Sunday, August 26, 2007

U.N. Plague Warning

In yo' FACE!!!! Telling you they are going to do this:

"WHO warns diseases spread with increased world travel" by Elizabeth Rosenthal, International Herald Tribune August 24, 2007

ROME -- New infectious diseases are emerging at an "unprecedented rate," and far greater human mobility -- by planes, trains, and ships -- means that infectious diseases have the potential to spread across the globe rapidly, a World Health Organization report warned yesterday.

[Translation: We are going to release mass plagues to thin you hungry mouths out]


Because of this risk, greater international cooperation among governments and scientists is essential for protecting the planet, said Margaret Chan, director general of the health organization.

[I've SEEN and HEARD this GLOBALIST MOVIE before!!!]

Chan, in a statement that accompanied the World Health Report 2007, issued in Geneva;

"Given today's universal vulnerability to these threats, better security calls for global solidarity. The new watchwords are diplomacy, cooperation, transparency and preparedness."

[Yes, the call to GLOBAL GOVERNMENT under yet another pretext!]


Much of the report focuses on how health officials should respond to an increasingly globalized world. Airlines carry more than 2 billion passengers a year, providing a new conduit for the spread of disease over long distances, the report highlights. In 2003, the outbreak of SARS, or Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, was spread from China to Hong Kong and then on to Singapore and Canada via airline passengers.

Additionally, many migrants travel around the world for work. A polio epidemic that started in Nigeria most likely moved to countries like Yemen on ships carrying migrant workers, WHO officials have said.

[But AMERICA'S BORDERS can be wide open, and you are only a fear-mongering racist if you say so.

See how they GOTCHYA, reader, either way?

Propaganda system is something, isn't it?]


In her introduction to the report, Chan points out that in 1951, when the WHO issued its first binding regulations on preventing the spread of infectious disease across borders, "people traveled by ship," new diseases were rare, and concern focused on a small number of diseases whose spread could be limited by periods of quarantine: cholera, plague, relapsing fever, smallpox, typhus, and yellow fever. Almost all of these are now rare and preventable through vaccines.

For much of the year, the WHO was haggling with China and Indonesia over their unwillingness to share samples of the avian influenza, or bird flu, virus.... such samples help international scientists at the WHO track the spread and genetic evolution of the virus, helping them to predict the likelihood of a possible global pandemic.

[I've always wondered about this bullshit mutation crap.

First AIDS from a monkey bite, now bird flu from sifting through chicken feces with open wounds?

Never seems to shut down commerce, be it chicken, beef, fish, etc, so....

WTF?
]


But they can also be used for vaccine development, and some countries have expressed fears that the profits and credit for any development would be lost if the samples were sent to Geneva.

[A-HA! Moolah too be made!]


Although 308 people have succumbed to bird flu worldwide, scientists are worried that the virus could mutate to make it more infectious for humans.

[Seriously, readers, something is a STINKIN' BIG TIME!!!!]


Likewise, in June, an American traveling in Europe with what was thought to be a highly dangerous strain of tuberculosis was not reported to authorities at the WHO, which might have restricted his movements. The organization was notified of his presence, known to US health officials, only after he was on a plane headed home.

Because of this he was able to fly from Italy to Prague and then to Canada, potentially infecting others. Upon his return to the United States, doctors found that his tuberculosis was not of the extremely dangerous variety."

[Yup, that whole scare and release of some other bug.

Why do you think they keep these germs, anyway?

Any coincidence they brought the Spanish Flu of 1917-18 back to life to study BIRD FLU?

HELLOOOOO?
Hello?

Yeah, I know, I'm nuts.... NOT (Sorry, hey, I don't even like being right anymore)]