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Federal agent source of Severna Park swine flu suspicions(Maryland)
HometownAnnapolis.Com ^ | 4/30/09 | Shantee Woodards

Posted on 04/30/2009 1:03:56 PM PDT by Califreak

A federal agent from Severna Park who may have infected his wife, son and nephew with the swine flu contracted the flu virus while on duty with President Barack Obama earlier this month in Mexico City.

The man, who asked not be identified, was on duty as part of a protection detail with the president and other U.S. officials, he said. The agent and the president were part of a museum visit there with Felipe Solis, a distinguished archaeologist who showed Obama around the city's anthropology museum during his visit to Mexico earlier this month. Solis died the following week from flu-like symptoms.

(Excerpt) Read more at hometownannapolis.com ...


TOPICS: Extended News; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; US: Maryland
KEYWORDS: 200904; austincell; bioweapons; edhammond; edwardhammond; fakenews; felipesolis; flu; influenza; joseangelcordova; josecordova; maryland; mexico; mexicocity; nlg; obama; obamatrip; obamatrips; pandemic; secretservice; severnapark; shanteewoodards; shanteewoodwards; sunshineproject; swineflu; thesunshineproject; wmds
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1 posted on 04/30/2009 1:03:56 PM PDT by Califreak
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To: Califreak

imo this dog’s bark seems worse than it’s bite.... sounds like a manufactured “case” of SF


2 posted on 04/30/2009 1:11:37 PM PDT by smartymarty (When you know why you believe what you believe, leadership is inevitable.)
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To: Califreak
The agent said he had been told the air pollution in Mexico City was probably impacting his system and was to blame for his cough. He traveled back to his Severna Park home to greet his wife, his son and his nephew. The agent's cough grew worse and his relatives contracted similar symptoms. As fears about swine flu began to arise around the country, he and his family decided to get tested. But everyone has recovered, using nothing other than Robitussin, he said. They've all returned to their normal lives, to school and work, and now the agent said he hopes the ensuing hysteria about the illness will calm down

Sort of funny that when he was on the job and had the cough, he was told it was just the pollution.

3 posted on 04/30/2009 1:11:58 PM PDT by dawn53
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To: dawn53

Asthma.

Another catch-all diagnosis.


4 posted on 04/30/2009 1:17:13 PM PDT by Califreak ("Could Zero be the Walkin' Dude?")
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To: dawn53

Trust me. That ain’t pig flu. Bleeding from the ears gives it away


5 posted on 04/30/2009 1:19:37 PM PDT by AppyPappy (If you aren't part of the solution, there is good money to be made prolonging the problem.)
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To: AppyPappy
Bleeding from the ears gives it away

Yikes, sounds like a hemorrhagic fever to me.

6 posted on 04/30/2009 1:21:49 PM PDT by mware (F-R-E-E, that spells free. Free Republic.com baby.)
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To: mware

The Great Influenza : The Epic Story of the Deadliest Plague In History
by Barry, John M.

No disease the world has ever known even remotely resembles the great influenza epidemic of 1918. Presumed to have begun when sick farm animals infected soldiers in Kansas, spreading and mutating into a lethal strain as troops carried it to Europe, it exploded across the world with unequaled ferocity and speed. It killed more people in twenty weeks than AIDS has killed in twenty years; it killed more people in a year than the plagues of the Middle Ages killed in a century. Victims bled from the ears and nose, turned blue from lack of oxygen, suffered aches that felt like bones being broken, and died. In the United States, where bodies were stacked without coffins on trucks, nearly seven times as many people died of influenza as in the First World War. In his powerful new book, award-winning historian John M. Barry unfolds a tale that is magisterial in its breadth and in the depth of its research, and spellbinding as he weaves multiple narrative strands together. In this first great collision between science and epidemic disease, even as society approached collapse, a handful of heroic researchers stepped forward, risking their lives to confront this strange disease. Titans like William Welch at the newly formed Johns Hopkins Medical School and colleagues at Rockefeller University and others from around the country revolutionized American science and public health, and their work in this crisis led to crucial discoveries that we are still using and learning from today. The Washington Post?s Jonathan Yardley said Barry?s last book can ?change the way we think.? The Great Influenzamay also change the way we see the world.


7 posted on 04/30/2009 1:24:32 PM PDT by AppyPappy (If you aren't part of the solution, there is good money to be made prolonging the problem.)
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To: AppyPappy

So we go and dig up some of the frozen victims and “play” with the bug in laboratories.

Absolutely brilliant idea.


8 posted on 04/30/2009 1:27:00 PM PDT by Salamander (Like acid and oil on a madman's face, reason tends to fly away.......)
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To: Salamander

Sleeping dogs, mummies and viruses should not be tampered with.


9 posted on 04/30/2009 1:28:49 PM PDT by Califreak ("Could Zero be the Walkin' Dude?")
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To: Califreak

Wiser words were never spoke...


10 posted on 04/30/2009 1:31:13 PM PDT by Salamander (All our times have come. Here but now, there. Gone.)
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To: Califreak
Victims bled from the ears and nose, turned blue from lack of oxygen, suffered aches that felt like bones being broken, and died.

That doesn't sound like a flu bug at all?
11 posted on 04/30/2009 1:32:40 PM PDT by Scythian
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To: Califreak

And here’s an old article about all the fun things they did with it!

http://www.seattlepi.com/local/191418_flu18.html

“A skeptic of resurrecting and enlivening the 1918 flu virus, however, said it is critical to first make sure we are adequately protected against creating a “man-made” pandemic.

“This project could create a new bug that infects someone in the lab who then walks out at the end of the day and, literally, kills tens of millions of people,” said Ed Hammond, director of a biotechnology and bioweapons watchdogorganization called the Sunshine Project, based in Austin, Texas.”

[that was *5* years ago....wonder what they’ve been “doing with it”, since then?]


12 posted on 04/30/2009 1:43:27 PM PDT by Salamander (All our times have come. Here but now, there. Gone.)
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To: Scythian

>Victims bled from the ears and nose, turned blue from lack of oxygen, suffered aches that felt like bones being broken, and died.<

Which article is that from?

It’s not from the article I posted.


13 posted on 04/30/2009 1:53:15 PM PDT by Califreak ("Could Zero be the Walkin' Dude?")
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To: Salamander

I believe a lab is where it came from.

Question is, which one?


14 posted on 04/30/2009 1:56:27 PM PDT by Califreak ("Could Zero be the Walkin' Dude?")
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To: Califreak

I know which one I’d bet all my money on.


15 posted on 04/30/2009 1:59:12 PM PDT by Salamander (All our times have come. Here but now, there. Gone.)
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To: Salamander

When they obtain this tissue, I wonder what kind of hoops they have to jump through?

Could just anyone dig up one of those poor people and start playing mad scientist?


16 posted on 04/30/2009 2:05:33 PM PDT by Califreak ("Could Zero be the Walkin' Dude?")
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To: Califreak

Surprisingly few.

When the anthrax scare hit, that particular strain had been mailed all over the world to various and sundry [and often questionable] labs “for study” all over the world.

They knew where it had originally came from but couldn’t tell where the stuff being mailed out had ~recently~ come from because it was literally *everywhere*.

Comforting, isn’t it?

And yes, I imagine someone could sneak in and dig up their own bugs, if they knew where the bodies were and there was no security in place.


17 posted on 04/30/2009 2:21:52 PM PDT by Salamander (All our times have come. Here but now, there. Gone.)
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To: dawn53; cardinal4

I was stationed in Mexico City in the early 90s. Once a week or so, we went to lunch at the McDonald’s in the Zona Rosa. To get there, we had to cross the eight lane Paseo de la Reforma. If we got stuck at a light, we had to suck that atmosphere into our bodies. By the time we got to Mickey D’s, our eyes were red, and there was some tingling in the throat. In less than two years there, I was sick three times for three days each time. Normally I don’t get sick. The air there defines toxic. The SecSer agent just got hit with what almost everyone else gets hit with there. It’s awful!


18 posted on 04/30/2009 2:24:09 PM PDT by Ax
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To: Califreak; dawn53
Mexican health secy Jose Angel Cordova said Mr Solis----- the man who shook hands with Obama------was already ill and that "Solis' death was unrelated to swine flu."

(waiting for hysterical laughter to die down)

Strange that as Mexico’s flu cases grow, health secretary Cordova is fighting the perception the disease began in Mexico---where swine flu sufferers are dying like flies.

Cordova even hinted it could have started in the United States. He told a press conference: “I think it is very risky to say, or want to say, what the point of origin or dissemination of it is, given that there had already been cases reported in southern California and Texas.”

If he's so sure of US infections, shouldn’t Cordoba demand Mexico close its border......so that all the infected US citizens can't get in and infect the rest of the population?

19 posted on 04/30/2009 8:16:44 PM PDT by Liz (I was like Snow White, then I drifted. Mae West (on liberalism.)
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To: Califreak

Wasn’t the story this morning that he was on the advance team and wasn’t really near the president, except across the room at some dinner?

Now, he was part of the protection detail and was in the same room with the president and Solis.

Why all the different stories?


20 posted on 04/30/2009 8:21:40 PM PDT by keepitreal (Obama brings change: an international crisis (terrorism) within 6 months)
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