a long time ago, i posted this
bush -- the manchurian lyme-i-date
Regarding
www.capitolhillblue.com/cont/node/3111> White House hid Bush's Lyme Disease
> August 9, 2007 - 6:31am.
> Withheld information for nearly a year
Isn't now a good time to contact Michael Moore and let him know what's happening
in Morgellons and Lyme-land?? There's a huge confluence of things going on right
now that will interest him including
(1) CDC award to Kaiser to Study Morgellons, despite Kaiser being "lyme
denialists" and Morgellons being directly linked to Lyme disease
(2) CDC/IDSA lyme guidelines being sued under antitrust/racketeering laws by a
US Attorney General -- guidelines that either don't diagnose
sick people, or leave sick people still sick
(3) Bush annoucement that he has Lyme and has been treated for it.
Was Bush treated under IDSA guidelines that are showing themselves to
involve scientific bias based on profits and corruption... therefore, was Bush
actually successfully treated for lyme? Might he be suffering from
"chronic lyme" which results from incomplete treatment under the
guidelines of the medical mainstream and the CDC/IDSA??
Is the president therefore suffering from a disease that comprises his judgement
as president? Doesn't that sound like the kind of thing Michael Moore could sink
his teeth into?? :-)
So we have a president lieing in the whitehouse "talking to god", infected with a
disease that is well-linked to psychotic behavior, as well as
mania/depression/ADHD/alzheimers. Similarly, we see what happens when other
people are afflicted with the lyme-like variant -- STARI --
which ostensibly "got" president Bush. It seems that the psychotic belief that
you can "talk to god" or "claim to be god" is a common symptom of this disease:
lymebusters.proboards39.com/index.cgi?board=rash&action=display&thread=1163012984#1168247964www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct/gui/show/NCT00358761?order=6 )
health.benabraham.com/html/lyme_disease_look-alike.html> the disease made the news recently when Florida State University officials
said FSU quarterback Wyatt Sexton had been diagnosed with Lyme. That news
followed Sexton's hospitalization under the Baker Act after he was found lying
in the road, claiming to be God.
>
> Such neurological symptoms as part of Lyme disease are unusual.
>
> "Delusional activity is not something I've seen described," Edwards said, but
cautioned that he doesn't know details of Sexton's case.
>
> Lyme can cause cognitive disorders, the CDC says. Two years ago, novelist Amy
Tan reported repeatedly hallucinating that a naked man was approaching her bed,
as well as memory loss and other cognitive problems before she was diagnosed
with Lyme.
>
> Meanwhile, scientists at the federal Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention last year started a new study of STARI. They're asking doctors across
the Southeast to do skin biopsies of patients with tick bites and rashes that
appear to be STARI and send them specimens.
>
> In 2001, doctors found the lonestari bacterium in a skin biopsy of a patient
with a STARI rash. The patient, who was treated with antibiotics, had been
exposed to ticks in North Carolina and Maryland.
In the same thread, I've posted quit a bit about STARI, because I believe that
is a lot closer to our morgellons culprit than the old-school east-cost Lyme
from deer-ticks, which most of us don't have.
STARI, which is a lyme-like disease passed by amblyomma ticks
(as found in texas and florida) for which people will NEVER be able to "get a
positive Lyme test" because the disease is caused by borrelia lonestari (named
because of it's prevalence in texas -- the lone-star state). The more agressive
amlbyomma is the main tick vector used for biowweapons research. Unlike other
"lazy" ticks, Lone-star ticks are active and "hunt down" their blood meals ...
whereas regular lyme ticks just sit there and wait for an animal/human to brush
by them, but don't go out looking for blood like the amblyomma ticks do.... (the
amblyomma's are thus good for
bioterrorism... just open a jar of them at any high-level meeting of world
leaders, and you've got guaranteeable psychotic outcome or debilitation
of "the deciders").
I've also been thinking (conspiracy hat on, or maybe i could write a better
novel than McSweegan) about "manchurian lyme-i-date" scenario.
What if a novel borrelial variant was created as bioweapon that could be
activated by external fields that can penetrate the human body electromagnetic
radiation, far-infrared, etc. (
www.theforbiddenknowledge.com/hardtruth/haarp_demonic_powers.htm ). What if these borrelia could be activated by such
fields to either exit their spore-stage dormancy
and become active spirochetes. What if further external activation,
could cause the activated spirochetes to rapidly release endotoxins that have
been considered to be the source of "borrelial brain dysfunction."
(another place where EMF induced dysfunction happens is autism -- see Dr. Klinghardt's mention of using a farraday-cage:
www.lymeinducedautism.com/images/KlinghardtLIA_II.pdf )
Under currrent guidelines, even if an official or
soldier was infected, he'd still have an ongoing low-level infection even
after the bogus "1 month" antibiotic treatment advocated by the CDC.
The disease could stay latent, and would be ignorable and not treated for years.
However, it can recur at any time...
What if you can control it's recurrence??
Like in the movie "The Manchurian Canditate" we have something
that sounds DAMN dangerous, and a little too close to reality
for my personal comfort.
The nano/chemtrails/tinfoilhat freaks can add their own tidbit to
this conspiracy... Since they already have stated preposterous claims that
Morgellons fibers are actually "electronic circuitry" for "receiving and sending
information"... well perhaps Morgs is antenna that picks up the
radiation used to "activate" the lyme-based mindscrambling bioweapon. You can
call that version of the conspiracy "Manchurian Morgi-date" :-)
PS: I've long stated that Bush has lyme/morgellons:
lymebusters.proboards39.com/index.cgi?board=politics&action=display&thread=1176803215#1177026138> Re: Well here is some food for thought. H
> « Reply #11 on Apr 19, 2007, 3:42pm »