| Chemtrails
Through the Ages?
http://fernlothng.freeservers.com/plague_spray.html

I was too lazy to type this up myself, I
figured someone else on the net already had - I edited it a little bit
Forwarded from the New Paradigms Project
[Not Necessarily Endorsed]:
From: earthman hardjube@IHUG.CO.NZ
Anyone who has the book Gods of
Eden by William Bramley should dig it out
and read or reread Chapter 18, The
Black Death starting on page 179. This
book was published in 1989, years
before the Chemtrails. There are places in
that chapter that sound like they
could have been written today.
Below are a few quotes, enough to
give you an idea of the parallels between the
middle age plagues and whats
happening today with the Chemtrails.
The Black Death began in Asia and soon
spread to Europe where it killed
wellover 25 million people (about one third
of Europe's total population) in
less than four years. Some historians put
the casualty figure closer to
35 to 40 million people, or about half of
all Europeans............
Two types of plague are believed to have
caused the Black Death. The
first is the "bubonic" type,
which was the most common. The bubonic form of
plague is characterized by swellings of the
lymph nodes: the swellings
are called "buboes," The buboes
are accompanied by vomiting, fever and
death ... This form of plague is not
contagious between human
beings; it requires an active carrier, such
as a flea. For this reason, many historians
believe that flea-infested rodents caused
the Bubonic Plague ...
The second form of plague contributing
to the Black Death is a highly
contagious type known as
"pneumonic" plague. It is marked by shivering,
rapid breathing and the coughing up of
blood ... This second type of plague
is nearly always fatal and transmits best
in cold weather
and in poor ventilation. Some physicians
today believe it was this second
form, the "pneumonic" plague,
which was responsible for most of the casualties
of the Black Death because of the crowding
and poor hygienic conditions
then prevalent in Europe.
We would normally shake our heads at
this tragic period of human history
and be thankful that modern medicine has
developed cures for these dread
diseases. However, troubling enigmas about
the Black Death still
linger. Many outbreaks occurred in summer
during warm weather in uncrowded
regions. Not all outbreaks of bubonic
plague were preceded by rodent infestation;
in fact, only a minority of cases seemed to
be related to an increase in
the presence of vermin. The greatest puzzle
about the Black Death is how it
was able to strike isolated human
populations, which had no contact with
earlier infected areas. The epidemics also
tended to end abruptly …
A great many people throughout Europe
and other Plague stricken regions
of the world were reporting that outbreaks
of the Plague were caused by
foul-smelling "mists". Those
mists frequently appeared after unusually
bright lights in the sky. The historian
quickly discovers that "mists"
were reported far more frequently and in
many more locations than were rodent
infestations. The Plague years were, in
fact, a period of heavy UFO
activity.
What, then, were the mysterious mists?
There is another very important
way in which plague germs can be
transmitted; through germ weapons. The US
and the Soviet Union today have stockpiles
of biological weapons containing
bubonic plague and other epidemic diseases.
The germs are kept alive in
cannisters which spray the diseases into
the air on thick, often visible,
artificial mists. Anyone breathing in the
mist will inhale the disease.
There are enough such germ weapons today to
wipe out a good portion of
humanity. Reports of identical
disease-inducing mists from the Plague
years strongly suggest that the Black Death
was caused by germ warfare. Let
us take a look at the incredible reports
which lead to that conclusion.
The first outbreak of the Plague in
Europe followed an unusual series of
events. Between 1298 and 1314, seven large
"comets" were seem over
Europe; one was of "awe-inspiring
blackness." To the people of
Europe, these sightings were considered
omens of the Plague, which soon
followed.
It is true that some reported
"comets" were probably just that;
comets ... On the other hand it is
important to note that almost
any unusual object in the sky was called a
"comet." ... This
leads us to wonder how many other ancient
"comets" were actually similar
rocket-like objects. When we are confronted
with an old report of a comet, we
therefore do not really know what kind of
thing we are dealing with unless there
is a fuller description. A report of a
sudden increase in "comets" or
similar celestial phenomena may, in fact,
mean an increase in UFO activity.
The link between unusual aerial phenomena
and the Black Death was
established immediately during the first
outbreaks of the Plague in
Asia.
As one historian tells us: The first
reports (of the plague) came out
of the East. They were confused,
exaggerated, frightening, as reports from
that quarter of the world so often are;
descriptions of storms and
earthquakes; of meteors and comets trailing
noxious gases that killed
trees and destroyed the fertility of the
land.
The above passage indicates that strange
flying objects were doing more
than just spreading disease; they were also
apparently spraying chemical or
biological defoliants from the air. The
above passage echoes the
ancient Mesopotamian tablets, which
described defoliation of the landscape by
ancient Custodial "gods."
The connection between aerial phenomena
and plague had begun centuries
before the Black Death. We saw examples in
our earlier discussion of
Justinian’s plague. We read from another
source about a large plague
that had reportedly broken out in the year
1117 -- almost 250 years before
the Black Death. That plague was also
preceded by unusual celestial
phenomena.
Once the medieval Black Death got
started, noteworthy aerial phenomena
continued to accompany the dread epidemic
…
Sightings of unusual aerial phenomena
usually occurred from several minutes to a year before an outbreak of
Plague.
Where there was a gap between such a
sighting and the arrival of the Plague, a second phenomenon was
sometimes reported: The appearance of
frightening human-like figures dressed in
black. Those figures were often seen on the
outskirts of a town or village and
their presence would signal the outbreak of
an epidemic almost immediately.
A summary written in 1682 tells of one
such visit a century earlier:
In Brandenburg (Germany) there appeared in
1559 horrible men of whom at
first fifteen and later on twelve were seen
... the others (had) fearful faces and long scythes,
with which they cut at the oats, so that
the swish could be heard at a great distance, but the
oats remained standing ... The visit of the
strange men to the oat fields was
followed immediately by a severe outbreak
of the Plague in Brandenburg.
This incident raises intriguing
questions: who were the mysterious figures?
What were the long scythe-like
instruments they had that emitted a loud swishing sound?
It appears that the "scythes"
may have been long instruments designed to spray poison or germ-laden gas.
This would mean that the townspeople
misinterpreted the movement of the "scythes" as an attempt
to cut oats when, in fact, the movements were the act of spraying aerosols
on the town.
Similar men dressed in black were
reported in Hungary ... there appeared so many black riders that the
opinion was prevalent that the Turks
were making a secret raid, but who rapidly disappeared again, and
thereupon a raging plague broke out in the neighborhood.
Strange men dressed in black,
"demons" and other terrifying figures were observed in other
European communities. The
frightening creatures were often observed carrying long
"brooms," "scythes," or "swords" that
were used to "sweep" or "knock at" the doors of
people's homes. The inhabitants of those homes fell ill with
plague afterwards. It is from these reports that people created the
popular image of "Death" as a skeleton or demoncarrying a
scythe. The scythe came to symbolize the act of Death mowing down people
like stalks of grain ..
Of all the phenomena connected to the
Black Death, by far the most frequently reported were the strange, noxious
"mists." The vapors were often observed even when other
phenomena were not. Mr. Nohl points out that moist pestilential fogs were
"a feature which preceded the epidemic throughout its whole
course." A great many physicians of the time took it for granted that
the strange mists caused the Plague.
The connection was established at the
very beginning of the Black Death...


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