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Science/Tech See other Science/Tech Articles Title: Fort Detrick: From Biowarfare To Biodefense Fort Detrick: From Biowarfare To Biodefense August 1, 2008 3:58 PM ET Tom Bowman A metal fence surrounds the Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases in Frederick, Md. Earlier this week, a former scientist for the institute, Bruce Ivins, died in an apparent suicide. Ivins helped investigate the deadly anthrax attacks in 2001. Mark Wilson/Getty Images What Is The USAMRIID The U.S. Army Medical Research Institute for Infectious Diseases was established by the Office of the Surgeon General of the Army on Jan. 27, 1969, to develop medical defenses against biological warfare threats. It is located at Fort Detrick, Md. The institute's scientists develop vaccines, drugs, diagnostics and information to protect U.S. service members from biological warfare threats and endemic diseases. It is the only laboratory within the Defense Department to study highly hazardous viruses requiring maximum containment. The institute has helped to contain deadly diseases, such as Lassa fever, SARS and human monkeypox, since the 1970s. Source: U.S. Army Medical Research Institute for Infectious Diseases Q&A: Behind The Anthrax Investigations Who was Bruce Ivins, and why was he a target in the FBI's investigation of the 2001 anthrax attacks? Here, a look at the questions surrounding the case. Timeline: Anthrax Attacks Read a chronology of who was infected in the anthrax attacks and the FBI's pursuit of the culprit. Fort Detrick, Md., was created in the middle of World War II and became the center for America's biological warfare efforts. But that role shifted in 1969, the government says, to focus solely on defense against the threat of biological weapons. Then called Detrick Air Field, the science and research facility housed four biological agent production plants. Anthrax was considered the most important agent. Simulants were tested, and one bomb was readied for production in 1944. One million bombs were ordered, though the order was canceled when the war ended in 1945. During the 1950s, the biological weapons program was among the most classified within the Pentagon. There was an emphasis on biological agents for use against enemy forces as well as plants and animals. The Army says no biological weapons were used during the Korean War, though such allegations were made by the Chinese and the Koreans. Growing Protests One plan at Fort Detrick in the late 1950s was to use the yellow fever virus against an enemy by releasing infected mosquitoes by airplane or helicopter. Detrick's labs were capable of producing a half-million mosquitoes per month, with plans for up to 130 million per month. The military also tested bombs in Utah with brucella suis, a bacterium that can lead to fever and influenzalike sickness. And scientists at Fort Detrick also worked on a number of possible pathogens that could destroy crops or trees. By the 1960s, the U.S. biological warfare program had begun to decline, with funding gradually decreasing. There were growing protests in the United States over the use of defoliants in Vietnam and anger about a sheep-kill incident in Utah. That incident occurred in 1968, when 3,000 sheep were found dead in the Skull Valley area, adjacent to the Army's Dugway Proving Ground. Although the findings were not conclusive, it was believed that nerve agents had somehow drifted out of Dugway during a test of aerial spraying. In 1969, the Army announced that 23 U.S. soldiers and one U.S. civilian had been exposed to a sarin nerve agent on the Japanese island of Okinawa, while cleaning sarin-filled bombs. The incident created international concerns and revealed that the Army had secretly positioned chemical munitions in Southeast Asia. That same year, President Nixon took action against biological and chemical weapons. He reaffirmed a no-first-use policy for chemical weapons, renounced the use of biological weapons and limited research to defensive measures only. Leading Researcher The Army fort that had its beginnings during World War II is now a sprawling campus of brick government buildings outside Frederick, Md., located an hour's drive north of Washington, D.C. Government scientist Bruce E. Ivins worked at the heart of Fort Detrick, inside the main building of the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute for Infectious Diseases. It was there that he was one of the leading researchers on anthrax vaccines. The building houses a number of highly secure labs where anthrax spores would be used. Ivins, who died on July 29, helped investigate the deadly anthrax attacks in 2001. He apparently had been notified that he was to be prosecuted for the five deaths connected to the anthrax attacks. Poster Comment: It tis interesting to note there are still biological operations going on at Ft. Detrick. Much depends on how much influence and money is injected into their operations using the CIA black budget. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 12.
#10. To: BTP Holdings (#0)
(Edited)
"...The Biological Warfare Unit of the U.S. Army, Fort Detrick, MD in 1971 took down the sign at their front gate and put up two signs. On one side of the front gate was placed NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE. On the other side of the gate was placed WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION. Not one of the mad, diabolical Mad Scientists lost one hour of research time in their rush to develop AIDS and other biological warfare agents..." - Dr. William Kelley [dentist who cured himself of pancreatic cancer in the early 1960's with a holistic regime including pancreatic enzymes, and went on to help 33,000 other cancer patients cure their various cancers.] =============== I ran across that and was going to post it as "Food for Thought" but then I saw your post and decided to put it here.
Dr. Kelly seems as though he found the same key as Dr. Otto Warburg in regards to cancer. ;)
It seems Kelley took a different approach. It was a little complicated and time-consuming but he had good results with it. His work was continued by Dr. Nicholas Gonzalez until Nick's life was cut short suddenly one night in his home. Not really sure what he died of. It happened not too long after he wrote a letter criticizing vaccinations as a cause for cancer and other things. He was one of those 90 or so holistic doctors that died around the same time, many of dubious causes. Kelley felt the problem was that our toxic lifestyle taxed the pancreatic enzymes so much that they were unable to keep up with digesting cancer cells as they came up. He said once that if people didn't eat meat after a certain hour [I think it was 2:00 pm but don't quote me] there would be a lot less cancer. Kelley's protocol in a nutshell: "HELL will freeze over and be 6 feet under ice before the true CURE FOR CANCER will be released. You must do-it-yourself. Even if your oncologist knew what to do he could not treat your cancer. You have to Do-It-Your-Self: You have to take your enzymes; You have to take your supplements; You have to take your coffee enemas; You have to do your liver-flushes; You have to make changes in your diet." https://www.drkelleyenzymes.com/cancer-cure-booklet/
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