Posted on 09/16/2009 6:26:24 AM PDT by Erik Latranyi
I have information that supports my hypothesis that many of our human illnesses may have their origins in space. Case in point is the meteor and crater discovered in Peru.
Many of the local people came down with a mysterious illness following exposure to the space debris and or crater. The W.H.O. investigated the incident after learning of a strange illness (w/out ANY protection LOL) . It is possible they have not identified the nature of the illness nor has there been any mention of it in medical journals but I suspect that if it is H1N1 they are keeping it very quiet.
There is a possibility that the organism used human vectors which then traveled north into Mexico. It is possible that this is the origin of the N1H1 flu strain that sparked the global pandemic earlier this year and must be ruled out.
I am calling for an investigation.
BTW You may want to pass this along because I suspect that once this gets out the clip will mysteriously vanish. ALSO would like to warn everyone to follow good hygiene while in public as there could be a nasty strain coming back with fury this fall season in N. America
If you have additional information please RSVP here
I came up with this forum post. While it is weak and without substantiation, I still think the theory has merit.
Freepers, what do you think?
“Pigs in space”

Pigs in Space
I'm gonna go with ...
Mr.President,I demand an independent investigation-Charlie
Sheen!
I think H1N1 is more likely the result of a lab experiment gone awry, and live virus hybrid vaccine released from lab. This occurred in Austria last year. Here is one story, you can find more:
http://www.torontosun.com/news/canada/2009/02/27/8560781.html
Emergence in Mexico raises a number of questions about how- it is hard to not think a deliberate seeding was made
hold my place while I pop some popcorn.
Unless DNA & RNA originally came from space and the “space flu” came from the same genetic source, it is extremely unlikely that an extraterrestrial virus would be genetically similar enough to us to have any effect. I think carnivorous little green men eating humans would be more likely than the “space flu”.
I'm not a doctor or even a research scientist. I'm a electrician...LOL
But flu is a virus which is living thing that requires certain tenperatures to survive. It is not and never was or will be a spore.
Re-entry heat is damn hot, outer space is damn cold and would have killed it long before it got to the temperate climates of earth. Not to mention radiation.
Just my thoughts.....
What, no Andromeda Strain references yet? You’re slacking, Freepers.
TY...since I don’t know how to post pictures
You might want to look around, as it is already here. The H1N1 virus is not running the same schedule as regular flu.
I have had this stuff before. In fact, after I had it back in the 70s, I never got the flu again after that.
Maybe a rose colored lining here for at least some people.
I stayed at a Holiday Inn express once.
Chandrashekar and Hoyle had postulated this years ago. I saw some plots Chandra made with meteor shower dates and influenza eruption peaks and while the correlation didn’t imply a direct cause and effect, it was pretty compelling.
I think the lame-o Benjamin Bratt re-make kind of poisoned that particular well.
I was actually going to refer to a short story I read once. It involved time travelers who go to specific points in time to watch disasters unfold for there amusement. These particular time travelers show up on earth right before a meteor strikes and infects the whole planet with some deadly virus. I wish I could remember the name of the story. It was pretty good.
One theory is that there are millions of virus’ that are dormant in the ground and can be stirred up when the soil is disturbed. That was one of the arguments being used to ban clear cutting the rain forests.
Anthrax Hits America Within Weeks of the September 11 Attacks.
Is this the Eleventh Plague?
On March 25, 2001 CBC Canada Broadcast a Report Called:
Bio-terrorism: the Eleventh Plague
© CBC / Producer Bob Carty
Following is an excerpt from the CBC broadcast.
Swarms of frogs, gnats, flies and locusts. Livestock diseased. People with boils. Hail storms that kill, rivers that
turn to blood, daytime that turns dark. And the death of the firstborn child.
Those are the ten terrible plagues of the Old Testament. Today, however, scientists and military experts say we
should be worried about a new affliction - the eleventh plague. It’s the use of living things like plague,
smallpox, anthrax, and new diseases like Ebola, as weapons of mass destruction - and mass terror.
Strategic experts say that a dozen nation states and an equal number of terrorist groups may now possess
biological weapons. That possibility is why, just six weeks ago, officials evacuated hundreds of people from
buildings in Ottawa, Toronto and Vancouver when it was feared that they had been infected by biological
agents.
For a long time, officials in western democratic societies were reluctant to talk about biological terrorism.
Talking about it might encourage it. But that’s changed in the last few years. The threat of a biological attack
against a North American city is now so great that officials feel the topic must be broached. And discussed.
And assessed.
The Eleventh Plague The Eleventh Plague
was also the title of
two books, both
released prior to the
September 2001
anthrax attacks. One
is fiction, and one is
non-fiction. The
category of both
books is bio-terrorism.
The Eleventh Plague

The fun has only just started...
There was a movie like this, but, the there was a twist to the meteor strike that I won’t give away as I don’t do that. But the meteor wasn’t the killer. But, there were time traveling tourist in the movie.
Anyway, so where do I pick up my tin-foil hat?
I made it halfway through that movie and gave up.
It was 90% watching people get decontaminated and move through air locks. I was bored out of my mind!
Oh, no, no, no - movies suck, books are better.
Like most movies, it did not do the book justice. I believe that was M. Crighton's fist novel, and a good one.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.