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From: Dave Gneiser (graze-l_at_witt.ac.nz)
Date: 02/23/08


------=_NextPart_000_003D_01C8765E.F57CA850

	charset="iso-8859-1"


Just testing since graze-l is quiet and grazersedge appears to have a 
computer blockage to new posts lately.
Dave G.
WisCOWsin
  Fact, unlike the non-safety threat posed from the downer cows, there 
are
  real threats in the US food supply that apparently the HSUS is not 
concerned
  about such as:

  OUTBREAK: Leprosy in Arkansas - Brought Here by Whom?

  Renee E. Taylor

  http://familysecuritymatters.org/challenges.php?id ...


  In an emergency room in Arkansas, the patient exhibits dark red boils, 
her
  skin numb. Another case of leprosy in America. Not far away, a
  tuberculosis-infected illegal immigrant coughs while on break at the 
local
  chicken processing plant - spreading his infectious germs across the 
break
  room table. His children, also carrying the disease, which had been 
all but
  eradicated from the United States years ago, join hundreds of children 
at
  the local public school. Crossing the Mexican border, in a pickup 
truck
  filled with "migrant workers" coming to "do the jobs Americans don't 
do" in
  our fields and food processing plants, is the Islamic terrorist who
  purposefully infected himself with smallpox in order to spread the 
deadly
  disease to unsuspecting Americans nationwide.


  Fact or fiction? Well over 12 million illegal aliens have invaded our
  country from our southern border, circumventing the strict health
  requirements that are enforced for those entering legally - 
requirements
  that include ensuring the entrants are free from infectious diseases. 
Our
  own government continues its push to give them legitimacy, in some 
cases
  welcoming them with open arms under the guise of "they are doing the 
work
  Americans just don't do." However, we don't know who they are - or 
what
  horrific contagions they may have brought with them.


  In Northwest Arkansas, the state health department has been tracking 
nine
  cases of Marshall Island citizens infected with leprosy. According to 
a
  report from KFSM, the CBS affiliate in Fayetteville, Northwest 
Arkansas has
  a large population of Marshall Island immigrants who have been brought 
here
  to work in the poultry plants in the area. Although, according to Dr.
  Jennifer Bingham in the KFSM report, leprosy is curable with proper
  attention to treatment, they are not able to enlist compliance from 
the
  patients to complete the process. The report also lists 100 cases of
  tuberculosis in the Springdale area.



  In subsequent reports, the Arkansas Department of Health has 
downplayed the
  importance of the outbreak of leprosy in Northwest Arkansas, stating 
that 95
  percent of the population is genetically resistant to the disease. 
Leprosy
  is a major concern in the Marshall Islands and with residents from the 

  Marshall Islands being exempt from immigration laws - including 
medical
  requirements - it is no small surprise that Northwest Arkansas, with a 
large
  concentration of Marshall Island residents working in the poultry 
plants, is
  tracking nine cases of the disease.


  In an effort to calm fears of tuberculosis outbreak, the Ft. Smith,
  Arkansas, Times Record states that in 2007, there were 106 cases of
  tuberculosis reported statewide, with 21 - nearly a full quarter - in 
the
  Northwest Arkansas area. Spread through the inhalation of infected 
particles
  from an infected person who coughs, tuberculosis is easier spread than 

  leprosy. Both stories, regardless of the downplaying from government
  officials, are reason for concern.


  Concerns over leprosy in America are not new, but rarely reported. On 
March
  15, 2005, Columbia University's Columbia News Service published an 
article
  by Ben Whitford, titled "Leprosy in America: New Cause for Concern".


  While leprosy outbreaks in the United States are rare, approximately 
130
  cases per year, Whitford's report states that in 2004, 100 cases of 
leprosy
  were diagnosed in the United States among the immigrant population. 
That was
  double from the year 2000. Dr. William Levis, head of New York's 
Hansen's
  Disease Clinic, stated, "It's creeping into the U.S." He is further 
quoted
  as calling it an "epidemic" that has already reached such proportions 
in
  Texas, New York and California - all states with high populations of
  immigrants.


  It has become politically incorrect to discuss the possibility of 
illegal
  aliens bringing tuberculosis, leprosy and other infectious diseases 
across
  the border. This tolerance to the lax policies regarding immigration,
  appeasement of La Raza and other special interests and the ease in 
which
  illegal aliens can blend into American society, leaves us wide open to 

  something far more sinister and deadly - bioterrorism.


  Like the economic and health issues regarding illegal immigration that 
have
  plagued our nation, the threat of terrorism from our porous southern 
and
  northern borders is largely ignored, but a very real possibility.


  After September 11, the possibility of smallpox being used in a 
bioterror
  attack became a concern with the Center for Disease Control. Long 
since
  eradicated from the U.S., this highly contagious, deadly disease - or 
any
  other - can walk across the border with Mohammed as easily as 
tuberculosis
  comes with your local tomato picker.


  Tuberculosis, leprosy - an epidemic? The reality of bioterrorism from 
our
  porous borders? The possibilities could cause panic among the 
population.
  The news would spread faster than the diseases themselves, therefore 
the
  news is controlled, with an apparent goal to downplay concerns.





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Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Pennsylvania


Dauphin County Edition

Zip Code:  
The zipcode value determines localized news and weather content.
Mostly Cloudy
Current Conditions in
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania

Weather Advisories

Last Updated:4:56 AM EST December 2, 2008
Conditions:Mostly Cloudy
Temperature:35° F
Wind Chill:30° F
Humidity:72%
Dew Point:27° F
Wind:WNW at 6 MPH
Pressure:29.98 Inches
Visibility:10.0 Miles
Sun Rise:07:12 AM
Sun Set:04:41 PM
Moon Rise:10:59 AM
Moon Set:09:02 PM


U.S. Department of Agriculture

Weekly Weather and Crop Bulletin



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