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In a message dated 7/1/2006 3:18:33 P.M. Pacific Standard Time,

jeaninem660@... writes:

maybe all the uses for fungi is why

they really dont want to admit to the bad part.

Jeanine,

I am sure that is part of the equation along with limiting financial

liability for stakeholders of sick buildings.

As it stands today, this aspect is the biggest concern I have from the

matter. We are getting ready to use biological warfare on Columbia and

Afganastan, under the guise of the war on drugs. This is being promoted by

legislators out of the state of Indiana. Gee, let's see. Indiana, corn, large

companies that sell products for crop disease control, lobbyists.

Sell more product to fight the " war on drugs " . This has passed Congress.

It is before the Senate. These people are out of control. Their are going to

kill and permanently maim an entire society...in order to sell more

pesticide/mycoherbicides.

April 07, 2006

US Considering Bio-Warfare on Poppies

The Drug Policy Alliance has started a _letter campaign_

(http://actioncenter.drugpolicy.org/action/index.asp?step=2 & item=29678 & MS=Mycohe\

rbicide-040406-ip)

against a plan currently under consideration in the US Senate that

basically amounts to _launching a biological warfare attack_

(http://www.drugpolicy.org/news/040406mycoherbicide.cfm) against countries such

as Columbia and

Afghanistan.

Mycoherbicides have already been extensively studied over the last thirty

years - and the results make it clear that they are not an option for

controlling crops of coca or opium poppies. They attack indiscriminately,

destroying

fruit and vegetable crops, causing open sores and feminization in reptiles and

other animals, and sickening humans as well. The toxins mycoherbicides

produce contaminate soil for years, so that nothing can grow where they have

been.

Mycoherbicides are so destructive that governments have even stockpiled them

as weapons...

Sounds real pleasant.

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yes, and its really scary, because we know that it will all come

back to bite us in the butt. what goes around comes around. IN THE

AIR. think it's a population control tactic?. like everything esle is

controled. what was that? home of the what? free? yea right. free

to breath the air that our goverment is contaminating. who cares

about the drugs really, whats the difference between illegal drugs

and the toxic drugs spit out by the drug produceing companys that

dont even wait to find out the long term affects of them before

plastering them all over the news. Illegal drugs would not even be

illegal if the goverment could fiqure how to control the market to

sell them. I dont know much about coca and dont care. people can get

high off prescription drugs and I dont see them doing anything about

that.

>

>

> In a message dated 7/1/2006 3:18:33 P.M. Pacific Standard Time,

> jeaninem660@... writes:

>

> maybe all the uses for fungi is why

> they really dont want to admit to the bad part.

>

>

>

> Jeanine,

>

> I am sure that is part of the equation along with limiting

financial

> liability for stakeholders of sick buildings.

>

> As it stands today, this aspect is the biggest concern I have

from the

> matter. We are getting ready to use biological warfare on Columbia

and

> Afganastan, under the guise of the war on drugs. This is being

promoted by

> legislators out of the state of Indiana. Gee, let's see.

Indiana, corn, large

> companies that sell products for crop disease control, lobbyists.

>

> Sell more product to fight the " war on drugs " . This has passed

Congress.

> It is before the Senate. These people are out of control. Their

are going to

> kill and permanently maim an entire society...in order to sell

more

> pesticide/mycoherbicides.

> April 07, 2006

>

>

>

>

> US Considering Bio-Warfare on Poppies

>

>

> The Drug Policy Alliance has started a _letter campaign_

> (http://actioncenter.drugpolicy.org/action/index.asp?

step=2 & item=29678 & MS=Mycoherbicide-040406-ip)

> against a plan currently under consideration in the US Senate

that

> basically amounts to _launching a biological warfare attack_

> (http://www.drugpolicy.org/news/040406mycoherbicide.cfm) against

countries such as Columbia and

> Afghanistan.

> Mycoherbicides have already been extensively studied over the last

thirty

> years - and the results make it clear that they are not an option

for

> controlling crops of coca or opium poppies. They attack

indiscriminately, destroying

> fruit and vegetable crops, causing open sores and feminization in

reptiles and

> other animals, and sickening humans as well. The toxins

mycoherbicides

> produce contaminate soil for years, so that nothing can grow where

they have been.

> Mycoherbicides are so destructive that governments have even

stockpiled them

> as weapons...

> Sounds real pleasant.

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

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