. Modeling of the transmission of influenza vividly illustrates the impact of one individual's behavior on the spread of disease, by showing that an infection carried by one person can be transmitted to tens or hundreds of others. For this reason, individual action is perhaps the most important element of pandemic preparedness and response.
Education (BRAINWASHING) on pandemic preparedness for the population should begin before a pandemic, (Happening NOW!) should be provided by all levels of government and the private sector, and should occur in the context of preventing the transmission of any infection, such as the annual influenza or the common cold. Responsibilities of the individual and families include:
Taking precautions to prevent the spread of infection to others if an individual or a family member has symptoms of influenza.
Being prepared to follow public health guidance that may include limitation of attendance at public gatherings and non-essential travel for several days or weeks.
Keeping supplies of materials at home, as recommended by authorities, to support essential needs of the household for several days if necessary. (TRY MONTHS!)
International Partners
We rely upon our international partnerships, with the United Nations, international organizations and private non-profit organizations, to amplify our efforts, and will engage them on a multilateral and bilateral basis. Our international effort to contain and mitigate the effects of an outbreak of pandemic influenza is a central component of our overall strategy. In many ways, the character and quality of the U.S. response and that of our international partners may play a determining role in the severity of a pandemic.
The International Partnership on Avian and Pandemic Influenza stands in support of multinational organizations. Members of the Partnership have agreed that the following 10 principles will guide their efforts:
International cooperation to protect the lives and health of our people;
Timely and sustained high-level global political leadership to combat avian and pandemic influenza;
Transparency in reporting of influenza cases in humans and in animals caused by virus strains that have pandemic potential, to increase understanding and preparedness and especially to ensure rapid and timely response to potential outbreaks;
Immediate sharing of epidemiological data and samples with the World Health Organization (WHO) and the international community to detect and characterize the nature and evolution of any outbreaks as quickly as possible, by utilizing, where appropriate, existing networks and mechanisms;
Rapid reaction to address the first signs of accelerated transmission of H5N1 and other highly pathogenic influenza strains so that appropriate international and national resources can be brought to bear;
Prevent and contain an incipient epidemic through capacity building and in-country collaboration with international partners;
Work in a manner complementary to and supportive of expanded cooperation with and appropriate support of key multilateral organizations (including the WHO, Food and Agriculture Organization and World Organization for Animal Health);
Timely coordination of bilateral and multilateral resource allocations; dedication of domestic resources (human and financial); improvements in public awareness; and development of economic and trade contingency plans;
Increased coordination and harmonization of preparedness, prevention, response and containment activities among nations, complementing domestic and regional preparedness initiatives, and encouraging where appropriate the development of strategic regional initiatives; and
Actions based on the best available science.
Through the Partnership and other bilateral and multilateral initiatives, we will promote these principles and support the development of an international capacity to prepare, detect and respond to an influenza pandemic
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(Here comes their justification for PLANNED Roadblocks and Checkpoints!)
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