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Post by itchin4answers on Nov 6, 2014 18:59:52 GMT -5
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Post by itchin4answers on Nov 7, 2014 10:45:39 GMT -5
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Post by itchin4answers on Nov 7, 2014 10:48:43 GMT -5
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Post by itchin4answers on Nov 7, 2014 10:50:03 GMT -5
I like this, its great. Itchin, have you gone postal! Quite a huge sum of postings, so many it just overwhelms, oh well, carry on. its all possible, maybe. I went mad long ago. No actually insane!
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Post by itchin4answers on Nov 7, 2014 11:28:30 GMT -5
A common question -- WHY WOULD PILOTS POISON THEMSELVES and THEIR FAMILIES?: Pilots poisoned themselves in Vietnam when they sprayed agent orange for years, even after they knew it caused cancer and birth defects on innocent populations of farmers. Soldiers and loyal employees tend to follow orders. In the case of Chemtrails, the military orders their pilots to fly missions to release aerosols. The pilots may not know what is in the aerosols but they do their job. If the pilots are told the CT's will mitigate global warming, they may be happy to do their job. Many other examples reveal that people can poison themselves and their friends and family with too much alcohol, crack, cigarettes etc. Watching people poison themselves and loved-ones is nothing new.
If someone of conscience refuses to spray, the next pilot will step in to do the dirty deed. Over the past 3-4 generations the public has been conditioned to OBEY. .
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Post by itchin4answers on Nov 7, 2014 11:54:06 GMT -5
I like this, its great. Itchin, have you gone postal! Quite a huge sum of postings, so many it just overwhelms, oh well, carry on. its all possible, maybe. Snail mail is growing steadily less popular thanks to the internet, but people in the US still send lots of it every year — over 158 billion pieces of mail were handled by the US Postal Service in 2013 alone. As it turns out, the USPS has also been quietly spying on way more of the mail passing through its doors than previously acknowledged. A report from the agency's internal watchdog — the USPS Office of Inspector General (OIG) — found that USPS captured information from the outside of about 49,000 pieces of consumer mail in 2013 and turned much of it over to law enforcement organizations throughout the country, unbeknownst to the intended senders and recipients. This information reportedly did not include the contents of letters and packages, but rather was limited to the information appearing only on the exterior, such as names, addresses, and postmark dates. The report on the USPS information capturing program, called "mail covers," was initially published to little fanfare over the summer and subsequently reported on by Politico, but is getting more attention now with an article appearing today in The New York Times that includes additional details. www.theverge.com/2014/10/28/7084135/usps-mail-cover-surveillance-wider-than-thought-49000-pieces
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Post by itchin4answers on Nov 7, 2014 12:36:59 GMT -5
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Post by itchin4answers on Nov 7, 2014 13:00:07 GMT -5
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Post by itchin4answers on Nov 7, 2014 19:35:00 GMT -5
Cryptococcosis is a fungal infection caused by fungi that belong to the genus Cryptococcus. There are over 30 different species of Cryptococcus, but two species – Cryptococcus neoformans and Cryptococcus gattii – cause nearly all cryptococcal infections in humans and animals. Most people who develop cryptococcosis have weakened immune systems, although healthy people can also become infected, particularly with C. gattii. www.cdc.gov/fungal/diseases/cryptococcosis-gattii/
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Post by itchin4answers on Nov 8, 2014 0:01:16 GMT -5
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Post by itchin4answers on Nov 8, 2014 1:02:58 GMT -5
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Post by itchin4answers on Nov 9, 2014 12:13:38 GMT -5
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