‘Operation Medicine Delivery’… Is This the Precursor Leading to Forced Door-to-Door Innoculations?

 

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As the FDA fights to allow people with ailments to seek prescription medications over-the-counter, we receive a perfectly timed e-mail from a reader in Minnesota. Adan Salazar – Video

This past weekend she received in her home mailbox an empty pill
bottle and a flyer informing that she’s part of a test group.

Hers and
about 37,000 other MN addresses were “volunteered” to be guinea pigs in
“Operation Medicine Delivery,” a joint project to “see how fast postal
teams can deliver medicine to homes in an emergency.” Seems mildly
quaint at first.

Here’s the transcribed text of the flyer people received (our reader was kind enough to transcribe):

“You should have received a sealed empty medicine bottle
in your mailbox today. It was put there as part of a test called
Operation Medicine Delivery.

The purpose is to see how fast postal
workers can deliver medicine to homes in an emergency. This is only a
test. There is no emergency now. And we have no reason to believe one
will happen soon. You do not need to do anything. You can just recycle
the bottle.

In a real emergency, we may need to get medicine to many
people quickly. The Minnesota Department of Health has been working with
the US Postal Service, local police and sheriffs on a plan for
delivering medicine.

Postal delivery is just one way of getting medicine
to people quickly. We will need to do that if – for example- Minnesota
is ever the target of a bioterrorist attack.

Again, there is no
emergency right now. This is only a test. For more information, go to:
www.health.state.mn.us”

As can be assumed, this wasn’t all Minnesota’s idea. The MDH (Minnesota Department of Health) site
lists the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Center for
Disease Control, local public health and law enforcement, and emergency
management agencies all as partners in the project.

And it wasn’t just the postal service making the deliveries:
“simulated emergency medicine will be delivered by teams of postal
service volunteers and law enforcement officers in regular postal service vehicles.”

Also, Minnesota isn’t the first to test this
out: “The idea of using postal delivery teams to deliver emergency
preventive medicine has already been tested, on a limited basis, in
Boston, Philadelphia, and Seattle.”

Upon further reading, we learn this is all part of a larger “public health initiative” known as the Cities Readiness Initiative, a federally funded CDC project.

So why all the fuss? It appears as though the CDC is genuinely
looking out for the safety of its citizens. We know this to almost never be the case.
“The medical-industrial complex,” as Ethan A. Huff, author of the
aforementioned FDA article, explains, “is primarily concerned with drug
company profits over safety.”

Our reader’s main concern was that this could lead to more intrusive
methods of delivering medicines: “This really concerns me. Have you
heard this happening in other parts of the country? Next they will be
wanting to do door to door vaccinations.”

A bit more reading and we see that the CRI is trying to do just that:
“The Cities Readiness Initiative helps communities prepare for public
health emergencies where it may be necessary to get medications and vaccines to people quickly.”

Do you know how a law enforcement officer might respond if you decline the vaccine they were ordered to give you? Not too well.

There also seems to be an awful lot of mentions of the idea of a ‘bio
attack,’ instigating a public fear factor. One of Minnesota’s papers, the Star Tribune,
featured an article that asked:

“What if an airborne anthrax attack
struck the Twin Cities? How would millions of Minnesotans get the
medicine to survive?” Another press release
begins: “The scenario might be a widespread, life-threatening
infectious disease outbreak. Or it might be a deliberate bioterror
attack, targeting the entire metro area, using a deadly agent like
anthrax.”

Rhetoric like this is used to warm people up to the idea of a
bio-terror attack. As we are in the business of calling out false flags,
the only reason there would be a biological attack is if our own
government orchestrated it themselves. They create the problem, then
pose as the saviors.

The federal government is using Operation Medicine Delivery to gauge the public’s response to receiving medication from a postal worker, but what’s their real purpose?

Are they acclimating the public to receive medications from anyone who says so?

Could this eventually lead to forced door-to-door “emergency” vaccinations? Or, as Kurt Nimmo writes, is this just a feeble attempt to keep the bogus war on terror alive?

 

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Adan Salazar – May 9, 2012 – InfoWars

 

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