Hopi
elder, Dan Evehema:
"Final, Decisive Battle Between Good and Evil":
GLOBAL CHEMTRAIL SPRAYING ?
_________________________________________________________________
Hopi Message to the World:
"Unite and Arise for Survival":
HOPI WORLD ALERT: THE NAVOHTI
__________________________________________________________________
chemtrail
rain chemtrails virus bacteria freeze dried polymer fibers
It's Raining Chemicals Again Feb. 16, 2004
8:45 AM. What kind of chemicals?
Polymer fibers laced with freeze-dried viruses? A barium
cocktail?
________________________________________________________________
CHEMTRAILS vs
CONTRAILS
Red blood cells, possibly of a
dessicated nature due to their reduced size, appear
to have ... Red Blood Cells and encapsulating materials,
approx. 2000x ...
www.carnicom.com/bio3.htm
- 12k - Dec 4, 2005
____________________________________________________________
________________
Previous 'X' zone Reports 12/03/05

IF YOU HAVE ANY INFORMATION THAT YOU
WOULD LIKE TO SHARE SEND IT AONG TO EITHER MYSELF
Ghostwolf@robertghostwolf.com
or Rob McConnell host of the 'X'
zone Radio
Show
xzone@xzone-radio.com
___________________________________
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
The
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is investigating reports that
the deaths of 12 Japanese children may be linked to the
anti-viral drug Tamiflu. The possibility has caused alarm, since
millions of doses of the drug are currently being stockpiled for use
in a potential flu pandemic.
Also Linked to
Seizures
Tamiflu has also
been linked to neuro-psychiatric incidents in children, including
seizures, loss of consciousness, and delirium causing strange
behavior such as children Jumping Off of Roofs
The
reports mention incidents including:
-
A 14-year-old boy
with flu took a dose of Tamiflu and two hours later fell from
the ninth floor of his apartment building
- Another
child, hours after taking a dose, jumped from the second floor
of his house into deep snow
Tamiflu Used FAR
More Frequently in Japan
However, it is
important to realize that the reason Tamiflu side effects may show
up earlier in Japan is that Tamiflu is used 12 times more
frequently in Japan than in the United States -- 11.6 million
prescriptions for children in Japan between 2001 and 2005, compared
to about 872,000 during that same period in the United States.

Chemtrails over Canada
EDUCATE YOURSELF Sky Samples Analyzed
USA TODAY ARTICLES
~ TAMIFLU
FDA probes Japan deaths possibly linked to
Tamiflu
By Anita Manning, USA TODAY
The Food and Drug Administration is reviewing reports of the deaths of 12
children in Japan who had taken the anti-viral drug Tamiflu.
FDA scientists say they
can't conclude that Tamiflu caused the deaths, which occurred between 2000
and April this year, but the reports have raised concern because millions of
doses of the drug are being stockpiled around the world as the first line of
defense in a potential flu pandemic.
In addition to the deaths,
32 incidents of "neuro-psychiatric" incidents such as seizures, loss of
consciousness or delirium, have been reported in children taking Tamiflu in
the past year.
The reports of illness and death were "unusual
enough to prompt further evaluation," says an FDA staff report, one of
several documents being presented today to the agency's Pediatric Advisory
Committee, meeting in Gaithersburg, Md., to review safety data on eight
drugs prescribed to children.
Tamiflu is used more widely in Japan than in any
other country. About 11.6 million Japanese children have taken the drug. It has been prescribed to more than 33 million
people worldwide, said Alfred Wasilewski, spokesman for manufacturer
Hoffmann-La Roche.
"Influenza, especially among children, can be very
devastating," causing high fevers and death in some cases, he said.
The reports include an
incident in which a 14-year-old boy with flu took a single dose of Tamiflu
and two hours later fell from the ninth floor of his apartment building.
Another involved a child who, hours after taking a second dose, jumped from
the second floor of his house into deep snow. He was unhurt and later
remembered jumping, but didn't know why.
The FDA has received further information on the
deaths from Roche and the Japanese Ministry of Health, FDA spokeswoman Susan
Bro said. "Our scientists have said, even with the additional information,
we are not seeing any reason to make a causal association between the use of
the drug and the deaths," she said. "The data don't lead to that
conclusion."
Some details on the cases, such as when the
children began taking the drug, are not available,
said Wasilewski. (ROCHE) Most of the children who died had pre-existing
health problems, he said, or serious flu complications such as pneumonia.
The FDA staff report
says that since the mid-1990s, there have been several reports in scientific
literature from Japan of encephalitis, or inflammation of the brain,
associated with flu in children.
These cases led to
national surveillance for flu-associated encephalitis in Japan, the report
says, suggesting that heightened awareness, wide use of Tamiflu and efforts
by Japanese regulators to look for side effects may have increased the
reports of illness and death possibly related to Tamiflu.
Infectious disease specialist William Schaffner of
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, says the reports are puzzling and
the FDA needs "vastly more information about these cases before you can
conclude anything
."Copyright
2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
________________________________________________________________________________
Los HOAXES sobre la pulmonía atípica (SARS)
- [
Translate this page ]
http://www.vsantivirus.com/hoax-sars.htm Por Jose Luis Lopez
videosoft@videosoft.net.uy
____________________________________________
ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORT
Roche
Warns Against Generic Tamiflu
Roche Cautions
Against Countries Producing Generic Version of Bird Flu Treatment Tamiflu
By BRADLEY S. KLAPPER Associated Press Writer
GENEVA Oct 24, 2005 — Swiss pharmaceutical company
Roche Holding AG on Monday cautioned against countries producing on their
own a generic version Tamiflu, the drug that experts believe is most
effective in protecting humans from bird flu.
Roche, the sole manufacturer of Tamiflu, has
ruled out relinquishing the patent on the antiviral drug, which is protected
until 2016. But orders have soared as bird flu has spread from Asia
to southeast Europe, and the company is coming under increasing pressure
from a number of countries to allow others to produce a copy of the drug.
India said Monday it would consider whether to invoke a special law
allowing its drug manufacturers to copy Tamiflu without getting a license
from Roche.
"It needs special knowledge, special
know-how to produce this drug," Roche spokeswoman Martina Rupp told The
Associated Press. "Since we have been making this drug for the last 10
years, it would be best for countries to enter into a discussion with us."
Health experts have been pinning their hopes
on Tamiflu in case bird flu mutates so that it could pass easily between
people. While there is no human vaccine for the spreading strain of bird
flu, scientists believe Tamiflu may help humans fight a mutated virus.
NOTE:
“ If and when this Bird Flu
mutates into a form that could be spread human to human it will have taken
on a different form, and molecular character; the vaccine then could have
zero effect against it.”
Indian authorities are weighing whether there is enough of a risk of
bird flu spreading in India to invoke the so-called compulsory licensing
clause and lift Roche's patent protections, said Health Secretary Prasanna
Kumar Hota.
THERE IS A PATENT
PROTECTION, if it is being honored by pirate drug manufactures in third
world countries …The World Trade
Organization in 2003 decided to allow governments to override patents during
national health crises, but no member state has yet invoked the clause.
India has yet to report any cases of bird flu this year, but it
imports poultry on a large scale from its Asian neighbors.
Indian drugmaker Cipla Ltd. which says it
has developed a generic version of Tamiflu pushed authorities to invoke the
clause, although it has also applied to Roche for permission to copy the flu
drug.
Another Indian company, Ranbaxy Laboratories
Ltd., said last week it could develop the drug in a couple of months
and has also applied to Roche for a license.
__________________________________________________________________________
TOXIC MOLD 
TOXIC
MOLD Toxic Mold damage is a hot
button in the world of insurance claims
MOLDS FLOURISH,
ILLNESS PREVAILS "a mold count greater than 11 colonies unacceptable"
_____________________________________________________________________
ABC NEWS
REPORT ~ TAMIFLU
Lisa Richwine
GAITHERSBURG, Maryland
(Reuters) - U.S. regulators do not have enough evidence to say Roche AG's
anti-flu drug Tamiflu caused deaths or psychiatric problems in children in
Japan, Food and Drug Administration officials said on Friday.
The FDA has been studying reports of 12 deaths and
32 cases of psychiatric problems in children who had taken Roche's drug,
which is in high demand as a defense against a possible avian flu pandemic
in people.
All but one of the psychiatric events, which
included hallucinations and abnormal behavior, also were reported in Japan.
FDA officials are seeking input about the reports
from a panel of outside experts meeting Friday.
Linda Lewis, an FDA
medical officer, said in prepared remarks there was "insufficient evidence
to establish that deaths and neuropsychiatric events represent a safety
signal associated with Tamiflu."
The agency will ask the committee if it agrees the
FDA should continue monitoring Tamiflu's safety in children and report back
to the panel within two years.
The FDA has no current plan to add warnings about
the deaths or psychiatric problems to the Tamiflu label, Lewis said. But
officials will ask the panel if new information should be added about
serious skin reactions, which are already mentioned as a possible side
effect.
Interest in Tamiflu has risen as experts around the
world warned of a possible H5N1 bird flu pandemic in people. Several
countries are stockpiling Tamiflu, which may lessen symptoms.
Tamiflu is used widely in Japan to treat the annual
influenza. From 2001 to 2005, there were 24.5 million Tamiflu prescriptions
in Japan, and 6.5 million in the United States.
There is some evidence Japan was more vigilant about
reporting problems in Tamiflu patients, FDA officials said.
Roche said information from databases of Tamiflu use
and other research showed there was no increase in deaths and psychiatric
problems in Tamiflu patients compared with influenza patients in general.
Continued ...
© Reuters 2005. All Rights Reserved.
___________________________________________________________
Rumsfeld's growing stake in Tamiflu
Defense Secretary,
ex-chairman of flu treatment rights holder, sees portfolio value growing.
October 31, 2005: 10:55 AM
EST
By Nelson D. Schwartz,
Fortune senior writer
See full story here…
http://money.cnn.com/2005/10/31/news/newsmakers/fortune_rumsfeld/?cnn=yes
NEW YORK (Fortune) - The prospect of a bird flu
outbreak may be panicking people around the globe, but it's proving to be
very good news for Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and other politically
connected investors in Gilead Sciences, the California biotech company that
owns the rights to Tamiflu, the influenza remedy that's now the most-sought
after drug in the world.
Rumsfeld served as Gilead
(Research)'s chairman from 1997 until he joined the Bush administration in
2001, and he still holds a Gilead stake valued at between $5 million and $25
million, according to federal financial disclosures filed by Rumsfeld.
The forms don't reveal the exact number of shares
Rumsfeld owns, but in the past six months fears of a pandemic and the
ensuing scramble for Tamiflu have sent Gilead's stock from $35 to $47.
That's made the Pentagon chief, already one of the wealthiest members of the
Bush cabinet, at least $1 million richer.
Rumsfeld's growing stake in Tamiflu
Defense Secretary, ex-chairman of flu treatment
rights holder, sees portfolio value growing.
____________________________________________________________
October 31, 2005:
10:55 AM EST
By Nelson D. Schwartz, Fortune senior writer

Rumsfeld isn't the only
political heavyweight benefiting from demand for Tamiflu, which is
manufactured and marketed by Swiss pharma giant Roche. (Gilead receives a
royalty from Roche equaling about 10% of sales.) Former Secretary of State
George Shultz, who is on Gilead's board, has sold more than $7 million worth
of Gilead since the beginning of 2005.
Another board member is
the wife of former California Gov. Pete Wilson.
"I don't know of any
biotech company that's so politically well-connected," says analyst Andrew
McDonald of Think Equity Partners in San Francisco.
What's more, the federal government is emerging as
one of the world's biggest customers for Tamiflu. In July, the Pentagon
ordered $58 million worth of the treatment for U.S. troops around the world,
and Congress is considering a multi-billion dollar purchase. Roche expects
2005 sales for Tamiflu to be about $1 billion, compared with $258 million in
2004.
Rumsfeld recused himself from any decisions
involving Gilead when he left Gilead and became Secretary of Defense in
early 2001. And late last month, notes a senior Pentagon official, Rumsfeld
went even further and had the Pentagon's general counsel issue additional
instructions outlining what he could and could not be involved in if there
were an avian flu pandemic and the Pentagon had to respond.
___________________________________________________________
World
Health Organization ~
HUMAN TO HUMAN REPORTS OF BIRD
FLU
The likelihood of a human
flu pandemic is very high, U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Michael
Leavitt said as he began a tour of Southeast Asia to coordinate plans to
combat bird flu.
The H5N1 strain of bird
flu has swept through poultry populations in many parts of Asia since 2003
and jumped to humans, killing 60 people, mostly through direct contact with
sick fowl.
While there have been no
known cases of person-to-person transmission, World Health Organization
officials and other experts have been warning that the virus could mutate
into a form that spreads easily among people. In a worst-case
scenario, they say millions of people could die.
Three influenza pandemics have occurred over the
last century and "the likelihood of another is very high, some say even
certain," Leavitt said Monday after meeting with Thai health officials to
review the country's preparations against the disease. "Whether or not H5N1
is the virus that will ultimately trigger such a pandemic is unknown to us,"
he told a news conference.
___________________________________________________________________
BirdLife International:
Statement on Avian Influenza ("Bird ‘flu")
14-10-2005
The H5N1 virus seems to be
spreading, with recent outbreaks in China, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, regions of
Russia and countries around the Black Sea, on top of the spread through Asia
since the end of 2003. It is not yet entirely clear how the disease is
spreading, but clearly there is a possibility that migrating water birds may
be involved.
There are numerous strains
(at least 144) of avian influenza, many of which circulate in wild birds at
low levels, but which can occur more frequently in waterbirds. Most of these
viruses within wild bird populations are benign. Highly pathogenic-avian
influenza viruses can cause great mortality in domestic poultry flocks but
are very rare in wild birds. H5N1 is highly pathogenic but was never
recorded in wild birds before the recent outbreaks in SE Asia, Russia and
countries around the Black Sea. It is likely that it originated in domestic
poultry through mutation of low pathogenic sub-types and was subsequently
passed from poultry to wild birds.
Transmission is promoted in domestic flocks due to
the density of birds and the consequent close contact with faecal and other
secretions through which the virus can be transmitted. Husbandry methods in
SE Asia where domestic flocks are often allowed to mix freely with wild
birds, especially waterfowl will have facilitated the transmission to
migratory waterbirds, leading to several reported instances of die-offs.
There is no evidence that
H5N1 infection in humans have been acquired from wild birds. Human
infections have occurred in people who have been closely associated with
poultry. The risk to human health from wild birds is extremely low
and can be minimized by avoiding contact with sick or dead birds. However,
there is a possibility that this virus could develop into one that might be
transmitted from human to human. If this happens, then it is most likely to
happen in SE Asia, from where it could then spread rapidly around the world.
_______________________________________________________________________
WHAT CAN YOU DO?
If you think we
should demand more impartial information about Tamiflu Vaccine
and the results from orthodox scientific research on the product contact
your local congressman and let them know how you feel. You have to let them
know.
_________________________________________________________________
Web
Page Site Link Disclaimer:
God's Word
says to "Prove all things and hold fast that which is good" 1 Thes.
5:21 KJV. On the net as in life, we should be wise and have discernment
when traveling. Just because a site says it is true doesn't mean it is or
that it's content
lines up with God's Word doctrinally. Finally, I believe the Lord guides
our steps and pathways.....yes even our net surfing. So pray for wisdom,
use discretion, and have fun on your adventure.