9/11 Illnesses Get Worse

3 07 2008

SUSAN EDELMAN | NYPost.com

Of 10,000 Ground Zero workers suing the city, medical records show 67 percent suffer respiratory ailments and 45 percent have a gastrointestinal disease, their lawyers claim.

The numbers, filed in court last night, aim to rebut the city’s argument that 30 percent have “only nominal injuries” and that serious claims are not proven.

The lawyers say they’re still collecting records from Mount Sinai Hospital, which has treated thousands of 9/11 responders.

“As information continues to be received, there is a clear picture that these plaintiffs’ conditions are tending to get worse, not better,” the lawyers say.
Read the rest of this entry »



The USS Liberty and U.S./Israeli Covert Cooperation

8 06 2008

Today marks the 41st anniversary of the USS Liberty incident. Although perceived by many as a purely hostile attack on the part of Israel, recent documentaries make a strong case that the Liberty incident was a failed False Flag attempt, with the intent of drawing the U.S. into an attack on Egypt during the 6 Day War, which would have led to a massive bloodbath, and possibly a larger confrontation with the USSR. Further, Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara and President Lyndon B. Johnson were fully aware of what was going on that day, yet the Liberty was still not given air cover. Proceeding from the possibility that the Liberty incident was a conscious, tandem act of deception, I offer a brief survey of U.S./Israeli covert cooperation.

Read the rest of this entry »



You Can Help Save Lives

13 03 2008

      

 If you live in New York area, please donate your blood platelets to help save Greg Quibell who developed Leukemia after working at Ground Zero. Click here to learn more.

John Feal, AnnMarie Baumann and Glen Klein have donated their platelets at North Shore University Hospital this week for Greg Quibell. Please join them!

Or donate to help NYPD 9/11 Hero Kevin O’Connor






Bad Behavior has blocked 185 access attempts in the last 7 days.