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Author: GeraciGeraci
Date: Jun 30, 2008 21:18
This newly released book is mainly written for
people that are fed up with slick home based
business schemes. A Tell-All from a guy that
knows the insider workings of these "deal"
Download it here or pass it on:
http://SoupNaziSecrets.com/ng4.html
4Sl#l3eq)yFtKOq
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Author: KAVANAUGHKAVANAUGH
Date: Jun 30, 2008 17:09
BEFORE You Pay A DIME For ANY Home Business
Opportunity Of ANY Type, READ:
Will The Next Liar Please Stand Up?
This is a tell-all book and shows you
how to REALLY earn 6 + FIgures Online
http://soupnazisecrets.com/ng5.html
5`'yW
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Author: Pat GardinerPat Gardiner
Date: Jun 30, 2008 10:05
Pat's Note: One of the gratifying things about American farming is
that they don't allow themselves to be towed about by a gang of
interlocking quangos run by corrupt covil servants who mentally belong
in 1950s USSR.
No-NAIS seems a healthy example of democracy on the farm.
I'd like to see Defra take them on. They would not get away with half
their self-serving scams, neither would their favoured sycophants.
Anyway, I'm glad to see that they are getting up to speed on pig
disease and trust they will take an interest in what has been going on
in Britain.
http://nonais.org/2008/06/28/big-pork-spin/
June 28, 2008
Big Pork Spin
Other — walterj 5:53 am
IÂ’ve had a lot of people send me this article. It is an example of how
Big Ag twists things to protect themselvesÂ…
Study questions safety of meat from animals raised without antibiotics
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Author: Pat GardinerPat Gardiner
Date: Jun 30, 2008 06:33
This is a very interesting snippet of information which ties in nicely
with the "Gardiner Hypothesis" explaining that the roots of the
current human superbug epidemics worldwide lie in an epidemic of PMWS
- Circovirus in Britain in 1999.
The Canadians admit to MRSA in both their pigs and pork. They have
also long admitted to PMWS epidemics.
They knew that with the advent of "country of origin" labeling in the
US this Autumn, it would become increasingly difficult to ship both
piglets across the border for fattening and all pork and pork
products.
There is little future in sick pigs with a declining export market and
price. Expectations were and are low. They began a subsidised pig
cull:
"In mid-April the federal government introduced a national swine herd
reduction program to better balance supply and demand and help improve
live hog prices.
The cull Breeding Swine program offers 225 dollars per culled animal
to producers who agree to de-populate breeding barns and leave them
empty for three years. "
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Author: Pat GardinerPat Gardiner
Date: Jun 30, 2008 03:58
Pat's Note: Fits perfectly with the Gardiner Hypothesis, of course.
The Hamilton Spectator has been a little subdued over the last couple
of days. I did wonder if that was because of the unpopularity of
pointing the finger at pigs in pig country.
They are prehaps hoping Defra would implode and save them the task.
However, wating for Defra's vets to own up is like waiting for Godot.
They might as well get on and do the dirty deed. They will be prenty
of credit later.
I won't be fighting for the limelight. You have to remember that, long
ago, I set myself the task of stopping pig disease reaching the new
world. I failed.
http://www.thespec.com/News/Local/article/395042
Two new C. diff cases
.Hamilton General has 7 cases in total
June 30, 2008
Barbara Brown
The Hamilton Spectator
(Jun 30, 2008)
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Author: Pat GardinerPat Gardiner
Date: Jun 30, 2008 03:40
I thought it a good moment to take a guess at just what is going on
inside Defra in respect of MRSA and pigs and what they are trying to
do.
It does not take a genius to realise that their claims about MRSA,
even given the best Defraspek, are inconsistent and evasive.
In one place they say they haven't tested the pigs because nobody has
asked them to; somewhere else that they have been asked to test by the
EU, but won't give us the results. (They have admitted refusing
results for other diseases in chickens.)
Not satisfied with that, the industry tells us that no MRSA has been
found in the first three months of this year, but the substantiation
does not seem to exist.
I think any normal human being, especially anyone that suspects that
Defra's vets are a bunch of devious dangerous crooks, would deduce
that the pigs do indeed have MRSA and probably just about everything
else as well.
The pigs have been very sick for ten years, what else would you
expect.
So what are they up to this time?
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Author: Pat GardinerPat Gardiner
Date: Jun 30, 2008 02:30
Pat;s Note: Lincolnshire is pig country and EBSL is found in pigs.
http://www.thisislincolnshire.co.uk/displayNode.jsp?nodeId=156582&command=displayContent&sourceNode...
MUTANT SUPERBUGS HIT LINCOLNSHIRE HOSPITALS
08:00 - 30 June 2008
The next generation of mutated drug-resistant superbugs is infecting
people at Lincolnshire hospitals, it has emerged.
There were 17 cases of ESBL at county hospitals in April and May,
compared to just 10 reports of MRSA.
ESBL, or extended-spectrum beta-lactamases, causes urinary tract
infections, fever and sickness.
It is highly resilient and continually mutates so that it can defeat
stronger and stronger antibiotics.
Glynis Clifton (52) caught MRSA while caring for her late husband
Phillip, who acquired the infection four times during his many stays
at Lincoln County Hospital.
The grandmother, of Outer Circle Drive, Lincoln, said: "I did not feel
well at all. I had chest pains and breathing difficulties.
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Author: Pat GardinerPat Gardiner
Date: Jun 30, 2008 02:01
Pat's Note: Remeber Dave Roberts who used to post here on
uk.business.agriculture, both he and the Americans are reporting under
similar headlines this morning
http://tahilla.typepad.com/mrsawatch/2008/06/mrsa-impact-on.html
....Children with MRSA compared with those with non-MRSA osteomyelitis
had significantly greater erythrocyte sedimentation rate and
C-reactive protein values on admission and increased length of
hospital stay, antibiotic therapy, and overall rate of complications.
We observed significant changes in antibiotic therapy related to
increased use of agents with activity against MRSA. ...
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Author: Pat GardinerPat Gardiner
Date: Jun 30, 2008 01:55
Pat's Note:
"This will come to an end when the Americans arrive in serious force
and babies die. The media will tear them apart."
Usually I have to wait years for my guesses to come right, Within 24
hours there has been interesting developments.
Britain and its corrupt vets might show a callous disregard for the
elderly, but the news of British babies carrying MRSA has hit the
American media - and the same publication tells how British soldiers
are suffering from C.Diff.
Texas too.
That is one more ingredient then needed present to force Defra to test
the pigs and publish the results - or rather release the fact that
they know the pigs have MRSA and get on with testing them for C.Diff.
Defra can't take on the army, the cradle and the Americans, and
Britain's vets are complete fools to think they can.
No wonder the country has been riddled with disease for years, animal
health is run by idiots.
Every right thinking person is going to be on the other side.
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