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originally posted by: Ocelot
originally posted by: jude11
He was able to board the United Airlines flight to Houston he was scheduled to work and was met early this morning in Houston by FBI agents and health workers from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC).
So after being injected with an unknown substance he was allowed to board and fly back on the plane with the passengers without testing or quarantine at the scene of the attack?
Quarantined only after arriving in the US.
Curious.
Peace
I thought so too. Why would they risk this person getting in the plane without having any idea what he was injected with?
originally posted by: jude11
originally posted by: Ocelot
originally posted by: jude11
He was able to board the United Airlines flight to Houston he was scheduled to work and was met early this morning in Houston by FBI agents and health workers from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC).
So after being injected with an unknown substance he was allowed to board and fly back on the plane with the passengers without testing or quarantine at the scene of the attack?
Quarantined only after arriving in the US.
Curious.
Peace
I thought so too. Why would they risk this person getting in the plane without having any idea what he was injected with?
So as to carry whatever it was back to the US?
Also, were the other passengers quarantined as well on their return? Can't see that in the news.
Peace
originally posted by: jude11
He was able to board the United Airlines flight to Houston he was scheduled to work and was met early this morning in Houston by FBI agents and health workers from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC).
So after being injected with an unknown substance he was allowed to board and fly back on the plane with the passengers without testing or quarantine at the scene of the attack?
Quarantined only after arriving in the US.
Curious.
Peace
originally posted by: Quantum_Squirrel
originally posted by: crazyewok
a reply to: AllSourceIntel
No.
It can be manipulated to become infectious after a couple of hours flight. A virus just doesnt work that fast.
Plus I doubt muslim extremisist ( who are not exactly bright sparks) could even keep viable ebola alive to use as aweapon let have the brain power and equipment to go in to genticaly engineering.
Couldn't they just infect someone with a current Ebola carriers blood? does it die outside the body after a short period of time? ..... and they are getting bright .. look at the production of their videos , its modernization has come on in leaps and bounds because they are getting help from westernized Muslims in the know who wish to fight the cause.
The above to me sounds Exactly the way they would do it if this was a preferred method of attack and if they have been doing it to countless other people who are unaware I dread the outcome, i am not saying i am right you are wrong or vice versa i am just mulling all the possibilities and i am starting to like replying to your mostly no nonsense critical posts
Q
originally posted by: jude11
originally posted by: Ocelot
originally posted by: jude11
He was able to board the United Airlines flight to Houston he was scheduled to work and was met early this morning in Houston by FBI agents and health workers from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC).
So after being injected with an unknown substance he was allowed to board and fly back on the plane with the passengers without testing or quarantine at the scene of the attack?
Quarantined only after arriving in the US.
Curious.
Peace
I thought so too. Why would they risk this person getting in the plane without having any idea what he was injected with?
So as to carry whatever it was back to the US?
Also, were the other passengers quarantined as well on their return? Can't see that in the news.
Peace
originally posted by: crazyewok
originally posted by: jude11
originally posted by: Ocelot
originally posted by: jude11
He was able to board the United Airlines flight to Houston he was scheduled to work and was met early this morning in Houston by FBI agents and health workers from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC).
So after being injected with an unknown substance he was allowed to board and fly back on the plane with the passengers without testing or quarantine at the scene of the attack?
Quarantined only after arriving in the US.
Curious.
Peace
I thought so too. Why would they risk this person getting in the plane without having any idea what he was injected with?
So as to carry whatever it was back to the US?
Also, were the other passengers quarantined as well on their return? Can't see that in the news.
Peace
Why?
He would not be infectious for a number of days. No need to isolate him until he got to a hospital.
en.wikipedia.org...
A person can transmit infection without showing any signs of the disease. Such infection is called subclinical infection. While latent or latency period may be synonymous, a distinction is sometimes made between incubation period, the period between infection and clinical onset of the disease, and latent period, the time from infection to infectiousness. Which is shorter depends on the disease. A person may be a carrier of a disease, such as Streptococcus in the throat, without exhibiting any symptoms. Depending on the disease, the person may or may not be contagious during the incubation period.
www.sciencedaily.com...
Incubation period, also called the latent period or latency period, is the time elapsed between exposure to a pathogenic organism, or chemical or radiation, and when symptoms and signs are first apparent. The period may be as short as minutes, to as long as thirty years in the case of variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.
www.nhs.uk...
The infectious period is not necessarily the same as the incubation period. With some viruses, such as chickenpox, the person may be infectious before symptoms start to show.
A federal air marshal who was stabbed with a syringe at an airport in Nigeria is back at work after officials determined the needle did not appear to contain Ebola or any other dangerous agent, TSA brass announced in a letter to employees on Wednesday.
*****
In a memo to employees Wednesday, TSA boss John Pistole said the unidentified air marshal is back on the job.
“Even more important is that preliminary test results show no Ebola or other threat agents in what was injected,” Pistole said. “More testing, however, is expected.
“While the motive for this attack is unknown, we are working with the FBI as it continues its investigation,” the memo continued. “This disturbing incident reminds us that our mission to protect the American people carries with it inherent dangers.”