Posted on 09/06/2002 5:21:07 AM PDT by NoControllingLegalAuthority
It has been centuries since native North Americans were so vulnerable to the sickening sword of a smallpox attack. The first time it was so used was when Lord Jefferey Amherst, commander of the British forces in North America during the French and Indian War (1754-1763) approved sending smallpox-infected blankets and handkerchiefs to the Ottawa tribe attacking Fort Pitt. It had the desired effect subsequent epidemics probably killed more than 50 percent of affected tribes, a consequence of Native Americans having practically no immunity to the smallpox-causing variola virus. The U.S. population now has about that same level of immunity, an unintended consequence of the extremely successful worldwide smallpox eradication campaign.
(Excerpt) Read more at asp.washtimes.com ...
Bush has a socialist, big government mindset. He may also be waiting on approval from the UN powers that be.
The smallpox vaccine is left over from the 70's, some older, and so due to the age of the vaccine it is currently being tested by The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), a component of the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH). Production has its problems as well, the FDA has found violations of quality control standards in the manufacturers, such as Merck who had their plant closed down and lost the contract due to QC violations.
As far as guns in the cockpit, Bush signed the Aviation Security Bill, which included provisions for arming pilots, but Mineta, Ridge and Magaw were obstructions in implementation, seems that is now changing, with the recent passage of H.R. 4635, the Arming Pilots Against Terrorism Act which orders the the TSA "to develop and implement a two-year 'demonstration period' during which a limited number of volunteer pilots would be armed". It also helped that Magaw was ousted from his post.
Not necessarily true. Smallpox is normally spread through aerosolized virus pariticles which are inhaled. An old method of innoculation called variolination exposed previously unexposed people to the variola (smallpox) virus via an incision on the skin. The patient would then get a milder form of the disease but would become infectious to others. This method of innoculation which had a 1% fatatity rate, was used on George Washington when he was a young man and by the Continental Army during the American Revolution. If terrorists used variolination, they could easily spread smallpox while not being terribly sick themselves or facing a high risk of death.
However, it is clear that even a small release of the variola virus say aerosols sprayed simultaneously at several major airports would have catastrophic consequences.
This deliberate infection would require only the virus be sprayed into crowds, not carried there by those already sick with the disease.
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