Sunday, June 28, 2009

The BU Bioweapons Incubator

Otherwise, why would the Globe censor it (article only appeared in print version of paper)?

Related
: BU's Bio-Weapons Lab

Bush Prepares Release of Bio-Weapons on American Public

For Obama to let loose.

"BU germ lab will soon open for training

The controversial Boston University research laboratory built to study the world's deadliest germs will open its doors to scientists in a few months for training exercises, the university announced this afternoon. When the researchers enter the South End facility late in the summer or early in the fall, they will not use any bacteria or viruses. Instead, university officials said, the exercises are being conducted to "test safety, health, and operational procedures." Later, emergency response teams -- including police officers and firefighters -- will engage in emergency response drills. The exercises are expected to last six to eight months."

--more--"

So THIS is what you could see on the STREETS, folks:

"In case of attack, follow their lead; Boston center sets training standard" by James F. Smith, Globe Staff | June 15, 2009

Emergency responders practiced for disaster in protective suits at the DelValle Institute in Mattapan.
Emergency responders practiced for disaster in protective suits at the DelValle Institute in Mattapan. (Joanne Rathe/ Globe Staff)

Brookline police Sergeant Robert Disario donned thick blue-green gloves, yellow rubber boots, gas mask, and respirator, and colleagues taped the seams on his chemical-proof plastic suit. Then he waddled around a parking lot in Mattapan, imagining what it would feel like to be rushing to the scene of a terrorist attack somewhere in Greater Boston.

Disario and 31 other officers from Boston-area communities spent three days last week in a course that prepares medical and security personnel for terrorist attacks or other disasters that could result in mass casualties.

It was just one of hundreds of hands-on courses run by Boston's DelValle Institute for Emergency Preparedness, which was set up in 2003 by the city's Emergency Medical Service and the Public Health Commission. The institute may be little known in Boston, but it has won praise from national antiterrorism specialists.

All this over those damn lies!

Nearly 13,000 nurses, doctors, police officers, ambulance teams and other emergency personnel have been through DelValle's training courses, in the classroom in downtown Boston and in hands-on learning - mainly at a steel-framed EMS station in Mattapan.

Think fire would drop it into its own footprint like on 9/11?

This week, the DelValle Institute will extend its reach internationally when experts from countries targeted by recent mass-casualty terror attacks meet here with their local and national counterparts. At a conference today at the John F. Kennedy Library, specialists from Pakistan, India, Israel, Spain, and Britain will brief Boston emergency specialists and officials from the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the primary US government agency responsible for medical responses to emergencies.

And tomorrow, the CDC team will draw on what it learned from the Boston conference to update its main teaching blueprint for emergency systems to respond to terrorism, titled, "In a Moment's Notice: Surge Capacity for Terrorist Bombings."

*******************

Delvalle was a New York City firefighter who died responding to the 2001 attack at the World Trade Center. The center opened in 2003 and operates on a budget of just under $1 million that comes mainly from federal grants from the CDC and the Department of Homeland Security....

"From Madrid to London to Israel to India, we'll start to see patterns that will help us...."

We ALREADY HAVE!!!!

They are called FALSE FLAGS!!!

--more--"