- Sandpoint, ID - Spraying pesticides to combat mosquitos
suspected of carrying the West Nile Virus (WNV) has not been scientifically
proven to be either safe for humans or effective against the disease, according
to award-winning public health author and emerging diseases expert Dr.
Leonard G. Horowitz.
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- An outspoken health rights activist, Horowitz is concerned
that spraying with malathion, a suspected human chemical carcinogen and
known immune system blocker, or its alternate, Anvil 10:10, violates a
basic tenant of public health practice that requires prior knowledge of
the risks and proven benefits of the policy before it is implemented.
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- Horowitz urges political and public health officials
to cease and desist this lethal and imprudent practice immediately, or
possibly face class action litigations if not antigovernment reprisals.
He makes his case for public endangerment in light of substantial evidence
linking exposure to airborne chemical compounds with cancer and genetic
damage in various species throughout the food chain.
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- Based on government documents reprinted in the author's
530 page Death in the Air: Globalism, Terrorism and Toxic Warfare (Tetrahedron
Publishing Group, 2001; 1-888-508-4787), even the origin of WNV, and declarations
concerning its emergence along eastern coastal states, is questionable,
if not suspicious.
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- According to Horowitz, studies of related encephalitis
viruses were pioneered during the late 1930s in the West Nile district
of Northwest Uganda, home to the Rockefeller family funded International
Agency for Research in Cancer (IARC). A 1971 National Cancer Institute
(NCI) report by the Army's sixth leading biological weapons contracting
firm, Litton Bionetics, collaborating with the IARC and Rockefeller University,
cited the encephalitis agent among a group of bioengineered pathogens being
tested at that time. Most suspiciously, according to U.S. Senate reports,
Rockefeller University President, Dr. Joshua Lederberg, a bioterrorism
expert for the Council on Foreign Relations, directed the American Type
Culture Collection (ATCC) to ship a variety of lethal biologicals including
the WNV to Sadam Hussein's military laboratories for months preceding the
Gulf War.
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- Horowitz new book, Death in the Air, clearly documents
the money trail. He asserts that Dr. Lederberg, along with other bioweapons
testing advocates Col. Jerry Hauer, the Head of the Office of Emergency
Management (OEM) for New York City during the 1999 WNV "emergency,"
and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) advisor Col. Thomas
Monath, of OraVax Corporation, makers of the only WNV vaccine, met with
President Clinton and Janet Reno in the Truman Room at the White House
a year before the alleged WNV outbreak in New York. Arrangements were then
made to rescue the insolvent OraVax Corporation with a $343 million contract
from the CDC for a smallpox vaccine, a $1.8 million contract from the National
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases for a vaccine against dengue
fever, and additional sums to stockpile the WNV vaccine for future "emergencies."
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- "The evidence indicates the entire field of public
health, and the majority of humanitarians serving to advance it, has been
undermined by unscrupulous parties in what amounts to Machiavellian iatrogenocide."
That is, Dr. Horowitz explained, "false threats of biological urgencies
are being promoted by agents and agencies primarily for financial reward.
In this milieu, the arenas of public health and economic espionage merge,
and control over the entire process is lost by informed citizens, honest
policy makers, and legitimate investigators for whom I wrote Death in the
Air."
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- In an effort to save lives, Tetrahedron Publishing Group
has waved its copyright of relevant chapters of Death in the Air to citizens,
activist organizations, and the media for mounting opposition to pesticide
spraying campaigns promoted during political gatherings by misguided, or
misinformed, public health professionals. The book is available through
libraries, select bookstores, direct from the publisher over the Internet
at <http://www.tetrahedron.org/http://www.tetrahedron.org, or by calling
1-888-508-4787.
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