Biological Alarm in Washington: Poison Found in Air During Anti-War Protest
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"One sensor, I'd say maybe," says biosecurity expert Stanhope of the dust theory. "Two sensors is a stretch. Six sensors? I'm sorry, you don't have enough money to buy enough martinis to make me believe that it is naturally occurring at six different sites. I don't think you could get me that drunk to believe that." -- Dr. Steven Hinrichs, director of the University of Nebraska Center for Biosecurity
Biological Alarm in Washington
by Mark Benjamin
Salon.com,
Tuesday 18 October 2005
Did terrorists attack Washington with a deadly pathogen?
http://www.truthout.org/issues_05/101805HA.shtml
Did Bush administration attack peace movement with military grade biological bacteria?
By Bob Fitrakis
FreePress.org,
October 4, 2005
What do we make of the Saturday, October 1 Washington Post headline “Poison Found in Air During Anti-War Protest”?
Washington D.C. Public Health Director Greg A. Pane posed the right question in the Post article, “Why that day? That’s what is not explained.” Pane pointed that it was “just this 24-hour period and none since.”
http://www.freepress.org/columns/display/3/2005/1221
Informant: John Calvert
"One sensor, I'd say maybe," says biosecurity expert Stanhope of the dust theory. "Two sensors is a stretch. Six sensors? I'm sorry, you don't have enough money to buy enough martinis to make me believe that it is naturally occurring at six different sites. I don't think you could get me that drunk to believe that." -- Dr. Steven Hinrichs, director of the University of Nebraska Center for Biosecurity
Biological Alarm in Washington
by Mark Benjamin
Salon.com,
Tuesday 18 October 2005
Did terrorists attack Washington with a deadly pathogen?
http://www.truthout.org/issues_05/101805HA.shtml
Did Bush administration attack peace movement with military grade biological bacteria?
By Bob Fitrakis
FreePress.org,
October 4, 2005
What do we make of the Saturday, October 1 Washington Post headline “Poison Found in Air During Anti-War Protest”?
Washington D.C. Public Health Director Greg A. Pane posed the right question in the Post article, “Why that day? That’s what is not explained.” Pane pointed that it was “just this 24-hour period and none since.”
http://www.freepress.org/columns/display/3/2005/1221
Informant: John Calvert
Starmail - 19. Okt, 15:04