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CHEMTRAILS%20-%20CONFIRMED%20-%202010%20by%20William%20Thomas

CHEMTRAILS%20-%20CONFIRMED%20-%202010%20by%20William%20Thomas

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Instead, he discovered that “fibers from different people looked remarkably similar to each other and yet<br />

seem to match no common environmental fibers.”<br />

When they took the fiber samples to a police forensic team, they said they were not from clothing,<br />

carpets or bedding. They have no idea what they are. [New Scientist: Sept. 15/07]<br />

So Dr. Wymore asked Ohio State University doctors to consult. They were dubious. But they agreed to<br />

see his Morgellons patients. The OSU researchers also took samples of the fibers found under the skin<br />

and examined them under a high-power microscope. What they found were black, red, and blue fibers<br />

lurking under the skin. After seeing some 25 patients, the doctors at OSU are now convinced that<br />

Morgellons is real. [KSBI TV June 23/06]<br />

“Hot zones” for Morgellons disease include California, Texas and Florida.<br />

ABC News picked up the story:<br />

Brandi Koch of Clearwater Beach, Florida., says she feels as if she's living in a horror movie.<br />

She claims she has colored fibers coming out of her skin. "The fibers look like hair, and they're<br />

different colors," Koch says.<br />

Anne Dill describes a similar condition. "There's this fibrous material. It's in layers." Dill says the<br />

skin on their hands is particularly bad, very swollen and itchy. She says it feels as if bugs are<br />

crawling underneath the skin.<br />

Forensic scientist Ron Pogue at the Tulsa Police Crime Lab in Oklahoma checked a Morgellons<br />

sample against known fibers in the FBI's national database. "No, no match at all. So this is some<br />

strange stuff," Pogue says. [ABC News Aug 9/06]<br />

Dr. Daniel Elkan describes a patient who “for years” has “been finding tiny blue, red and black fibers<br />

growing in intensely itchy lesions on his skin.”<br />

His patient says: “The fibers are like pliable plastic and can be several millimeters long. Under the skin,<br />

some are folded in a zigzag pattern. These can be as fine as spider silk, yet strong enough to distend<br />

the skin when you pull them, as if you were pulling on a hair.”<br />

Doctors insist that this type of disease could only be caused by a parasite. But anti-parasitic medications<br />

offer no relief from the terrible itching and alien fibers. [New Scientist: Sept. 15/07]<br />

Since a story about Morgellons first aired on KENS 5 Eyewitness News in 2006, the station has been<br />

inundated with e-mails and phone calls from the medical community and others how claim to have the<br />

symptoms described in the story. The story has received tens of thousands of page views on<br />

MySanAntonio.com [KENS 5 Eyewitness News May 23/06]<br />

Doctors have no answers. Infectious disease specialist Dr. Neelam Uppal re[orts that so far, testing the<br />

filaments has brought no results. According to Dr. Uppal, "I've seen [it]; sent it to the lab. They can't<br />

identify it. They'll say 'They're nothing.'" [ktvu.com May 24/06]<br />

CDC LOOKS INTO MORGELLONS SYNDROME<br />

After more than a year of pressure from patients, and letters from at least 40 US Senators, in the<br />

summer of 2007 the CDC finally agreed to treat Morgellons as more than a psychological disorder. [KTN<br />

TV July 26/07]<br />

How can fibers examined under microscopes be “delusional”?

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