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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Okenica says she became frightened after gazing through Nikon binoculars and noticing an all-white jet<br />
with "plumes" coming from the rear of the plane. In early December, local newspaper reported that<br />
Bethesda Memorial and Delray Community hospitals were full and could not accommodate any more<br />
patients.<br />
In New York City, doctors were calling a flood of respiratory cases an epidemic. "We have people<br />
double- and triple-parked in the ER on stretchers," Dr. Elliot Friedman, associate director of emergency<br />
medicine at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center in Queens, told the New York Times on January 31. "And<br />
there have been times when upwards of 40 people have been admitted but are waiting for someone to<br />
be discharged," Friedman added.<br />
"This high fever is not typical of other flu’s," Dr. Sigurd Ackerman, the president of St. Luke's-Roosevelt<br />
Hospital Center told the New York Times shortly after a TV cameraman panned up to frame lingering<br />
"X"-shaped contrails over Times-Square.<br />
On February 9, one month after I was assigned by the Environment News Service to cover the strange<br />
sky patterning, seven Kentucky counties closed all the schools because of sick children. All with flu-type<br />
symptoms.<br />
In Youngstown, Ohio, a doctor told a patient “the hospitals were filled with patients having severe<br />
problems.”<br />
By the week ending February 13, 1999, the CDC reported: “Deaths from influenza and pneumonia in a<br />
sampling of 122 cities were at epidemic levels for the third consecutive week.”<br />
The CDC’s definition of influenza includes “influenza-like illness and/or culture-confirmed influenza.” But<br />
lab tests for influenza kept coming up negative. Robert Page, director of the Chemung County Health<br />
Department in Elmira, New York, told reporters “We know there’s a lot of sickness, but our diagnosis<br />
shows that it’s not the flu.”<br />
MDs across America told the New York Times and other newspapers:<br />
-- “This is the worst crisis I have seen.”<br />
-- “We have people double- and triple-parked in the ER on stretchers.”<br />
-- “Respiratory and gastrointestinal illnesses are filling up the beds.”<br />
-- “It was surprising to me how sick they got and how quickly it happened.”<br />
-- “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 />
WHAT REGISTERED NURSES SAID<br />
After serving two hitches in the Navy, a Registered Nurse for nearly 20 years claimed that Americans<br />
“were being used as Guinea pigs for man-made pathogens, quite probably viral, which were designed to<br />
produce different symptoms by casting off a series of shells or layers.” Crop-dusters, she noticed, “were<br />
spraying at the wrong time of year and over populated areas instead of over the fields.”<br />
Another RN was worried when “Omaha announced there was very few cases of flu this winter, and then<br />
just a few weeks ago we had an outbreak of flu-like symptoms in the hospitals and where I work.”