AIDS is the biogenetic equivalent of the atom bomb.
The "Manhattan Project," the secret program to develop the bomb,
had its beginnings in 1939 with a letter from Einstein
to President Roosevelt alerting him that German physicists had
recently entered an historically new realm in their research
and would someday be capable of creating an explosive, based
on the splitting of the atom,
that would be unimaginably more destructive than any other weapon
ever known to mankind.
From that moment on, it was a certainty that the weapon would be built
—and used — someday.
I don't know when the virus that would kill by destroying the human
immune system was first conceived in some scientist's brain.
But intelligence reports indicate that the actual laboratory
experiments — at Fort Detrick, Los Alamos and Cold Spring Harbor —
began during the 1960s.
/
The federal agency responsible for controlling the outbreak of epidemics,
the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta, recently circulated a secret
memo to its top officials
estimating that one out of eight children born in America today
will die of AIDS before they reach the age of 50.
A secret CIA report has concluded that twenty-five percent of Americans
now showing symptoms of AIDS are in their early twenties —
which means they contracted the disease while teenagers.
"For every documented case of a young person testing positive
for the HIV virus," the CIA report continues,
"there are 1,000 others who carry the highly active virus,
without even being aware of it." ( . . )
..Jean Denezet, one of the French bankers who was present
during McNamara's 1970 speech on population control, told Le Figaro,
the newspaper most closely aligned with the French government:
"World financial crisis will become virtually inevitable.
Political consequences, just like in 1930, will be serious, but this
time they will take place in the Third World."
Denezet made other remarks that Le Figaro chose not to publish.
Here's the rest of what Denezet said in 1983:
"Horrible things are going to happen in the Third World — and
there is nothing to do, but just let it happen.
Three and a half billion people are going to be plunged into a Hell
worse than the Middle Ages."
(Note the reference to the Middle Ages, with its oblique overtone of
another Great Plague.)
Denezet knew what he was talking about. Since 1983,
Africa has indeed been Hell worse than the Middle Ages.
According to Dr. E. O. Idusogie, of the FAO regional office
in Accra, Ghana, "about 100 million people in Africa are suffering
from malnutrition (a euphemism for starving);
AIDS carries away thousands every day, and civil wars in the region
are causing chaos, confusion and a total breakdown of even
the most meager sanitary conditions."
In 1989, Dr. Bernard Debre, a member of the French National
Assembly, was interviewed by Paris Match upon his return
from a tour of the continent.
"Africa, engulfed by AIDS, is in a terrible situation because
the disease thrives upon fragile populations;
practically all (black) Africans are infected with malaria and
parasites. … In Zaire, when we do blood tests, one out of four
is contaminated with AIDS.
All of the African countries are hit, and in some countries …
terrible proportions. Congo, Ivory Coast, Gabon, Cameroon, are
severely hit. Zaire or Burundi may die."
He estimated that perhaps thirty or forty percent of the populations
were already infected with AIDS.
"Poverty in Africa makes a serious fight against AIDS almost
impossible."
While in the U.S., men with AIDS outnumber women with AIDS by
seven to one, in Africa it is a family disaster.
Women in Africa are more likely than men to die of AIDS.
Four out of five AIDS sufferers in Zimbabwe are women.
Among women in Africa, AIDS is spreading 100 times faster
than in the U.S.
According to an intelligence report, new, more virulent strains
of the AIDS virus are surfacing. These have appeared in
thousands of cases where persons tested showed false-negative
results. It is believed that HIV testing simply did not identify
the new strains.
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