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originally posted by: AfterTheGoldRush
It is my concern that if the powers that be knock out the internet, then the resisters and 'never vaxxers', the awake and not going to sleep, have no way of coordinating to support each other. a reply to: VulcanWerks
originally posted by: ThatDamnDuckAgain
a reply to: musicismagic
How did they know it was Small Pox so quickly.
It says so on the inscription of the vials. Five viral vials, ten antidotes / vaccines.
originally posted by: scraedtosleep
a reply to: VulcanWerks
He's not saying anything others haven't thought of. It's just common sense. If humans have access to and or create a dangerous virus they will eventually use them on each other.
originally posted by: Troothseeker71
Incorrect that there is only 2 places on earth that store the smallpox samples. Australia also keeps it to name one.
a reply to: VulcanWerks
Build a level 4 biological lab in/near a city of 10 million people.....so during the day I can play around enhancing pathogens into super gain of function killer bugs....then go back to my flat, shower and eat at a ritzy dinner joint in the evening....SURE WHY NOT?? Makes perfect sense
originally posted by: Rolicia
originally posted by: AfterTheGoldRush
It is my concern that if the powers that be knock out the internet, then the resisters and 'never vaxxers', the awake and not going to sleep, have no way of coordinating to support each other. a reply to: VulcanWerks
You do realize that there are more means of communication than the internet, right?
When there’s a will, there’s a way.
Nov... 7, 2002 (CIDRAP News) – The CIA has good evidence that four nations—Iraq, North Korea, Russia, and France—have secret stores of smallpox virus, according to a Washington Post report based on comments from officials speaking anonymously.
An explosion this week in a Russian lab, one of only two labs in the world known to store live samples of the variola virus, which causes smallpox, has raised anew questions that have been asked since the disease was eradicated in 1980.
A researcher at a Merck facility outside of Philadelphia found several vials that were labeled “smallpox,” according to a local TV station.