- Mr Elkan is obviously a government disinformation plant.
Morgellons disease is now proven without a shadow of a doubt to be nano
technology rum amok. Dr Hilda Staninger will be on Rense . Com internet
radio on Monday Sept. 17 for her 3 hour reveal of all of the lab work as
well as the actual proof of ChemBots, nano arrays and nano wires that have
been reomved from the bodies of morgellons victims.
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- The photos of all will be revealed. Dr Staninger has
information and data collected at four labs including Woodshole at MIT.
This conlusive information has been delevered at a recent conference of
the National Registry of Environmental Professionals.
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- Pandoras box is now open and coverups and smear campaigns
are now useless.
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- Disease or Delusion? New Findings in Morgellons Debate
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- Recent tests lend some credence to the self-proclaimed
sufferers of Morgellons disease, who complain of symptoms that are almost
indentical to ones commonly imagined by paranoiacs and schizophrenics,
writes Daniel Elkan in the
New Scientist (subscription required).
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- The Internet has allowed thousands of Morgellons, as
they call themselves, to group together and call for recognition in recent
years, mainly thanks to the Web site of the nonprofit Morgellons Research
Foundation. (The name comes from a 17th century medical treatise on a similar
condition) Most doctors are skeptical of their claims, however.
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- Morgellons say they have black fibers growing from their
skin and something itchy crawling underneath it. People with a psychiatric
illness known as delusional parasitosis, or DP, complain of the same thing.
Morgellons tend to have other hallmarks of DP, including depression and
a habit of bringing small containers filled with fibers as proof to doctors.
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- "When [individuals with DP] read about Morgellons
disease they get emotional comfort and temporarily feel better about themselves,"
says Jennifer Biglow, a dermatologist at Skin Specialists in Minnesota.
What they need, she says, is antipsychotic drugs.
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- Still, some researchers have found they can't easily
dismiss some of the Morgellons' symptoms, although none of their research
has yet been peer reviewed. Randy Wymore, a pharmacologist at Oklahoma
State University in Tulsa, says his samples of fibers from Morgellons closely
match each other, but not roughly 880 common environmental fibers he has
checked. Tests by other scientists suggest the fibers might be fungi or
that the lesions are due to a bacterium that causes tumors in plants.
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- Robert Bransfield, associate director of psychiatry at
Riverview Medical Center in New Jersey, notes that many Morgellons, unlike
most DP sufferers, were in a normal mental state before they began to complain.
He thinks a parasite might be responsible. Either way, the controversy
has led the Centers for Disease Control to announce a formal investigation
into the condition to hopefully settle it. Robin Moroney
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- http://blogs.wsj.com/informedreader/2007/09/13/disease-or-
- delusion-new-findings-in-morgellons-debate/
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