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Katrina
evacuees to be injected with neurotoxin
Total Information Analysis | September 22 2005 It is well known that mercury is a neurtoxin, the cause of autism and other cognitive maladies. It has been taken out of most vaccines but is still in tetanus shots and has actually been increased in the flu vaccine. [Background from RFK Jr.] From
the Times-Picayune Sept. 21: The shots aren't being offered to the general public at this time because they might not be effective when flu season peaks in January and February, said Dr. Frank Welch, the Office of Public Health's medical director for immunization programs.[...] About 10,000 shots have been given since the eight-day program started Friday, he said. In addition to flu shots, people are administering hepatitis A and tetanus shots to ward off infections when people return to their homes, frequently by wading through foul water, and try to clean up. Even though it is unlikely that people could contract
hepatitis A from contaminated water, the vaccine is "a protective
measure we can offer," Childhood vaccines also are available to shelter residents, he said. Working with the Office of Public Health have been teams from other organizations, Welch said, including the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the U.S. Public Health Service, Louisiana State University and the Mayo Clinic. Turns out this guy Welch has a history of being a hardcore thug in using the bio-terrorism meme to leverage attacks on the immune systems and health freedoms of the citizenry. This is unfortunately not an uncommon trait in Louisiana. Here's his bio from the New Orleans alt-weekly Gambit 10 20 03: Until the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11,
2001, Frank Welch was pursuing his Ph.D. in epidemiology. Since that
day, however, his dissertation has been on hold. Welch, the medical
director of the state Office of Public Health, has been busy preparing
a plan for the state and the city of New Orleans in case of bio-terrorist
attack. Beginning last summer, Welch directed a statewide effort to
vaccinate 1,200 emergency response officials from 85 hospitals against
smallpox, one of the most successful efforts of its kind in the nation.
"I am incredibly proud," he says. "Louisiana is far ahead
of other states in bio-terrorism preparedness." Recently, Welch
also led a general immunization effort that quickly vaccinated 12,000
children statewide, a further demonstration, he says, that Louisiana
has the capacity to respond to a bio-terrorist threat, pandemic disease
outbreak or natural disaster by providing medicine and vaccinations
on a mass scale. In addition, the Los Alamos, N.M., native has played
a key role in developing and maintaining the state's nationally recognized
immunization database, known as the Louisiana Immunization Network for
Kids Statewide. Welch -- who has worked for the state Office of Public
Health in New Orleans since 1998 when he served as a medical consultant
for environmental epidemiology, addressing public health concerns around
Superfund sites -- is active with Project Lazarus, a hospice program
for AIDS patients; Kent House, which provides temporary housing for
people with HIV or AIDS; and the Human Rights Campaign. |