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  • #16
    Can CWD jump to humans? Concerns keep rising

    Can CWD jump to humans? Concerns keep rising


    https://www.caller.com/story/news/lo...ing/453371001/
    http://christian-identity.net/forum/...673#post166573
    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...673#post166573


    Amid renewed concern about whether chronic wasting disease can jump from deer to people, a fatal human brain condition in the same family is showing up more often in Wisconsin and nationally.

    It's happening as state testing for the deer disease is down, and hunters routinely opt not to test deer killed in affected zones.

    In 2002, the year CWD was discovered in Wisconsin, six cases of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease were recorded, according to the state Department of Health Services. In two of the last four years, 13 cases have been recorded. That's a 117% increase.

    Nationally, there also has been an increase in cases of Creutzfeldt-Jakob. In 2002, there were 260 cases, compared with 481 in 2015, an 85% increase, according to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    Creutzfeldt-Jakob is closely related to the form of mad cow disease that infected people, primarily in Great Britain, in the late 1990s and early 2000s, after they ate beef from infected cows. Indeed, human mad cow disease is known as variant-Creutzfeldt-Jakob. Both diseases attack the brain, and death usually occurs within a year.

    The increase in Wisconsin comes as chronic wasting disease — which, like Creutzfeldt-Jakob, is caused by infectious agents known as prions — continues to spread among deer. Like its human counterparts, CWD also attacks the brain and is always fatal.

    In Wisconsin, it appeared initially to be confined to a core area of western Dane County and eastern Iowa County. Today, there are 18 counties where CWD has been found in the wild deer population, according to state figures. Nationally, CWD is known to exist in at least 21 states.


    That raises two questions: whether the rise in Creutzfeldt-Jakob cases is statistically significant, and whether it is linked to the spread of CWD.

    Wisconsin officials are skeptical on both counts.

    “The department believes the modest increase in the number of confirmed cases in the state is a reflection of our increased efforts to detect and confirm cases,” Jennifer Miller, a spokesperson for the Wisconsin Department of Health Services, said in an email.

    Since Creutzfeldt-Jakob occurs mainly in people over the age of 60, an aging population also may be factor, she said.

    Miller said that the increased surveillance of Creutzfeldt-Jakob cases began in 2002, when it became a reportable disease with vigorous follow-up. Prior to that, all figures were based on death certificate data.

    Nevertheless, the public health implications of CWD have gained some urgency.

    A study in Canada, where the deer disease also is present, found that macaque monkeys had contracted chronic wasting disease after being fed meat from deer that had tested positive for CWD. The findings are the first known transmissions of the prion disease to a primate from eating infected venison.

    “While no human cases of CWD have been reported to date, the new study findings raise concerns that people who hunt or consume meat from infected animals could be at risk for CWD infection,” Christine Pearson, a spokesperson for the CDC, said in an email.

    Concerns about possible transmission of the disease to humans have led to a two-pronged approach by the CDC: It is looking for unusual cases of human prion disease and attempting to find cases of prion disease in people who may have eaten meat from infected animals. Complicating that process, incubation periods for prion diseases can vary from several years to decades.

    In the meantime, the CDC says meat from infected deer should not be eaten and hunters should have their deer or elk tested if it came from an area where the disease is known to exist.

    For now, the CDC attributes the increase to an aging population, more awareness among neurologists and the use of the National Prion Disease Pathology Surveillance Center at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. The lab is where the brains of people with suspected Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease are sent for analysis and to monitor for any potential new prion diseases in people.


    ____________________________
    I am The Librarian
    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/
    http://www.pastorlindstedt.org/forum/

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    • #17
      Rules and regulations for hunting you need to know before getting in the stand

      Rules and regulations for hunting you need to know before getting in the stand

      By: Austin Hyslip
      Posted: Nov 10, 2017 10:57 PM CST
      Updated: Nov 10, 2017 10:57 PM CST



      http://www.fourstateshomepage.com/ne...tand/855472239
      http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...7242#post17242
      http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...7242#post17242


      Modern gun hunting season opens tomorrow morning, but before you hop in the deer stand, there are some things you need to know. Not only is safety a high priority when hunting, there's also some rules you need to follow and if you don't there could be legal ramifications.

      The Missouri Department of Conservation requires that anyone hunting wear an orange vest and an orange hat. Not wearing this could result in a ticket or fine. Before using your gun, be sure to look it over and make sure the safety is in proper working condition as well as the gun itself. Also make sure to check all equipment for the deer stand, climbing gear as well as the stand.

      Jarid Wilkinson, Conservation Agent: "We will be patrolling the assigned counties that we’re in, taking phone calls as they come in. We’ll also be dealing with multiple issues from trespassing to baiting violations. Like if someone has corn out in front of their stand like they’re not supposed to things like that and just routine things around the county."

      New this year anyone who harvests a deer in a chronic wasting disease management zone like Barry, Dade or Cedar must get their deer checked. There are inspection locations for each county that the hunter will be required to go to.

      We have the list of those locations here.



      Typpycull ZOGland Noose 4 ZOGling Whigger Ass-Clowns
      Across Duh Fruited & Nutted ZOG-Plain


      kzog-tv6.com

      Cum-cum, Cum-cum !!!

      Comment


      • #18
        I got Michigan Started

        I Got Michigan Started


        https://www.detroitnews.com/story/ne...ase/109139526/
        http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...8083#post18083
        http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...8083#post18083



        Michigan deer are suffering from CWD.
        Michigan wardens check deer at mandatory CWD check station from this season

        .


        A deadly disease that threatens to decimate Michigan’s whitetail deer population has shifted northwest from the Lansing area, some 100 miles, new test results show.

        All but one of the new cases of chronic wasting disease in the just-ended 2017 firearm season were discovered in free-ranging deer killed in Montcalm and Kent counties, 40 total, according to the Department of Natural Resources. One case was found in nearby Mecosta County.

        That is far more than nine so-called “zombie” whitetails identified in Ingham and Clinton counties the two previous years. It suggests the always-fatal disease has percolated in Michigan more extensively than previously known.

        “It's clear that Montcalm and Kent have had CWD longer than Ingham and Clinton where we have identified it,” said Chad Stewart, the DNR’s deer specialist. “What we don’t know is the space between (the outbreaks).”

        In all, 50 cases have now been identified in Michigan since the first emaciated, confused deer was killed by police east of Lansing in 2015. Three others were found from two penned deer farms or ranches in Mecosta County.


        Chronic wasting disease is unrecognizable — yet still infectious — in diseased deer in early stages. Its end-stage leaves deer emaciated, listless, drooling and unafraid of humans. Deformed proteins literally eat holes in the animal’s brain. Infectious disease experts caution against eating infected venison.

        The 2017 deer hunting season ended Monday. On Thursday, the state will begin two brief limited hunting seasons to see if wildlife experts can connect the dots between the two outbreaks.

        The special hunts will run through Sunday and Jan. 11-14 in northern Ionia County and eastern Montcalm County in 14 townships, some 500 square miles. Any deer killed must undergo testing for chronic wasting disease.

        “I'm not expecting a lot of deer to be harvested, but if we are able to identify a CWD-positive animal in this area, then it will provide valuable information to inform our management decisions going into next hunting season,” Stewart said.

        The DNR will soon begin capturing and collaring white-tailed deer in the western Upper Peninsula as part of a multi-year study to review herd movement as well as detect if the disease is present.

        “Limiting the spread of CWD is difficult, but even more so here in the U.P. where winter severity results in increased deer movements and yarding behavior that concentrates animals,” said Terry Minzey, DNR U.P. regional wildlife supervisor, in a statement.

        A special task force, meanwhile, is expected to give recommendations Jan. 11 to the state Natural Resources Commission on how to slow the disease that has devastated herds from Wisconsin to Colorado.

        Bans by the state against baiting and feeding in core disease areas expanded Monday.

        “We want to see a serious discussion about baiting and feeding in disease areas where we want to prevent the spread of the disease,” said Amy Trotter, deputy director of Michigan United Conservation Clubs, the state’s largest such organization.

        Michigan United Conservation Clubs has opposed baiting and feeding in the past, saying it congregates deer and assists the spread of infectious disease.

        “From our perspective, these numbers appear to indicate we have a new epicenter,” Trotter said of recent mandatory testing of hunted deer in high-concern areas. “What we need to know more is, Are we all linked up here? Mid-Michigan may be on the front edge of what direction it is moving.”

        At this point, the best hope is to contain — not eradicate — the disease, she said.

        “They are literally the walking dead,” Trotter said.

        Michigan’s known prevalence of the disease is still small but has the potential to expand greatly. In early stages, deer show no symptoms as they contaminate other deer through contact or soil infected for years from urine or feces.

        Prior to the recent hunting season, less than one in 1,000 white-tails tested positive since the first known free-ranging Michigan case in 2015, according to the DNR.

        By contrast, however, one in 100 deer tested positive in Montcalm County during the just-passed hunting season, 32. About one in 60 deer tested positive in more-limited testing in neighboring Kent County.

        A few were identified outside mandatory testing areas. Few showed symptoms, perhaps indicating the disease is in its early stages.

        Concerns about the disease’s movement rose after a free-ranging deer, a 1.5-year-old buck, was identified in Montcalm County’s Sidney Township in late October. An infected 6-year-old pregnant doe was killed weeks earlier in neighboring Montcalm Township during the youth hunt. Mandatory DNR testing of deer taken there and in parts of Mecosta and Kent were initiated.

        Deer hunting is an estimated $2.3 billion hunting industry in Michigan, with nearly 600,000 hunters participating in the November firearm season alone.

        .


        Pastor Lt-Colonel Fannion Kincaid -- Free-Range Prion-Poisoner



        You met me in "The Devil's Workshop"

        Comment


        • #19
          We’re All Gonna Die

          We’re All Gonna Die


          http://www.voiceofretards.com/blog/were-all-gonna-die/
          http://christian-identity.net/forum/...8657#post18657
          http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...8657#post18657


          Prion poisoning seems to be a favorite theme of Martin’s. I guess it’s some disease that makes deer go batshit, or something like that. He keeps talking about it, but I just don’t see how it will affect anything. Oh yeah, now I remember, it crosses the species barrier and everyone will get sick and die from it.

          Chronic Wasting Disease is what these here deers supposedly get. That sounds more like the typical healthy whigger than an animal, quite frankly.

          Martin usually reserves ample time in his broadcasts to discuss this issue. Whether it truly will catch on and cross the species barrier is anyone’s guess. It seems almost too good to be true.

          I’ll tell you what’s suspicious. In the article linked above, one of those officials in charge of deer made sure to mention that he has no idea where it’s cuming from. That usually means jews are behind it.

          I don’t really get it. I don’t eat deer. And can’t you kill that shit by boiling it? Anyway, prion poisoning is the latest fad in coonspiracy theories. Whether this is a sign of the jewpocalypse or not remains to be seen. So far, I’m not impressed. You know AIDS is fake, right?

          .


          I’M A SICK DEER. CAN’T YOU TELL? DON’T EAT ME
          OR YOU’LL SHIT IN YOUR PANTS LIKE GAYMAMZER OR JEWBOY LINDER
          .


          Comment


          • #20
            Chronic wasting disease threatens Missouri's $1 billion deer hunting culture

            Chronic wasting disease threatens Missouri's $1 billion deer hunting culture


            https://www.caller.com/story/news/lo...ng/1211961002/
            http://christian-identity.net/forum/...8732#post18732
            http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...8732#post18732


            Deer hunting is big business in Missouri.

            Based on numbers from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, all those deer hunting permits, sales of archery gear, rifles and ammunition, hunting clothing, taxidermy services and other hunting-related dollars are worth about $1 billion to the Missouri economy each year.

            But the presence of an insidious ailment called chronic wasting disease might threaten the future of deer hunting in Missouri.

            It's 100 percent fatal in deer and elk that contract it and renders meat inedible, though there have been no confirmed cases of CWD transmission to people, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

            So far, Missouri's wild deer population remains relatively safe from CWD — only 75 confirmed cases have been found since the state conservation department recorded the first case in the wild in 2012. But it's what has happened in other states that worries Missouri wildlife biologists.

            In Colorado, Wyoming, Nebraska, western Kansas and southern Wisconsin, CWD has spread widely in wild deer and elk herds. In the past two years, an outbreak of CWD in northwest Arkansas has resulted in 370 positive tests, mostly in the region's deer.


            There hasn't been an effective and proven way to stop CWD, though one controversial method shows some promise, according to Jasmine Batten, the Missouri Department of Conservation wildlife disease coordinator who is leading the state's effort to halt the disease.

            When CWD is discovered in Missouri, the conservation department targets deer within one to five miles of where the positive test occurred. Landowners and MDC staff shoot a certain number deer in those areas, both to test them for CWD and to remove a greater number of deer that have been exposed to CWD.

            The process is known as targeted culling.

            Fewer infected deer in the population may help slow the pace of the disease's spread and limit the amount of CWD in the soil, plants and water. At least that's the theory, Batten notes, adding that not all deer are killed in a culling area.


            "We learned a lot from the state of Illinois, which has been culling deer for 16 years or longer," Batten said. "Culling decreases the prevalence of CWD, especially compared to its neighbor to the north (Wisconsin). Once the disease becomes too widespread, the chance to limit it really goes down."

            Wisconsin tried culling but stopped the practice after deer hunters and landowners protested. The state went back to monitoring for CWD. The result: CWD began spreading again after culling was halted.

            In Missouri, MDC staff and landowners who agreed to participate in targeted culling have killed approximately 4,600 deer since culling began in 2013. MDC has spent $2.15 million on culling efforts, which includes the cost of lab testing, staff time and payments to meat processors.

            Meat that's free of CWD is returned to landowners or donated to MDC's Share the Harvest program.

            Tainted meat is destroyed.

            CWD: Missouri deer hunters on efforts to curb spread of chronic wasting disease

            During hunting seasons, landowners in designated CWD Core Areas also can get up to five "CWD Management Seals" from MDC that let them take more deer than a typical deer permit allows. MDC reimburses the landowner $60 per deer for the cost of processing the meat.

            The purpose of those seals is to help reduce the deer numbers where CWD has been found and to test more deer for CWD to gauge how deeply the disease has infected deer in those areas.

            Culling 4,600 deer over the past five years might sound like a lot, but it's a small number compared to the 1.36 million deer that Missouri hunters killed in approximately that same time frame.

            If culling works to slow the spread of CWD in Missouri, it's worth it, Batten said.

            "We absolutely have those concerns, that CWD could be a threat to Missouri's long-term hunting culture," she said. "But there's no way around the fact that in these very localized areas where CWD was confirmed, landowners who participate are making a big sacrifice. Deer densities will decrease in these culling areas. But our goal is to slow or stop the spread."

            .

            How CWD works

            CWD is caused by a strange, misshapen protein called a prion that can be transmitted from deer to deer by physical contact. It also is spread by contact with soil, food, and water that have been contaminated through feces, urine, saliva — and carcasses — of infected deer.

            Velvet that bucks rub off from their new antlers? CWD can be transmitted in that soft material. Batten said it's possible, though less likely, that the blood trail left behind from a wounded deer infected with CWD could transmit the disease to other deer.

            CWD: Why chronic wasting disease could change the way Americans hunt forever

            A CWD-infected deer will lose weight and stagger around, eventually dying from the disease. Perhaps more significantly, once a deer dies, those prions can persist in the ground long after the deer decomposes and can continue to infect other deer.

            Even forest fires aren't hot enough to kill prions in the environment.

            Another problem with CWD: It might take 18 months or more for an infected deer to look visibly sick. During that time, though, it's still spreading prions in the environment.

            .

            A growing problem in 23 states
            .

            Nationwide, CWD has been found in 23 states and continues to spread, according to Kip Adams, spokesman for the Quality Deer Management Association. QDMA, based in Georgia, works with hunters, landowners and state conservation agencies to improve the habitat and health of wild deer.

            "CWD is one of the biggest threats to deer hunting and deer management programs," Adams said. "We are seeing population declines in deer herds, especially in Wyoming, and there's been no real success in states keeping it out of their borders."

            Missouri hopes to stop what has happened elsewhere. In states like Colorado, Wyoming and Wisconsin, where CWD is now deeply entrenched, deer herds are diminishing. In Wyoming, 19 percent of the wild deer herd now dies annually from CWD, according to conservation figures.

            While deer hunting is declining nationwide for many reasons, the prevalence of CWD in popular hunting areas is one of them. There is concern that the fear of eating deer or elk contaminated with CWD might deter others from taking up the sport.

            CWD: Can chronic wasting disease jump from deer to humans? Concerns keep rising

            Adams said it's believed that CWD might have jumped from sheep to captive deer in Colorado in the 1960s, possibly through a mutated version of scrapie — a neurological disease in sheep caused by prions.

            "They suspect it went from those captive deer to the wild population," Adams said. "Deer, elk and moose are the only animals that get CWD, and elk are not nearly as susceptible to it as deer."

            He said MDC's intense effort to sample deer for CWD — as well as its culling efforts where CWD is found — is a good approach.

            "Nobody in the country is sampling deer at as high a rate as MDC," he said.

            MDC began testing deer for CWD in 2001, after seeing the disease spread in neighboring states. It now encourages voluntary testing of deer killed by hunters, as well as mandatory testing in 31 counties where CWD has been confirmed, or where it's likely to appear, such as southern counties bordering Arkansas.

            While it's true that no human has contracted CWD from handling or eating an infected deer, Adams said the CDC's warning against eating CWD contaminated meat should be strictly followed.

            "We don't know that barrier will always be that way," he said.


            First contact in Missouri
            .

            How did CWD arrive in Missouri? That's a troubling question, according to MDC's Batten.

            She said the first confirmed case was discovered in 2010 in a herd of captive deer at a big-game hunting preserve in northwest Missouri.

            "That detection behind the fence triggered wider testing of our wild herd," Batten said. "In 2012 we had five positives in wild deer within one or two miles of that positive game preserve. We think it's a likely vector, but we can't say with certainty that's where it came from."

            The captive deer at the preserve were destroyed, Batten said.

            Once in Missouri's wild deer, CWD began showing up in pockets around the state. Batten said it is unlikely the disease is spreading in Missouri's herd of approximately 1.2 million deer through natural deer dispersal alone. It is likely that humans are helping to spread the disease, potentially through the movement of infected deer carcasses.

            "It spreads slowly in the environment," Batten said. "We know it's progressing in the state, but we can't say with any certainty how it's spreading. We also can't assume the disease was introduced into the state only that first time."

            The possible link between captive deer and CWD prompted the Missouri Conservation Commission in 2015 to tighten rules on businesses that hold or raise captive deer, requiring higher fences to prevent escapes, more testing for CWD and a ban on importing captive deer into Missouri.

            According to MDC, as of July Missouri had 44 permitted big-game hunting preserves and 138 permitted wildlife breeders with white-tailed deer. Those operators reported about 150 captive deer escaped into the wild between 2012 and 2014.

            Several Missouri deer breeders and big-game hunting preserves sued MDC, claiming captive deer were livestock, not wild animals, that were beyond MDC's authority.

            They succeeded in getting an injunction to stop the implementation of the tougher regulations.

            But in July, the Missouri Supreme Court ruled in favor of MDC, giving it full regulatory control over captive deer and elk and upholding the tougher rules the conservation commission approved in 2015.

            Now that it understands how CWD is affecting Missouri's wild deer, MDC is proposing several new regulations to slow the disease's spread.

            The department will be taking public comment on the proposals, and the earliest any of the rules could realistically go into effect would be the fall of 2019.


            Ongoing efforts
            .

            MDC is offering free CWD sampling and testing of deer harvested anywhere in the state throughout the entire deer hunting season, which runs through Jan. 15. The sampling is voluntary, and hunters can also get free test results for their deer.

            Hunters can have their deer sampled at 11 select MDC offices around the state. Hunters can also take their deer to 64 participating taxidermists and meat processors located in the 48 counties of MDC’s CWD Management Zone.

            Find locations and more information on voluntary CWD sampling at mdc.mo.gov/cwd under “Voluntary CWD Sampling All Season.”

            Hunters can get test results for their CWD-sampled deer online at mdc.mo.gov/CWDTestResults.


            Mandatory CWD sampling Nov. 10 and 11
            .

            MDC will again conduct mandatory CWD sampling in 31 of the 48 counties of its CWD Management Zone during the opening weekend of the fall firearms deer season, Nov. 10 and 11.

            The counties include new ones added to the CWD Management Zone, counties with previous CWD positives, and counties very near previous positives.

            The 31 counties for mandatory CWD sampling are: Adair, Barry, Bollinger, Cape Girardeau, Cedar, Cole, Crawford, Franklin, Grundy, Hickory, Jefferson, Knox, Linn, Macon, Madison, McDonald, Mercer, Moniteau, Ozark, Perry, Polk, Putnam, St. Charles, St. Clair, St. Francois, Ste. Genevieve, Stone, Sullivan, Taney, Warren and Washington.
            Hunters who harvest deer from these counties Nov. 10 or 11 must take their deer — or the head with at least 6 inches of the neck in place — on the day of harvest to one of MDC's 61 CWD mandatory sampling stations. Deer may be presented at any mandatory sampling station.

            Find locations for mandatory CWD sampling at mdc.mo.gov/cwd under “Mandatory CWD Sampling Nov. 10-11.”


            Proper deer disposal to limit CWD
            .

            MDC reminds deer hunters that properly disposing of carcasses of harvested deer is important in limiting the spread of chronic wasting disease. MDC also reminds hunters who harvest deer, elk, or moose outside of Missouri and bring the animals back to follow related regulations to help limit the spread of CWD.

            To help avoid this exposure risk, MDC recommends the following carcass disposal methods:


            Place in trash or landfill: The best way to prevent the spread of CWD is to place carcass remains in trash bags and dispose of them through trash collection or a permitted landfill;

            Bury on site: If you can’t bag and place in trash or a permitted landfill, bury carcass remains at or near where the deer was harvested. Bury deep enough to prevent access by scavengers. Burial will reduce but not eliminate the risks of spreading CWD;

            Leave on site: As a last resort, leave carcass remains on site. While this will not prevent scavengers from scattering potentially infectious parts, the remains will stay in the general area where the deer was taken. If CWD is already present in that area, it will likely remain there and not be moved to another area;

            Do not place in water: It is illegal to dispose of carcasses or remains in streams, ponds, or other bodies of water;

            Do not burn: Only commercial incinerators reaching over 1,800 degrees Fahrenheit can generate enough heat for long enough to destroy the prions that cause CWD.


            ____________________________
            I am The Librarian
            http://whitenationalist.org/forum/
            http://www.pastorlindstedt.org/forum/

            Comment


            • #21




              http://christian-identity.net/forum/...9082#post19082
              http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...9082#post19082






              Pastor Lt-Colonel Fannion Kincaid -- Free-Range Prion-Poisoner



              You met me in "The Devil's Workshop"

              Comment


              • #22
                In 2005, about 200 people ate ‘zombie’ deer meat. Here’s what happened

                In 2005, about 200 people ate ‘zombie’ deer meat. Here’s what happened


                https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/...at/2926840002/
                http://christian-identity.net/forum/...9293#post19293
                http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...293#post192913

                As people wonder what might happen if humans eat meat from "zombie" deer, there is at least one group of people who already know.

                On March 13, 2005, a fire company in Oneida County, New York, fed the meat of a deer that tested positive for chronic wasting disease to 200 to 250 people. The company didn't know the meat was from a diseased deer. Laboratory tests for one of the deer served came back positive for CWD later.

                Because little was known about what happens to people who eat infected meat, the Oneida County Health Department monitored the group's health through a surveillance project. About 80 people who ate the venison agreed to participate. Together with the State University of New York-Binghamton, health experts checked in with the group of mostly white males over the course of six years to see whether they developed any unusual symptoms.

                In a study published in the peer-reviewed medical journal Public Health, researchers found the group had "no significant changes in health conditions." They did report eating less venison after the whole ordeal. Otherwise, observed conditions, including vision loss, heart disease, type 2 diabetes, weight changes, hypertension and arthritis, were credited to old age.

                "It’s the only study I’m aware of that has this progressive follow-up of a known point source contamination where we know the people ate a contaminated animal," researcher Ralph Garruto, professor of biomedical and biological sciences at Binghamton University, told USA TODAY.

                Garruto said his team checks in with the group every two years and plans another follow-up in spring. Though he said the chance of symptoms appearing dwindles with time, there's a small possibility that someone might show signs of the disease.

                "It only takes one case," he said.

                There have been no reported cases of CWD in humans, but the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and state wildlife offices urge hunters to take precautions in areas where the disease has been found in animals. In laboratory studies, CWD has been able to cross species.

                "Right now, most scientists believe there is a pretty strong 'species barrier,' which means that it’s unlikely the disease will jump to a new species," Krysten Schuler, wildlife disease ecologist and co-director at the Cornell Wildlife Health Lab, told USA TODAY.

                But some experts have predicted CWD could one day infect humans. Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, said it's "probable" that humans will come down with the disease after eating meat "in the years ahead."

                .


                ____________________________
                I am The Librarian
                http://whitenationalist.org/forum/
                http://www.pastorlindstedt.org/forum/

                Comment


                • #23
                  'Zombie' deer disease is in 24 states and thousands of infected deer are eaten each year, expert warns

                  'Zombie' deer disease is in 24 states and thousands of infected deer are eaten each year, expert warns

                  Ryan W. Miller, USA TODAY Published 10:15 a.m. ET Feb. 16, 2019
                  Updated 2:13 p.m. ET Feb. 18, 2019


                  https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/...ns/2882550002/
                  http://christian-identity.net/forum/...9319#post19319
                  http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...9321#post19321


                  An infectious disease deadly in deer has spread to 24 states, and experts warned that the ailment – unofficially dubbed "zombie" deer disease – could one day hit humans.

                  Chronic wasting disease, or CWD, has afflicted free-ranging deer, elk and/or moose in 24 states and two Canadian provinces as of January, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.

                  "We are in an unknown territory situation," Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, told USA TODAY on Friday.

                  Last week, Osterholm testified before his state lawmakers, warning about possible human impacts.

                  "It is probable that human cases of chronic wasting disease associated with consumption with contaminated meat will be documented in the years ahead," he said. "It’s possible the number of human cases will be substantial and will not be isolated events."

                  Osterholm compared the situation to "mad cow" disease in the 1980s and 1990s in the United Kingdom, when there was public doubt that it could spread to humans. According to British news outlet the Independent, 156 people died in the U.K. in the 1990s because of "mad cow" disease.

                  No cases of CWD have been reported in humans, but studies have shown it can be transmitted to animals other than deer, including primates, according to the CDC.

                  For humans, eating infected deer meat would be the most likely way for it to spread to people, the CDC says.

                  About 7,000 to 15,000 animals infected with CWD are eaten each year, and that number could rise by 20 percent annually, according to the Alliance for Public Wildlife, which Osterholm cited in his testimony.

                  Scientists can't say for sure that CWD will cross over and infect humans, but as time goes on and more infected meat is consumed, the likelihood increases, Osterholm said.

                  "It's like a throw at the genetic roulette table," he said.

                  .


                  Chronic Wasting Disease in the ZOGland, Jan 2019

                  How much of this caused by Prion-Poisoning?
                  .

                  CWD is a kind of illness known as prion diseases or transmissible spongiform encephalopathies.

                  "If Stephen King could write an infectious disease novel, he'd write it about prions," Osterholm told lawmakers.

                  In deer, CWD spreads through contaminated bodily fluids, tissue, drinking water and food, the CDC says.

                  The disease affects deer's brains and spinal cords through abnormal prion proteins that damage normal prion proteins, the CDC said. The cells collect and eventually burst, leaving behind microscopic empty spaces in the brain matter that give it a “spongy” look, according to the North Carolina Wildlife Commission.

                  Symptoms, which can take more than a year to develop, include drastic weight loss, lack of coordination, listlessness, drooling, excessive thirst or urination, drooping ears, lack of fear of people and aggression.

                  The disease was first identified in captive deer in the late 1960s in Colorado and in wild deer in 1981, the CDC said. According to the health agency, CWD could be more widespread than 24 states.

                  "Once CWD is established in an area, the risk can remain for a long time in the environment. The affected areas are likely to continue to expand," the CDC says on its website.

                  Many state regulations are in place aimed at preventing humans from eating the infected meat.

                  In North Carolina, anyone transporting cervid (animals from the deer family) carcass parts into the state must follow strict processing and packaging regulations. Indiana stepped up its monitoring efforts, though testing is not mandatory.

                  "If you put this into a meat processing plant ... this is kind of a worst case nightmare," Osterholm told lawmakers.

                  Osterholm said more needs to be done in the way of testing deer meat. Though some states test, it needs to be done quicker and with a more robust infrastructure to prevent infected deer from being consumed, he said.

                  The CDC recommended that hunters test deer before eating meat in affected areas. If a deer looks sick or acts strangely, hunters should not shoot or handle it or eat its meat, the health agency said.

                  Osterholm said hunters should be cautious and follow state regulations if they're in an affected area. "No one is asking anyone to stop hunting," he said.

                  "People have to understand the significance of this. We can't wait until we have the first cases coming," Osterholm told lawmakers.



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                  • #24
                    Andy Ostmeyer: Talking trout, elk, CWD and the loss of a signature species with Sara Parker Pauley

                    Andy Ostmeyer: Talking trout, elk, CWD and the loss of a signature species with Sara Parker Pauley


                    https://www.joplinglobe.com/news/lif...fa2804f04.html
                    http://christian-identity.net/forum/...9851#post19851
                    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...9851#post19851


                    Sara Parker Pauley was in Joplin last week to check on the progress of the Shoal Creek Conservation Education Center.

                    Pauley, director of the Missouri Department of Conservation, was accompanied by Aaron Jeffries, deputy director, and joined by others, including Kevin Badgley, manager of the center, formerly the Wildcat Glades Conservation & Audubon Center.

                    The building has been closed since last year, when the National Audubon Society withdrew from the partnership. Since then, MDC has found a number of problems that it is working to repair as well as getting displays ready.

                    Jeffries said the hope is that the building will open some time this summer.

                    “We ask for just a little more patience here,” Pauley added. “This is a priority for our commission.”

                    I used the opportunity to ask them about a number of other changes and challenges in Missouri, including:

                    Chronic wasting disease

                    This is not just a Missouri issue but a regional and even a national challenge, as evidenced by the explosion of CWD cases in northern Arkansas in the past few years that have now pushed into Southwest Missouri. Nearly 600 CWD positives have popped up in Arkansas in the past three years, with Carroll and Boone counties, along the state line, among the hot spots. Last year, a buck taken in Stone County, Missouri, in early November tested positive for CWD. It was the first detection of CWD in this corner of the state. Another positive soon turned up in Taney County.

                    There’s little doubt that more encroachment is likely to follow in Southwest Missouri.

                    MDC biologists are meeting with their counterparts in other states to find out what is working and to coordinate strategies, but Pauley said the disease is here to stay for now, adding: “We don’t believe, in my lifetime, we will rid ourselves of this disease.”

                    She added: “We are committed to keeping the spread as low as possible.”

                    This week, the agency proposed new regulations for transporting deer carcasses and added carcass-disposal rules for meat processors and taxidermists. If approved, the regulations would become effective next year. The agency is seeking public comment on the proposed regulations through early August at short.mdc.mo.gov/Z49. More changes will be coming that will affect management and hunting. We’ll keep you updated.

                    CWD was first found in Missouri at private big-game breeding and hunting sites in 2010 and 2011; the first positive cases in free-ranging deer were found in 2012 near those private breeding and hunting sites.

                    According to a statement, MDC has tested more than 130,000 deer for the disease since the first cases were detected; the number of positive cases is currently at 116.

                    Elk hunting

                    The department began stocking elk in Missouri nearly a decade ago at Peck Ranch, part of a patchwork of public and private land between the Current and Eleven Point rivers.

                    A different subspecies of elk was once home in the Ozarks, and Henry Rowe Schoolcraft, the first person to leave behind a detailed account of the Ozarks in 1818-1819 — before statehood and settlement — gives the impression that elk were common. In fact, Schoolcraft wrote about coming upon an elk antler of “astonishing size” near the North Fork River in 1818 that he and a companion hung in an oak tree to signal to other visitors that humans had passed that way. They named a nearby spring Elkhorn Spring.

                    Missouri’s native elk were eventually wiped out, but with the reintroduction, the plan has always been to restore elk hunting in the state, perhaps as early as next year. It will be the first elk hunting in Missouri in more than 130 years. The last elk killed in Missouri was in 1886 in Texas County.

                    How many permits will be available and other details are still be sorted out.

                    “We have already been presenting to our commission what that elk season might look like,” Pauley said. “Right now our fingers ares still crossed for a 2020 season.”

                    Trout fishing

                    I just returned from a four-day camping trip to Roaring River State Park. Our oldest son called and wanted to take our 2-year-old granddaughter on her first camping trip. She ate her first campfire-cooked s’mores, spent her first night in a tent, toted around a firefly lantern, hiked her first Ozark trail and even helped me reel in her first rainbow.

                    When the kids were little, and I paid for their trout tags, and later their first licenses, the cost for a day of fishing at Roaring River could add up, particularly if you include the cost of the gas, a meal at the lodge or in Cassville, and the sundry incidentals we always end up buying in the park store when we go fishing, everything from ice cream to sun block.

                    Like a lot of area families, we have accrued a stringer full of memories around Roaring River and its trout fishing, memories that are priceless, and with a new generation, we hope to add more.

                    That’s why I’m not too worried about the latest change, and I guess I am not alone.

                    MDC recently proposed that, beginning next year, the cost of an annual trout permit go from $7 to $10 for anglers ages 16 and older and from $3.50 to $5 for anglers ages 15 and younger. The cost of a daily trout tag to fish Roaring River or the other state trout parks — Maramec Spring Park, Bennett Spring State Park and Montauk — will go from $3 to $4 for adults and from $2 to $3 for those 15 years of age and younger.

                    (A trout permit is required to possess trout, except in trout parks where a daily trout fishing tag is required during the catch-and-keep season from March 1 to Oct. 31. A trout permit also is required for winter fishing in trout parks during the catch-and-release season and for fishing year-round in Lake Taneycomo upstream from the U.S. Highway 65 bridge. A fishing permit also is required, unless you qualify for an exemption.)

                    Pauley noted that MDC has not raised permit prices in two decades, and according to MDC, in 2003, the cost to raise a trout in the hatcheries and stock them in streams was about $1 per fish; by 2017, it was twice that, just for the food and labor. That does not include maintaining the hatchery infrastructure.

                    She also said the state has spent more than $11 million in recent years repairing and improving its hatcheries. Last fall, it broke ground on a $1.9 million renovation at Roaring River that involves a number of improvements. The work was ongoing when we were there last weekend, delayed, no doubt, by the rains.

                    MDC is accepting public comments on the proposed changes through early August at short.mdc.mo.gov/Z49.

                    “We are getting hundreds of comments,” Pauley said. “By and large the comments we have received on that particular issue have been positive.”

                    Prairie chickens

                    I asked these MDC leaders if there is much that can be done for the greater prairie chicken in the region.

                    The short answer is “No.”

                    It’s apparent now that Southwest Missouri will soon lose its greater prairie chicken population. Despite a saturation stocking effort several years ago involving hundreds of birds, the population at Taberville Prairie Conservation Area, north of El Dorado Springs, is close to being wiped out, and the population at the nearby Wah’ Kon-Tah Prairie has failed to sustain itself.

                    Which means there likely will soon be just one small population left in a single county in northern Missouri along the Iowa border.

                    This has been a long fight — in 1907, the greater prairie chicken became the first species in the state given protection from hunting. Max Alleger, grassland biologist for MDC, recently told the Globe: “It’s tough to be an 1800s bird in the 21st century.”

                    The bird was once abundant in Missouri, numbering in the hundreds of thousands, but then the state also had 15 million acres of tallgrass prairie.

                    As recently as 1999, the state had a greater prairie chicken population estimated at 1,000.

                    Badgley said that in 2004, when he worked at Prairie State Park, they had a winter flock of 67 birds; there was a confirmed sighting in the park of a greater prairie chicken this winter, but it has been the only bird seen in that park in several years.

                    The problem is that only one-half of 1% of native prairie remains in Missouri today.

                    Jeffires said, “We can make good prairie chicken habitat, we just can’t make enough of it.”

                    In other words, it’s not just tough to be an 1800s bird in the 21st century, it may be impossible.

                    Andy Ostmeyer is the metro editor for The Joplin Globe. Contact him at aostmeyer@joplinglobe.com.





                    All the shit unfit to print

                    http://www.joplinglobe.com

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                    • #25
                      A mysterious, devastating brain disorder is afflicting dozens in one Canadian province

                      A mysterious, devastating brain disorder is afflicting dozens in one Canadian province

                      From deer to whiggers & anglo-mezstizos in Soviet Canuckistani

                      By Amanda Coletta
                      May 12, 2021 at 12:19 p.m. CDT



                      https://www.washingtonpost.com/world...brain-disease/
                      http://christian-identity.net/forum/...2872#post22872
                      http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...2873#post22873
                      .


                      Alier Marrero is stumped.

                      For years, the neurologist in Moncton, New Brunswick, has seen patients with symptoms common to Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, a fatal brain disorder that affects 1 in 1 million people each year.

                      But diagnostic testing for the rare neurodegenerative syndrome keeps coming back negative, more patients with similar symptoms have turned up each year, and Marrero hasn’t found another cause. Federal public health officials last year identified the cases as a cluster meriting further investigation.

                      Now Marrero and scientists and doctors from Canada and around the world are playing detective in a medical whodunit, racing to untangle the cause of the brain disorder that has afflicted 48 people, six of whom have died, in the Moncton area and New Brunswick’s Acadian peninsula.

                      Those afflicted with the condition — called the New Brunswick Cluster of Neurological Syndrome of Unknown Cause, for now — have ranged in age from 18 to 85. Symptoms began in 2018 and onward for many of them, but one case in 2015 was identified retrospectively last year.

                      “The suffering is immense … because it’s beyond physical,” said Marrero, who works at Moncton’s Dr. Georges-L.-Dumont University Hospital Center. “There’s also the neuropsychiatric and moral suffering of the patients that is only partially relieved by medications.”

                      An otherwise healthy 75-year-old woman arrived at the Dumont emergency department last June. For months, she had experienced unexplained weight loss and what she described to her daughter as a “trembling sensation” inside her body. Her legs felt heavy. One arm was shaking involuntarily.

                      The daughter said her mother is one of the cases under investigation.

                      “My mother goes to bed at night and questions herself: ‘Am I going to wake up tomorrow, and if I do wake up tomorrow, am I going to be able to walk or talk?’” she said. “Because there’s no answers. Nobody knows anything. There’s no reasoning. There’s nothing.”

                      Patients experience a constellation of symptoms, Marrero said, usually beginning with atypical anxiety, depression and muscle aches or spasms. They develop sleep disorders, including insomnia so severe that they sleep only a few nights a week or not at all, even with medication. Their brains are atrophied.

                      Many experience blurred vision, memory problems, teeth chattering, hair loss and trouble with balance. Some, including those in palliative care being administered strong medications, suffer from uncontrollable muscle jerks. Others have rapid and unexplained weight loss and muscle atrophy.

                      Some have hallucinations, including what Marrero said are “terrifying hallucinatory dreams” that leave them afraid to go to sleep, and tactile hallucinations in which they feel as if insects are crawling on them. One symptom, particularly devastating for loved ones, is Capgras delusion, a belief that family members have been replaced by impostors.

                      “The rapidity in the constellation of features is something that — I’ve not seen this before,” said Michael Strong, the neurologist who heads the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.

                      The cluster was detected by the federal public health agency’s Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease surveillance system, which monitors for CJD and other prion disorders. They occur when prions, misfolded proteins, build up and cause normal proteins in the brain to misfold. Under a microscope, the brains of people and animals with prion disorders resemble sponges with small holes.

                      Michael Coulthart, who heads the surveillance system, said it is notified of many suspected cases each year, but only a tiny number are confirmed. The system has identified 36 “definite and probable” cases of CJD in New Brunswick since 1998.

                      The system doesn’t typically follow up on unconfirmed cases; the physician treating the patient is left to search for another diagnosis.

                      Marrero, with one such case in 2015, couldn’t find a satisfying diagnosis. From 2018 on, patients kept showing up with similar symptoms. In 2019, there were 11 cases in New Brunswick that would later be identified as part of the cluster. In 2020, there were 24. Marrero and Coulthart thought they could be dealing with something new.

                      “We say that they were resistant to diagnosis,” Coulthart said. “That’s what had to emerge as a pattern before we started talking about a cluster.”

                      Scientists believe the syndrome has a two-year incubation period. They’re pursuing every clue — sleuthing through environmental exposures to travel histories to diets — to determine its etiology.

                      Marrero has tested his patients’ blood and screened for the presence of zoonotic infectious diseases known to cause neurological symptoms. He has looked for autoimmune disorders, metabolic deficits and cancer. His patients undergo genetic testing. None of it has brought an answer.

                      Testing cerebrospinal fluid for elevated levels of protein markers can help diagnose CJD in life, but Marrero’s patients are negative. Brain autopsies for three of the dead — the gold standard for confirming a diagnosis — have displayed no hint of a known prion disorder. Molecular testing of those samples is underway.

                      “These cases for all intents and purposes by their description should be CJD,” Strong said. “That’s what they sound like and are presenting like, and yet the testing is negative.”

                      One theory is that the syndrome is caused by an entirely new prion disorder. Another is that it’s tied to exposure to an environmental toxin.

                      One toxin that has come under scrutiny is beta-Methylamino-L-alanine, which is produced by cyanobacteria, or blue-green algae blooms. Another is domoic acid, a naturally occurring toxin produced by certain types of algae, that was responsible for a deadly contaminated seafood outbreak in Canada in 1987.

                      In Caraquet, a town of some 4,200 people in the Acadian peninsula, Mayor Kevin Haché said “the biggest problem is the unknown.”

                      “The population is in shock,” Haché said, “to realize that there’s a sickness out there, and we don’t know anything about it, and we don’t know where it’s coming from, and we don’t know what to do to protect ourselves from it.”

                      Across the border in Maine, officials say their disease surveillance and epidemiology teams learned about the cluster in March. Robert Long, a spokesman for the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said no cases with similar characteristics have been reported in the state.

                      New Brunswick has fared relatively well against the coronavirus, but the scientists and doctors who are investigating the new syndrome say it has slowed their work.

                      “The pandemic has put many wrenches in the works,” said Neil Cashman, a neurologist at the University of British Columbia. He’s advising the investigation, mostly over Zoom.

                      Strong agreed.

                      “The worst time for this to have happened is in the middle of a pandemic,” he said.

                      When the coronavirus hit, many non-emergency procedures, including diagnostic imaging and spinal taps, were temporarily canceled. Some patients feared seeking medical aid because they worried about contracting the virus, Marrero said.

                      New Brunswick’s travel restrictions and quarantine rules have complicated efforts to get epidemiologists on the ground to take environmental samples and interview residents.

                      “New Brunswick has been able to divert some new resources to the issue as it gradually became more and more recognized as needing constant attention,” Coulthart said. “But I don’t think we still have all the people engaged that we’re going to have.”

                      Some in the province have expressed frustration at what they’ve said is a lack of transparency from the government. The CJD surveillance system brought the province into its investigation in December, and a draft case definition was compiled in January. But the public wasn’t made aware of the cluster until mid-March, when the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. reported on a memo about the cases sent to New Brunswick physicians that month.

                      When a reporter at a news conference on the coronavirus asked if officials could address the “news of this mysterious neurological syndrome,” Jennifer Russell, the province’s chief medical officer of health, confirmed that more than 40 cases were under investigation.

                      A spokeswoman for New Brunswick’s health department did not respond to a question about why the public first learned about the cluster in a media report.

                      “The Department of Health is committed to continue working closely with our provincial and federal partners to explore and identify all potential causes including food, environmental and animal exposures,” spokeswoman Abigail McCarthy said.

                      Coulthart said the attention the cluster is now drawing leaves him “confident that, in the end, we’re going to arrive at an answer.”

                      Marrero says he tries to sound an optimistic note with his patients and their families.

                      “Fear is understandable,” he said. “But we are working for hope.”


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                      • #26
                        Bill Zippro -- Died of Prion-Poisoning

                        https://larrydablemontoutdoors.blogs...ll-zippro.html

                        .
                        .
                        Bill Zippro, a resident of Joplin, Mo will tell you that his brother died a young man with prions in his brain because he killed and ate a huge buck which was not acting right. His brother told him the buck didn’t make any attempt to escape and he told Bill he thought the deer had been turned loose from a nearby deer farm where they feed deer meat and bone by-products to make bigger antlers.

                        He said his brother was shown to have the prions in his brain and spinal fluid, and the Center for Disease Control in Atlanta Georgia verified it. In humans it is called ‘Cruetzfeldt-Jacobs’ disease and in deer and elk it is called ‘chronic wasting’ disease. They call it ‘mad–cow’ disease in cattle, ‘scrapies’ in sheep. All these are transmissible spongiform disease… all of them should be called that and nothing else regardless of what strain they identify the prions as. Prions are prions! All those diseases involve prions which create holes in the brain.

                        When he died, Zippro’s brother’s family was refused a normal funeral, because his body had to be cremated quickly. Bill Zippro took the frozen deer head all the way to Atlanta to the Center for Disease Control and they would not test it, refusing to let him bring it in. I met in person with Zippro, still emotionally torn up by watching the horror of his brother dying over several weeks with the horrible disease. He told me what he saw with tears in his eyes. I have talked to many family members of men who died of prions to the brain. I wish you could hear what he says but no news agency will talk to him. WHY?

                        The only thing you will ever see on this subject will have to go through the Conservation Department which tells the state’s deer hunters that human’s cannot get the disease. That has proven to be false; horrible misinformation used to keep deer hunter numbers high and revenue from deer tags growing. The variety of names makes most Missourians believe it. All the diseases are a result of something called prions and they are still a puzzlement to most medical people. My daughter, who is a doctor, confirms that if she saw a patient with the early onset of the disease it would be very hard to diagnose. She tells me that in her early years as a doctor, she saw a case of it at the University of Missouri hospital in Columbia. That was about 25 years ago. Other doctors say the same thing. It can be confused with other diseases without a brain biopsy.

                        There was a test done years ago on about 300 people who died of what was presumed to be Alzheimers disease. They created slides from brain tissue of those people and 34 of them had prions in the brain. Those 34 had died of TSE. Zippro thinks the huge deer his brother killed had been kept in captivity. Remember this… The disease is called TSE and if you kill a deer with what the MDC wants to call something else… it is transmissible spongiform encephalopathy and there isn’t one person who swears a human cannot get the disease from a deer who will eat a loin steak from a deer that has TSE or CWD or whatever name they want to give it. It is PRION-IN-BRAIN disease and it has killed hundreds and hundreds of people, including two scientists in Italy who were trying to study. Look it up on the internet… it describes transmissible spongiform encephalopathy as “a disease which affects both mammals and humans. It is always fatal.”


                        The Missouri Department of Conservation fears that if the truth is known about the ‘chronic wasting disease it will cost them a lot of money.

                        They were geared up to start selling non-resident tags for hundreds of dollars to the wealthier out-of-state hunters looking for trophies. That ‘seven-point or greater’ rule put into affect in two thirds of Missouri only a few years ago was to serve that purpose… create more “trophies”. Biologically and enforcement wise it is a ridiculous concept. Some of the older agents told me that confidentially they wouldn’t even attempt to enforce it because of the silliness of it.

                        But hunters looking for trophies do not worry about chronic wasting disease, they don’t intend to eat the deer, they want a cape and a set of antlers, and that is it. From that concept the Conservation Commission did well in setting up a ‘share the harvest’ program which turned over venison the trophy hunters didn’t want to poor families who could use the meat. With mad-deer disease spreading, that program should someday be stopped. No one should take a chance on eating the meat of a sick deer harvested perhaps in some other part of the state just for its antlers.

                        My oldest daughter is a doctor and I question her about the chronic wasting disease and have a hard time getting her to give me hard medical answers. She says it a disease spread by organisms called prions, and there isn’t she can say that the medical profession is absolutely sure of. To a doctor, mad-deer disease or mad-cow disease is known as ‘Creutzfeldt-Jakob’ disease. My daughter has told me that anyone eating venison from a diseased deer is at risk and should never do it. Prions aren’t bacteria and they are not virus. There really isn’t a good definition of exactly what they are! Prions seem to exist in the brain and spinal fluid and possibly bone marrow, but not in blood.

                        What they call Cruetzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans, (nothing more than prion-in-the-brain disease or TSE) was created by feeding meat and bone meal to cattle in England in order to make them heavier and worth more money. The same thing created it in deer and elk in the United States years and years ago, feeding a commercial food with meat and bone meal to herbivores in order to create bigger antlers.
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                        • #27
                          Mad Dog Musings 11 March 2024 Prion-Poisoning the ZOGland in General and South Dakota and Ohio in Particular
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                          .

                          http://whitenationalist.xyz/forum/forum/the-church-of-jesus-christ-christian-aryan-nations-of-missouri/general-discussion-aa/1266-prion-poisoning-in-the-zogland?p=39823#post39823
                          .
                          .
                          Tonight Pastor Mad Dog Lindstedt of the Aryan Nations with LoganHunter covers how ZOG will be destroyed by using a biological warfare agent built by ZOG, i.e. prion poisoning by means of spreading Chronic Wasting Disease -- which is running rampant in the ZOGland and Csnuckistan already.
                          Pastor Lindstedt discusses using biowar against ZOG through "prion poisoning" and how it should be used to gain our freedom from ZOG/Babylon.

                          With Bryan Reo losing in state and federal kort with Stanley County Judge Bridget Da Idjit Mayer telling Bryan Reo attorney Robert Konrad that Stanley County Sheriff Glenn Rathbun and Stanley County DA Tom Mahrer that She wasn't going to force Rathbun to issue a bill of sale for my inheritsnce to Bryan Reo based upon the judgments set aside by the 6th US Circuit Court of Appeals on March 15, 2024.
                          http://bryanreo-lawsuits.xyz/2024/Ma...anley%20Co.pdf

                          Now of course Judge Mayer violated South Dakota State Law 15-6A-15 by ordering Rathbun to sell at Sheriff's sale to Bryan Reo my inheritance prior to the end of the appeals process and then when the 6th Circuit overturned it on Dec 8, 2023 the mad scramble of obeying that Appellate Court's overturn and remand. Bryan Reo and his antifa lawyer Robert Konrad begged her to simply give Reo my property anyways and she declined.

                          But since 1996 after reading "Mad Cow USA" and Michael Crichton's Jurassic Park II The Lost World where dinosaurs were dying of Mad Dino Disease from eating infected sheep protein, I figured that deer dying of Chronic Wasting Disease created in the late 50s and early 60's by penning deer on an Army base with infected sheep with scrapie, a prion disease then turning the deer loose into the wild to spread it to other deer. The first deer with prion disease from these misfolded proteins called "prions" were captured in Ft. Collins in 1967 to where it spread through Colorado to Wyoming, Utah, and Nevada and then into Saskatchewan and Alberta. I recommended that Resistance workers collect deer carcasses in late Feb to March when the deer dying from the winter could be collected and then cooked up in cheap garage-sale pressure cookers and mixed with corn to "prion-poison" deer herd hundreds and thousands of miles away. In 2000 deer with Chronic Wasting Disease were found in Dane County Wisconsin and spread throughout Wisconsin, Illinois, Iowa and Minnesota.

                          Later in 2010 the first instance of prion-poisoning in Missouri was found in Adair County where lives a gut-sick jewboy with jew Ass-GAIDS/Chrons named Alex Linder who was big friends with TraitorGlenn Miller, and Cole County, and Boone County Arkansas whose county seat is Harrison which is the capitol of Christian Identity in the ZOGland so I think it was spread by a Deep-woods DSCIer. Since then it has spread 30 miles a year into Missouri to where it surrounds Newton County where I live.

                          Stephen J. Cannell wrote a novel about ZOG military developing prions to use as a bioweapon for ZOG targetted at certain genetics, in this case niggers and jews called "The Devil's Workshop" in which a mad scientist develops the "Pale Horse Prion." Cannell wrote this book in 1999 and I read it in the Fulton State Nuthouse. I remember getting an e-mail -- probably from Cannell asking if prions could be used as a bioweapon. I wrote back that it could but it was not easily targettable and not something which would work quickly. Cannel made me into a Christian Identity pastor running a gang of racist hobos named Lt. Colonel Fannion Kincaid who was over the top and the white supremacist gang leader.

                          After some A-Team action all is well. The villains are killed or punished.

                          So prions could be used as a deadly bioweapon against ZOG by killing deer, cattle, and whiggers which probably already is happening. Certainly in South Dakota where I was pleased to find out that by 2023 it already hit Stanley County and crossed the Missouri River to Sully County and was up against Minnesota and Nebraska in Union County in SE South Dakota. Instead of feeding deer prion-corn it could be spread by injection into cattle or whiggers thus becoming a bio-terror weapon as well. See the 81 page study by South Dakota: Page 5 has a map of prion-poisoning as of March 2023 in the ZOGland -- and it is spreading quickly the past few years

                          https://gfp.sd.gov/UserDocs/docs/man..._june_2023.pdf


                          I was also pleased to see that it is in three counties northwest of Columbus Ohio. It could also be soread to New York State to deal with civil lawfare against the ZOG-Emperor Drumpf.

                          The point is that prion-poisoning shall be a part of fighting Civil War 2, and should be used as a bio-terror weapon against ZOG/Babylon and its subject ZOGlings.


                          Hail Victory !!!

                          Pastor Martin Lindstedt
                          Church of Jesus Christ Christian / Aryan Nations of Missouri

                          Odysee link:
                          https://odysee.com/@PastorLindstedt:...r24_Prions-f:0
                          video link:
                          https://player.odycdn.com/v6/streams...b5c/1d2019.mp4

                          Pastor Lindstedt's Web Page
                          Pastor Lindstedt's Archive Page & Christian Nationalist Forum

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