When World War II ended, Dr Ishii Shiro--the medical doctor who was
commissioned as a General in the Japanese Army so he could take
command of Japan's biological warfare development, testing and
deployment-- was captured. He was given the choice of a job with the
United States Army or execution as a war criminal. Not surprisingly,
Dr Ishii Shiro chose to work with the US military to demonstrate how
the Japanese had created mad cow disease in the Fore Indian tribe.
In 1957, when the disease was beginning to blossom in full among the
Fore people, Dr Carleton Gajdusek of the US National Institutes of
Health headed to New Guinea to determine how the minced-up brains of
the visna-infected sheep affected them. He spent a couple of years
there, studying the Fore people, and wrote an extensive report. He
won the Nobel Prize for "discovering" kuru disease in the Fore tribe.
Testing Carcinogens over Winnipeg, Manitoba (CHEMTRAILS)
In 1953, the US Government asked the Canadian......