Bioterror In The Usa 1984 2020

Discussion in 'Viruses' started by Faye Fox, Nov 19, 2021.

  1. Faye Fox

    Faye Fox Veteran Member
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    I am amazed that very few understand what REALLY happened to the USA and the world in the late Fall of 2019. It is also amazing that very few know about the first bioterror attack in the USA. When history is silenced or downplayed, then learning from it doesn't happen.

    I was among the 751 people that were victims of a well-planned bioterror attack in The Dalles, Oregon 1984.
    I was violently ill for several days and weak for two weeks. This post is from first-hand knowledge.

    Please read and study what happened in The Dalles in 1984. Very important to help fully understand what has and is happening in the USA.

    The following is from Wikipedia and it agrees with my first-hand knowledge.

    Several thousand of Rajneesh's followers had moved onto the "Big Muddy Ranch" in rural Wasco County in 1981, where they later incorporated as a city called Rajneeshpuram. They had taken political control of the small nearby town of Antelope, Oregon (population 75), the name of which they changed to "Rajneesh". The group had started on friendly terms with the local population, but relations soon degraded because of land use conflicts and the commune's dramatic expansion.

    After being denied building permits for Rajneeshpuram, the commune leadership sought to gain political control over the rest of the county by influencing the November 1984 county election. Their goal was to win two of three seats on the Wasco county commission, as well as the sheriff's office. Their attempts to influence the election included the "Share-a-Home" program, in which they transported thousands of homeless people to Rajneeshpuram and attempted to register them to vote to inflate the constituency of voters for the group's candidates. The Wasco county clerk countered this attempt by enforcing a regulation that required all new voters to submit their qualifications when registering to vote.

    The commune leadership planned to sicken and incapacitate voters in The Dalles, where most of the voters resided, to sway the election. Approximately twelve people were involved in the plots to employ biological agents, and at least eleven were involved in planning them. No more than four appear to have been involved in development at the Rajneeshpuram medical laboratory; not all of those were necessarily aware of the objectives of their work. At least eight individuals helped spread the bacteria.

    The main planners of the attack included Sheela Silverman (Ma Anand Sheela), Rajneesh's chief lieutenant, and Diane Yvonne Onang (Ma Anand Puja), a nurse practitioner and secretary-treasurer of the Rajneesh Medical Corporation. They purchased Salmonella bacteria from a medical supply company in Seattle, Washington, and staff cultured it in labs within the commune. They contaminated the produce at the salad bars as a "trial run" The group also tried to introduce pathogens into The Dalles' water system. If successful, they planned to use the same techniques closer to Election Day. They did not carry out the second part of the plan. The commune decided to boycott the election when it became clear that those brought in through the "Share-a-Home" program would not be allowed to vote.

    Perpetrators spread Salmonella contaminants on surfaces in the Wasco County Courthouse.

    Two visiting Wasco County commissioners were infected via glasses of water containing Salmonella bacteria during a visit to Rajneeshpuram on August 29, 1984. Both men fell ill and one was hospitalized. Afterward, members of Sheela's team spread Salmonella on produce in grocery stores and on doorknobs and urinal handles in the county courthouse, but these actions did not produce the desired effects. In September and October 1984, they contaminated the salad bars of 10 local restaurants with Salmonella, infecting 751 people. Forty-five people received hospital treatment; all survived.

    The primary delivery tactic involved one member concealing a plastic bag containing a light-brown liquid with the Salmonella bacteria and either spreading it over the food at a salad bar or pouring it into salad dressing. By September 24, 1984, more than 150 people were violently ill. By the end of September, 751 cases of acute gastroenteritis were documented; lab testing determined that all of the victims were infected with Salmonella enterica Typhimurium. Symptoms included diarrhea, fever, chills, nausea, vomiting, headaches, abdominal pain, and bloody stools. Victims ranged in age from an infant, born two days after his mother's infection and initially given a five percent chance of survival to an 87-year-old.

    Local residents suspected that Rajneesh's followers were behind the poisonings. They turned out in droves on election day to prevent the cult from winning any county positions, thus rendering the plot unsuccessful. The Rajneeshees eventually withdrew their candidate from the November 1984 ballot. Only 239 of the commune's 7,000 residents voted; most were not U.S. citizens and could not vote. The outbreak cost local restaurants hundreds of thousands of dollars and health officials shut down the salad bars of the affected establishments. Some residents feared further attacks and stayed at home. One resident said: "People were so horrified and scared. People wouldn't go out, they wouldn't go out alone. People were becoming prisoners."


    Do you see a parallel to 2019-2020?

    The commune, an exercise in socialism that became communism.
    1983_festival_at_Rajneeshpuram.jpg R (1).jpg R.jpg R (2).jpg 400px-RajneeshCity_01.jpg 1859_July_August_Bhagwan_Shree_Rajneesh_5.jpg R (3).jpg
     
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  2. Don Alaska

    Don Alaska Supreme Member
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    That is the most famous episode of bioterrorism in U.S. history. I have never known anyone who was affected by it. It also demonstrated how voter fraud can work. Proud to "know" you @Faye Fox
     
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  3. Faye Fox

    Faye Fox Veteran Member
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    Thanks Don! I was there and poisoned eating the salad at Taco Time. It was just unreal that educated people of some of wealth gave it all up to join that cult that promised utopia. Seeing the brainwashed dressed in red and purple with numbers growing rapidly was just unbelievable. I knew a lady that left her husband and son to join that craziness. After the entire thing was over she tried to reconcile with her son but he rejected her so she committed suicide.

    The point I am trying to get across is it was all about rigging an election just like covid was the only thing left to open the election to fraud. All other attempts to get Trump out failed.
     
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  4. Marie Mallery

    Marie Mallery Veteran Member
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    I've always had an inquiring mind and read a lot. In the mid to late 70s I read an article in a Readers Digest written by a high ranking military man about his involvement in dropping viruses over major American cities to test bio warfare. He wrote that he could no longer deceive himself into thinking he was being a good soldier for his nation in doing so.Not sure this is the same man,he said many old and very young died from the "flu" they created .


    It wasn't until the 1970s that Americans, as Cole wrote in the book, "learned that for decades they had been serving as experimental animals for agencies of their government."

    San Francisco wasn't the first or the last experiment on citizens who hadn't given informed consent.

    https://www.insider.com/
     
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