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

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

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

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-- “The increase in respiratory infections may not be due to the flu.”<br />

-- “We know there’s a lot of sickness, but our diagnosis shows that it’s not the flu.”<br />

-- “We’ve seen a lot of cases that you can’t typically classify as flu.”<br />

These events followed 12 straight weeks of what the Centers for Disease Control called, “an epidemic of<br />

mortality.”<br />

Unlike flu, which takes time to spread through a population, these illnesses were appearing virtually<br />

overnight in neighborhoods and cities, swamping hospital wards. And what the media never remarked<br />

on was that incidences of heavy spraying, the characteristic X’s in the sky, the gel falling onto parked<br />

cars and windshields and buildings took place always at the same time. And within 24 to 48 hours, we<br />

saw these outbreaks of illness.<br />

Very little of it was influenza. The outbreak of associated pneumonia and cardiac arrest killed even<br />

healthy people in four to five days. Since when is cardiac arrest a symptom of the flu?<br />

Most stricken patients tested negative for the flu. When the WHO conducted medical tests of more than<br />

18,000 patients, they found that just 13 in 100 - the national average – tested positive for influenza.<br />

What about the rest?<br />

One doctor spoke for many when he told the New York Times, “I don’t know what’s causing this.”<br />

“What’s going down?” reporters asked the CDC.<br />

The outbreak experts answered, “This could be due to some other pathogen?”<br />

What pathogen?<br />

They didn’t know.<br />

Or they weren’t saying.<br />

My next appearance with Art Bell was on January 25. Relating these wave of undiagnosed illnesses, I<br />

said that when I looked at reported heavy spray days by city, I found an exact correlation with reported<br />

spikes in emergency room admissions. And they were continuing.<br />

SICK IN SALLISAW<br />

In Sallisaw, Oklahoma, restaurant owner Pat Edgar watched “cobwebbing stuff coming down” from the<br />

zigzagging jets flying “all day long, line after line, back-and-forth, like furrows in a farm field.”<br />

An exasperated Edgar told me, “I wish more people would pay attention. There must’ve been 30<br />

contrails in the sky on a sunny day last October.”<br />

Before Edgar sold his restaurant, customers came in complaining of airplanes “flyin’ around all night”<br />

over this remote area of Oklahoma. In the morning, they could see “stuff comin’ out of their wings.”<br />

Edgar knows four-dozen witnesses who have “come down violently ill, coughin’ up blood for two weeks,<br />

or real bad nosebleeds.”<br />

Pat Edgar was convinced: “They have a mission. They go back and forth all day. Hey man, I’m talkin’<br />

hundreds of contrails in a day! It’s unbelievable.”

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