Posts Tagged ‘CFR’

Yukking it up at CFR Pandemic Influenza Symposium

Friday, November 13th, 2009

COHEN: Then should we mandate for children?

(Laughter.)

COHEN: We do for school entry. Individual states do for school entry. Why don’t we do that to protect the population? And we know that protecting our children from the vaccine, if they are indeed ten times more infectious —

MONTO: A very brief answer which covers a lot of problems with influenza vaccine and we’ve heard it brought up already and that is, a lot of our problems with mandating influenza vaccine, use of influenza vaccine, would go away if we didn’t have the need for annual vaccination. I mean, we’ve got a different kind of vaccine here, and I think we need to recognize the difference between influenza vaccine the way it’s used and the fact that it’s a good vaccine.

It’s not a great vaccine. We’ve shown in a recent study 70 percent efficacy of the live vaccine in healthy adults young adults, who should have the best efficacy. We need, as we’ve heard, a better vaccine.

COHEN: Well, it’s an interesting question, though. Would you be against mandating?

SIMONSEN: Well, I think this is very interesting because, I mean, especially for the health-care worker example. I mean, there are many, many good reasons why health care workers should be considering immunization for their own safety but also to protect and, first, do no harm to the patients that they are treating. Having said that, does it work to mandate?

I think what would work better would be to say that there was a shortage and people tend to buy more of something that’s in demand. (Laughter.) We saw that — there was one season where, really, people lined up all night to get a flu shot.

COHEN: Right.

SIMONSEN: And I mean —

COHEN: Well, there is shortage.

SIMONSEN: No, actually, because we thought we were going to need two doses for every adult and since we are – only one dose, so, actually, we have twice as many doses and enough for the whole population at this point, I understand.

COHEN: But it’s not there today, so –

SIMONSEN: Right, right. But I mean, that’s –

COHEN: You had a question. You’ve been waiting a long time. And please identify yourself.

Jon Cohen, Arnold Monto and Lone Simonsen, from Session I of a Council On Foreign Relations Symposium on Pandemic Influenza: Science, Economics and Foreign Policy, 10-16-09 (streaming video & audio also available)

How else do I know she was talking out of school? All you have to do is look at what’s happened in Canada. 50 million vaccine doses were ordered for a population of 33 million, but we are told there is a shortage, and the excuse given is that the sole source, GlaxoSmithKline, has to focus at the moment on non-adjuvanted vaccines – for special purposes, like the military. The general population, of course, gets the adjuvanted kind.

I heard this with my own ears on a CPAC broadcast of the emergency Parliamentary session on Swine Flu held on Monday evening (Nov. 2) – and the CBC confirms it:

“GlaxoSmithKline overestimated their ability to produce the adjuvanted vaccine while they focus on unadjuvanted vaccine” …

But do you remember the video that the Sun dumped as quickly as it published it, and we had to look elsewhere to find it? It said that the vaccine has arrived in two separate vials, one containing vaccine, another containing adjuvant – and the two had to be mixed by the jabbers themselves, which is why the line-ups moved so slowly.

CFR confirms vaccine shortage in Canada is a lie!“, YayaCanada 11-4-09

YayaCanada links to False Flag Flu, which drops the phrase “Swine-Eleven”.  Nice!

Have fun and cuídate.

Have You Forgotten II Remember The Time?

Friday, September 11th, 2009
The girl whose drinks refresh the soul
then said these words to Gilgamesh:
“Remember always, mighty king,
that gods decreed the fates of all
many years ago. They alone are let
to be eternal, while we frail humans die
as you yourself must someday do.
What is best for us to do
is now to sing and dance.

Danny P. Jackson, The Epic of Gilgamesh Tablet X, Column III

Then Enkidu said to Gilgamesh,

“You who have walked beside me, steadfast

through so many dangers, remember me,

never forget what I have endured.”

Stephen Mitchell, Gilgamesh: A New English Version

163 Now when the Lady of the Gods came nigh,
164. She lifted up the priceless jewels which Anu had made according to her desire, [saying]
165. O ye gods here present, as I shall never forget the sapphire jewels of my neck
166. So shall I ever think about these days, and shall forget them nevermore!
167. Let the gods come to the offering,
168. But let not Enlil come to the offering,
16q. Because he took not thought and made the cyclone,
170. And delivered my people over to destruction.”

E.A. Wallis Budge, The Epic of Gilgamesh

Play and cuídate.

how we should think about the future

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

If you hear any noise

It’s just me and the boys

George Clinton, “The Mothership Connection”

Thank you very much, Richard, and I am delighted to be here in these new headquarters. I have been often to, I guess, the mother ship in New York City, but it’s good to have an outpost of the Council right here down the street from the State Department. We get a lot of advice from the Council, so this will mean I won’t have as far to go to be told what we should be doing and how we should think about the future.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, CFR Foreign Policy Address 7/15/09

Chemtrails en el Aire

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

WASHINGTON (AP) — The president’s new science adviser said Wednesday that global warming is so dire, the Obama administration is discussing radical technologies to cool Earth’s air.

John Holdren told The Associated Press in his first interview since being confirmed last month that the idea of geoengineering the climate is being discussed. One such extreme option includes shooting pollution particles into the upper atmosphere to reflect the sun’s rays. Holdren said such an experimental measure would only be used as a last resort.

“It’s got to be looked at,” he said. “We don’t have the luxury of taking any approach off the table.”

***

But Holdren noted that shooting particles into the air — making an artificial volcano as one Nobel laureate has suggested — could have grave side effects and would not completely solve all the problems from soaring greenhouse gas emissions. So such actions could not be taken lightly, he said.

Still, “we might get desperate enough to want to use it,” he added.

AP 4/8/09

After Holdren’s comments hit the net, he was quick to clarify, “Relax, dudes, it was just, like, an idea, okay?“  Nearly a year ago, the CFR brought in CMU’s Jay Apt and M. Granger Morgan for a Workshop on Unilateral Planetary Scale Geoengineering to discuss such ideas; last month, Granger also contributed to this Foreign Affairs article, which concludes, “It is time to take geoengineering out of the closet-to better control the risk of unilateral action and also to know the costs and consequences of its use so that the nations of the world can collectively decide whether to raise the shield if they think the planet needs it.”

If this tech was just “on the table” being debated by think tankers, that’d be one thing; but that it’s in the dang sky being sprayed by tankers is a whole different bucket of spiders.  As for the nations of the world collectively deciding stuff, this tends to happen clandestinely.  Maybe what Morgan is getting at is some kind of digital open global referendum, yeah?

_ Geoengineer my ass (the planet needs it)!

_ Don’t chemtrail me, bro!

Then Al Gore or whoever can declare that more people picked “Geoengineer my ass”, so “the shield” shall be raised by popular mandate… even though it already has been.


“It’s a nuisance to you and I to determine what’s real and what’s not.”

Damn, weatherman…

Thanks We Are Change Pittsburgh and Your Inner Vagabond for the free public screening of Aerosol Crimes yesterday.  The next movie night is May 27, so check their calendar in few weeks to find out what’s playing.

CHEMICAL CHORDS

There’s still no official video for Beck’s track “Chemtrails“, but there is one by Luca Maximilian for Iris Aneas‘ “Chemtrails en el Aire” which I really like.

Here’s a provisional translation of Aneas’ lyrics:

So much time believing that what we see

is composed of water and steam,

but perhaps it is not true

and there is something hidden,

some lines that could be deadly

in the sky/heaven and diagonally,

a network that expands through the air

and kills the sun in the end.

Today I am sad because

there are chemtrails in the air

and I think on my balcony,

Where is the blue sky?

Is it not depraved what is made

before us in broad daylight?

It isn’t all the same to me

to watch it in my city.

Look and verify it,

look and verify it,

some lines that could be deadly

in the sky/heaven and diagonally.

Above they say

they are testing the aerosol

but it kills the sun in the end.

I believed it was a simple plane

like a naïve fish in the sea

that found a shark

and the naïve one has been me.

Today I am sad because

there are chemtrails in the air

and nobody knows it

and I cry from my balcony,

Where is the blue sky?

Something like that.

The Calderón quip at the end of the video (A quién le daña el saber, homicida es de si mismo.) translates to something like, “One who harms knowledge is the same as a murderer.”

Cheers, Iris!

¡Cuídate!

Richard Haass on Colbert Report

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

CFR president Richard Haass talks about his toys.

Haass quips, “A lot of globalization isn’t fun.”

Amen, and then some.  But what is fun?

And for whom?

Are you having fun now, or playing Control’s zero-fun game?

What’s the most fun you’ve ever had?

And what fresh, novel fun could you have in the future?

Any futurological speculation or Utopian planning which neglects the concept of fun is, IMHO, baloney.  Control is inherently anti-fun because it uses fear (fun’s antithesis) to move its little “toys” around the holographic game board it projects.  Even when it casts itself as pro-fun, Control in effect says, “Do my awful bidding, else no fun for you,” using the fear of not-fun to get what it wants: your energy.

But if fun is fun (Aristotle) and not-fun is also fun (Buddha) and the fun you take is equal to the fun you make (me), then Control’s dire ultimatum becomes absurdly… funny.

Expand your concept of fun and be/have/make fun no matter what.

Sow the wind with fun today and reap the fun-filled whirlwind tomorrow.Choose fun constantly and instantiate your highest/best/most intense fun immediately.

Play and cuídate.