Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Genetically Modified Mosquitoes To Be Released In Florida Next Spring

It is just a matter of time before insects with modified DNA will be released into residential areas all throughout the world. In fact it has never come this close to actually happening, the intention is to kill off 96% of the mosquito population in the particular areas, and to curb diseases from spreading. The mosquitoes carry a mix of E. coli and cabbage, which according to their testing grounds has proven successful. Never, has anything like this ever come this close to hitting city skies nor has anything like this been tested in residential areas.


The plan is to have these mosquitoes by the millions be released in the Florida Keys area where the population density of mosquitoes is enormous. The experiment will have to be approved by the FDA. Which will most likely receive little to no resistance.


Genetically Modified Mosquitoes To Be Released In Florida Next Spring
Genetically Modified Mosquitoes To Be Released In Florida Next Spring
Genetically Modified Mosquitoes To Be Released In Florida Next Spring
Genetically Modified Mosquitoes To Be Released In Florida Next Spring

The problem is not only the GMO part, but also the fact that this sort of action will be used in warfare. It is inhumane and very effective. The plan to genetically modify mosquitoes is not a new one but an old one. Using insects in warfare is something out of a horror movie or a witches spell book, but it is totally possible, because if they can modify the insect DNA for “good” then there definitely is an ulterior motive which is why the government is interested in such a scheme.



In fact, the possibility of using insects in warfare is not a far stretch at all. History has proven to repeat on multiple occasions, especially when warfare is involved. A massive biological warfare attack by insects has been thought of throughout recent history, especially during the Nazi era.


The Nazi’s where studying how to use insects in warfare. According to the study published by Live Science they where planning to use Mosquitoes, flies, and fleas. The fact that scientists today are still working with some of the discoveries from Hitler should go to show that the US government, and NATO are no better than the Nazi’s themselves. This is not the only experiment with drastic ties to the Nazis, this is not the only satanic idea that the US and Britain have come up with, there are hundreds of thousands of researched possibilities that have such motives.


Documentation on the Nazi’s potential use of insects for Biological warfare:Was the Nazi SS studying insects with the intent of launching a bug-based attack? A new analysis of archived documents concludes that, yes, they were.


Scholars have known for decades the feared SS (Schutzstaffel or “protection squadron”) in Nazi Germany had established an entomological research institute at the Dachau concentration camp. Documents that survived World War II describe experiments related to biological warfare. However, it can be difficult to parse whether these experiments were intended to protect against insect-borne Allied attacks, or to devise ways to use insects as bioweapons against the enemies of the Third Reich.


After reading through historical documents, including those descriptions of experiments and their results, a modern-day entomologist has concluded the SS wanted to create creepy-crawly weapons. [7 Absolutely Evil Medical Experiments]


“You cannot suggest this was defensive research anymore,” said Klaus Reinhardt, who studies bedbugs and fruit fly sperm biology at the University of Tuebingen in Germany. But, he said, “in technical terms it was far away from a bomb, or a massive malaria infection and breeding program being carried out.”


Evil entomology


On Jan. 2, 1942, Heinrich Himmler, the head of the SS, the organization that controlled the police force and the concentration camp system, ordered the creation of an entomological institute. This wasn’t an overt call for biological warfare research. Hitler had forbidden research into bioweapons, although some authorities attempted to circumvent this ban, Reinhardt writes in an article published in the December issue of the journal Endeavour.


There were other reasons for Himmler to launch studies of insects. Insect-borne diseases, such as typhus, threatened SS troops and concentration camp guards. Reinhardt also links the foundation of the institute with the SS supplying slave laborers to industry in return for financial support from the companies. Without a certain survival rate among the prisoners, the SS could not uphold their end, he writes. [5 Lethal Chemical Warfare Agents]


Himmler also had a personal motivation: a phobia of flies.


Reinhardt stumbled across this topic when he noticed that a German book on dragonflies first published in 1933 by an unknown in the field, Eduard May, which sparked his curiosity. Reinhardt then found that the same Eduard May had also headed up the SS’s entomological institute, in spite of his poor qualifications. Reinhardt’s research offers a glimpse into the inner workings, and dysfunction, of the SS by revealing how more qualified candidates were passed over.


Mosquitos, fleas & flies


The entomological institute was established at Dachau, where some Nazi researchers conducted horrific experiments on prisoners. Dr. Claus Schilling inoculated prisoners with malaria, and Schilling’s malaria research was one reason for locating the insect studies at Dachau. (Schilling was tried, convicted and executed after a war crimes trial.) However, May reportedly refused to conduct experiments on humans.


May arrived with a background in pesticides, and research in this area was at the top of all of the institute’s proposed research programs. In a meeting, he discussed pesticides as a defense against a bio-attack — “the airborne dropping of plant pests” — and proposed using toxins sprayed from an airplane, Reinhardt writes.


Mosquitos were a major focus, and documents discuss the feasibility of dropping mosquitos from an airplane in order to cause a mass malaria infection and how to counter such an attack.


The intent of the experiments —offensive or defensive —is often debatable, but Reinhardt sees clear evidence of intent to use the insects as weapons when May recommends a certain mosquito species, Anopheles maculipenni, based on experiments showing its ability to survive longer without food.


“‘If you want to use them take this species.’ This is in an active voice and an active recommendation,” Reinhardt told Live Science. “It is unlikely to be interpreted as defensive.”


However, the studies were not done with malaria-infected mosquitos, so the ability to launch such an attack was so far away as to be almost irrelevant, he said.


The institute also appears to have worked with fleas, although details are scarce, because most surviving evidence is circumstantial. For instance, May sought a meeting with a plague expert and access to fluorescence microscopy in order to study the survivability of microorganisms; the institute also sought rats for experiments, Reinhardt writes. (Plague bacteria are spread through rats and fleas.)


Himmler’s phobia got its due as well. A research protocol documents an experiment in which flies were exposed to a fly-killing fungus.



Genetically Modified Mosquitoes To Be Released In Florida Next Spring

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