Saturday, December 3, 2022

the 1918 pandemic and the Rockefeller Institute

Dr. Fred Lamont Gates of Rockefeller Institute and of US Army Medical School began his experiments in January 1918 at Fort Riley, Kansas. When the United States declared war in April 1917, the fledgling Pharmaceutical industry had something they had never had before – a large supply of human test subjects in the form of the US military’s first draft….An article from 2008 on the CDC’s website describes how sick WWI soldiers could pass along the bacteria to others by becoming “cloud adults.” “Finally, for brief periods and to varying degrees, affected hosts became “cloud adults” who increased the aerosolization of colonizing strains of bacteria, particularly pneumococci, hemolytic streptococci, H. influenzae, and S. aureus. “For several days during local epidemics—particularly in crowded settings such as hospital wards, military camps, troop ships, and mines (and trenches)—some persons were immunologically susceptible to, infected with, or recovering from infections with influenza virus. “Persons with active infections were aerosolizing the bacteria that colonized their noses and throats, while others—often, in the same “breathing spaces”—were profoundly susceptible to invasion of and rapid spread through their lungs by their own or others’ colonizing bacteria.” (1) Three times in his report on the Fort Riley vaccine experiment, Dr. Gates states that some soldiers had a “severe reaction” indicating “an unusual individual susceptibility to the vaccine”. While the vaccine made many sick, it only killed those who were susceptible to it.  Those who became sick and survived became “cloud adults” who spread the bacteria to others, which created more cloud adults, spreading to others where it killed the susceptible, repeating the cycle until there were no longer wartime unsanitary conditions, and there were no longer millions of soldiers to experiment on. …From the Base Hospital, Fort Riley, Kansas, and The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, New York. Received July 20, 1918. Between January 21st and June 4th of 1918, Dr. Gates reports on an experiment where soldiers were given 3 doses of a bacterial meningitis vaccine….By March of that year, “100 men a day” were entering the infirmary at Fort Riley…. Is the bacterial serum made in horses at the Rockefeller Institute which was injected into US soldiers and distributed to numerous other countries responsible for the 50-100 million people killed by bacterial lung infections in 1918-19?…The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research took advantage of this new pool of human guinea pigs to conduct vaccine experiments…. The vaccine industry is always looking for human test subjects.  They have the most success when they are able to find populations who not in a position to refuse. Soldiers (9), infants, the disabled, prisoners, those in developing nations – anyone not in a position to refuse. Vaccine experimentation on vulnerable populations is not an issue of the past.  Watch this video clip of Dr. Stanley Plotkin where he describes using experimental vaccines on orphans, the mentally retarded, prisoners, and those under colonial rule…. Please watch the horrifying video clip of Dr. Stanley Plotkin testifying under oath about the experiments that the pharmaceutical industry has done on unaware, uninformed patients.  https://youtu.be/yevV_slu7Dw (10) …In 1918-19, there was no liability to the manufacturer for injuries or death caused by vaccines. https://news.fiar.me/2020/11/did-rockefeller-created-the-spanish-flu-pandemic-of-1918/ Related • Did Rockefeller create the ‘Spanish Flu’ pandemic of 1918? (II) • The Dark History Of The Rockefellers And Their Impact On Humanity ………….. On the declaration of war in 1917, Dr. Fred Lamont Gates (b. 1886) volunteered for the U.S. Army Medical Corps, was accepted and commissioned a first lieutenant. He was assigned to duty on the Rockefeller Institute staff where he gave lectures to military groups selected to attend training there. He was also assigned to visit training camps, in the interest of preventive medicine and traveled widely. He continued at the institute after the war and his researches, especially those on influenza, received worldwide recognition. His health failed in 1927 and he was required to undertake a less demanding schedule. He continued his research at Harvard and moved his family to Cambridge, MA where he died, June 17, 1933, at age forty-six, after suffering a concussion from a fall. https://sites.google.com/housatonicits.com/home0002/research/frederick-lamont-gates-b1886?pli=1 ……

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