NCJ Number
194349
Date Published
2001
Length
546 pages
Annotation
This book describes the manners in which population control programs are being conducted, and non-lethal warfare is being waged on unwitting groups of people.
Abstract
Public health, as a branch of medical science, most actively promotes and veils the waging of class warfare and global genocide. Malathion, one of the most commonly used organophosphate insecticides, was used in schools, restaurants, warehouses, and manufacturing plants prior to the 1990's when it was proven to cause numerous irreversible health problems in humans and other living things. Aerial sprayings of neurotoxic pesticides have become commonly accepted practices despite their risks being adequately considered. Pesticides are widely used in American agriculture though they are recognized as dangerous to humans. Malathion’s chronic toxicity problems can be divided into the following primary areas: carcinogenicity, mutagenicity, birth and other reproductive effects, and immune system effects. The ploys of public health officials to defend the use of pesticides involve the misrepresentation of adequacy in scientific data, making false and misleading claims, and bureaucratic “buck-passing.” The main thesis is that contemporary spraying and vaccination programs are public health programs aimed at minority, native, and economically disadvantaged populations for the purpose of deliberately and systematically bringing about their destruction for economic and ideological reasons. The “emergency” West Nile Virus outbreaks in the Northeast, and subsequent pesticide spraying programs was a direct attack on people’s neuroendocrine and immune systems to facilitate infectious diseases, increased cancer rates, and sterility. Despite a huge public outcry against toxic exposures, public health officials have been mostly unwitting facilitators and accomplices to a form of non-lethal warfare. Advice for citizens is to ask questions of leadership, and live a healthy lifestyle to counter these influences. Index