貌似水很深。买提看到的,自己参考。 ================================================================ http://www.mitbbs.com/article_t/Military/56222941.html 美帝比较难圆的是去年8月确实紧急关停一个军方的P4 https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/05/health/germs-fort-detrick-biohazard.html Deadly Germ Research Is Shut Down at Army Lab Over Safety Concerns Problems with disposal of dangerous materials led the government to suspend research at the military’s leading biodefense center. By Denise Grady Aug. 5, 2019 Safety concerns at a prominent military germ lab have led the government to shut down research involving dangerous microbes like the Ebola virus. “Research is currently on hold,” the United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, in Fort Detrick, Md., said in a statement on Friday. The shutdown is likely to last months, Caree Vander Linden, a spokeswoman, said in an interview. The statement said the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention decided to issue a “cease and desist order” last month to halt the research at Fort Detrick because the center did not have “sufficient systems in place to decontaminate wastewater” from its highest-security labs. But there has been no threat to public health, no injuries to employees and no leaks of dangerous material outside the laboratory, Ms. Vander Linden said. In the statement, the C.D.C. cited “national security reasons” as the rationale for not releasing information about its decision. The institute is a biodefense center that studies germs and toxins that could be used to threaten the military or public health, and also investigates disease outbreaks. It carries out research projects for government agencies, universities and drug companies, which pay for the work . It has about 900 employees. The shutdown affects a significant portion of the research normally conducted there, Ms. Vander Linden said. The suspended research involves certain toxins, along with germs called select agents, which the government has determined have “the potential to pose a severe threat to public, animal or plant health or to animal or plant products.” There are 67 select agents and toxins; examples include the organisms that cause Ebola, smallpox, anthrax and plague, and the poison ricin. In theory, terrorists could use select agents as weapons, so the government requires any organization that wants to handle them to pass a background check, register, follow safety and security procedures, and undergo inspections through a program run by the C.D.C. and the United States Department of Agriculture. As of 2017, 263 laboratories — government, academic, commercial or private — had registered with the program. The institute at Fort Detrick was part of the select agent program until its registration was suspended last month, after the C.D.C. ordered it to stop conducting the research. The shutdown was first reported on Friday by the Frederick News-Post. The problems date back to May 2018, when storms flooded and ruined a decades -old steam sterilization plant that the institute had been using to treat wastewater from its labs, Ms. Vander Linden said. The damage halted research for months, until the institute developed a new decontamination system using chemicals. The new system required changes in certain procedures in the laboratories. During an inspection in June, the C.D.C. found that the new procedures were not being followed consistently. Inspectors also found mechanical problems with the chemical-based decontamination system, as well as leaks, Ms. Vander Linden said, though she added that the leaks were within the lab and not to the outside world. “A combination of things” led to the cease and desist order, and the loss of registration, she said. Dr. Richard H. Ebright, a molecular biologist and bioweapons expert at Rutgers University, said in an email that problems with the institute’s new chemical-based decontamination process might mean it would have to go back to a heat-based system “which, if it requires constructing a new steam sterilization plant, could entail very long delays and very high costs.” Although many projects are on hold, Ms. Vander Linden said scientists and other employees are continuing to work, just not on select agents. She said many were worried about not being able meet deadlines for their projects. Missteps have occurred at other government laboratories, including those at the Centers for Disease Control and the National Institutes of Health. And in 2009, research at the institute in Fort Detrick was suspended because it was storing pathogens not listed in its database. The army institute also employed Bruce E. Ivins, a microbiologist who was a leading suspect — but who was never charged — in the anthrax mailings in 2001 that killed five people. Dr. Ivins died in 2008, apparently by suicide. -at-military-lab-amid-safety-concerns.html 给出的原因是 The biodefense center studies dangerous microbes that could be used to threaten the military or the American public, such as organisms causing Ebola, smallpox, anthrax and plague. The CDC issued a "cease and desist order" in July 2019 to halt the center's research because it lacked " sufficient systems in place to decontaminate wastewater," the center said in a statement. 这个被关停的军方生物实验室是研究Ebola,天花,炭疽, 鼠疫等相关病毒的实验室。 之后的2个月,美国就爆出了电子烟导致死亡的不明肺炎。2,051例确诊,死亡总人数已 达39人。大致和新冠死亡率吻合。 一个猜想就是,那个研究所有了泄露,才被关闭的,可能当时新冠病毒就流出来了。后 面变异了,再流到其他国家。 ================================================================
Deadly Germ Research Is Shut Down at Army Lab Over Safety Concerns Problems with disposal of dangerous materials led the government to suspend research at the military’s leading biodefense center.
By Denise Grady Aug. 5, 2019
Safety concerns at a prominent military germ lab have led the government to shut down research involving dangerous microbes like the Ebola virus.
“Research is currently on hold,” the United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, in Fort Detrick, Md., said in a statement on Friday. The shutdown is likely to last months, Caree Vander Linden, a spokeswoman, said in an interview.
The statement said the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention decided to issue a “cease and desist order” last month to halt the research at Fort Detrick because the center did not have “sufficient systems in place to decontaminate wastewater” from its highest-security labs.
But there has been no threat to public health, no injuries to employees and no leaks of dangerous material outside the laboratory, Ms. Vander Linden said.
In the statement, the C.D.C. cited “national security reasons” as the rationale for not releasing information about its decision.
The institute is a biodefense center that studies germs and toxins that could be used to threaten the military or public health, and also investigates disease outbreaks. It carries out research projects for government agencies, universities and drug companies, which pay for the work . It has about 900 employees.
The shutdown affects a significant portion of the research normally conducted there, Ms. Vander Linden said.
The suspended research involves certain toxins, along with germs called select agents, which the government has determined have “the potential to pose a severe threat to public, animal or plant health or to animal or plant products.” There are 67 select agents and toxins; examples include the organisms that cause Ebola, smallpox, anthrax and plague, and the poison ricin.
In theory, terrorists could use select agents as weapons, so the government requires any organization that wants to handle them to pass a background check, register, follow safety and security procedures, and undergo inspections through a program run by the C.D.C. and the United States Department of Agriculture. As of 2017, 263 laboratories — government, academic, commercial or private — had registered with the program.
The institute at Fort Detrick was part of the select agent program until its registration was suspended last month, after the C.D.C. ordered it to stop conducting the research.
The shutdown was first reported on Friday by the Frederick News-Post.
The problems date back to May 2018, when storms flooded and ruined a decades -old steam sterilization plant that the institute had been using to treat wastewater from its labs, Ms. Vander Linden said. The damage halted research for months, until the institute developed a new decontamination system using chemicals.
The new system required changes in certain procedures in the laboratories. During an inspection in June, the C.D.C. found that the new procedures were not being followed consistently. Inspectors also found mechanical problems with the chemical-based decontamination system, as well as leaks, Ms. Vander Linden said, though she added that the leaks were within the lab and not to the outside world.
“A combination of things” led to the cease and desist order, and the loss of registration, she said.
Dr. Richard H. Ebright, a molecular biologist and bioweapons expert at Rutgers University, said in an email that problems with the institute’s new chemical-based decontamination process might mean it would have to go back to a heat-based system “which, if it requires constructing a new steam sterilization plant, could entail very long delays and very high costs.”
Although many projects are on hold, Ms. Vander Linden said scientists and other employees are continuing to work, just not on select agents. She said many were worried about not being able meet deadlines for their projects.
Missteps have occurred at other government laboratories, including those at the Centers for Disease Control and the National Institutes of Health. And in 2009, research at the institute in Fort Detrick was suspended because it was storing pathogens not listed in its database. The army institute also employed Bruce E. Ivins, a microbiologist who was a leading suspect — but who was never charged — in the anthrax mailings in 2001 that killed five people. Dr. Ivins died in 2008, apparently by suicide.
-at-military-lab-amid-safety-concerns.html
给出的原因是 The biodefense center studies dangerous microbes that could be used to threaten the military or the American public, such as organisms causing Ebola, smallpox, anthrax and plague. The CDC issued a "cease and desist order" in July 2019 to halt the center's research because it lacked " sufficient systems in place to decontaminate wastewater," the center said in a statement.
貌似水很深。买提看到的,自己参考。 ================================================================ http://www.mitbbs.com/article_t/Military/56222941.html 美帝比较难圆的是去年8月确实紧急关停一个军方的P4 https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/05/health/germs-fort-detrick-biohazard.html Deadly Germ Research Is Shut Down at Army Lab Over Safety Concerns Problems with disposal of dangerous materials led the government to suspend research at the military’s leading biodefense center. By Denise Grady Aug. 5, 2019 Safety concerns at a prominent military germ lab have led the government to shut down research involving dangerous microbes like the Ebola virus. “Research is currently on hold,” the United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, in Fort Detrick, Md., said in a statement on Friday. The shutdown is likely to last months, Caree Vander Linden, a spokeswoman, said in an interview. The statement said the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention decided to issue a “cease and desist order” last month to halt the research at Fort Detrick because the center did not have “sufficient systems in place to decontaminate wastewater” from its highest-security labs. But there has been no threat to public health, no injuries to employees and no leaks of dangerous material outside the laboratory, Ms. Vander Linden said. In the statement, the C.D.C. cited “national security reasons” as the rationale for not releasing information about its decision. The institute is a biodefense center that studies germs and toxins that could be used to threaten the military or public health, and also investigates disease outbreaks. It carries out research projects for government agencies, universities and drug companies, which pay for the work . It has about 900 employees. The shutdown affects a significant portion of the research normally conducted there, Ms. Vander Linden said. The suspended research involves certain toxins, along with germs called select agents, which the government has determined have “the potential to pose a severe threat to public, animal or plant health or to animal or plant products.” There are 67 select agents and toxins; examples include the organisms that cause Ebola, smallpox, anthrax and plague, and the poison ricin. In theory, terrorists could use select agents as weapons, so the government requires any organization that wants to handle them to pass a background check, register, follow safety and security procedures, and undergo inspections through a program run by the C.D.C. and the United States Department of Agriculture. As of 2017, 263 laboratories — government, academic, commercial or private — had registered with the program. The institute at Fort Detrick was part of the select agent program until its registration was suspended last month, after the C.D.C. ordered it to stop conducting the research. The shutdown was first reported on Friday by the Frederick News-Post. The problems date back to May 2018, when storms flooded and ruined a decades -old steam sterilization plant that the institute had been using to treat wastewater from its labs, Ms. Vander Linden said. The damage halted research for months, until the institute developed a new decontamination system using chemicals. The new system required changes in certain procedures in the laboratories. During an inspection in June, the C.D.C. found that the new procedures were not being followed consistently. Inspectors also found mechanical problems with the chemical-based decontamination system, as well as leaks, Ms. Vander Linden said, though she added that the leaks were within the lab and not to the outside world. “A combination of things” led to the cease and desist order, and the loss of registration, she said. Dr. Richard H. Ebright, a molecular biologist and bioweapons expert at Rutgers University, said in an email that problems with the institute’s new chemical-based decontamination process might mean it would have to go back to a heat-based system “which, if it requires constructing a new steam sterilization plant, could entail very long delays and very high costs.” Although many projects are on hold, Ms. Vander Linden said scientists and other employees are continuing to work, just not on select agents. She said many were worried about not being able meet deadlines for their projects. Missteps have occurred at other government laboratories, including those at the Centers for Disease Control and the National Institutes of Health. And in 2009, research at the institute in Fort Detrick was suspended because it was storing pathogens not listed in its database. The army institute also employed Bruce E. Ivins, a microbiologist who was a leading suspect — but who was never charged — in the anthrax mailings in 2001 that killed five people. Dr. Ivins died in 2008, apparently by suicide. -at-military-lab-amid-safety-concerns.html 给出的原因是 The biodefense center studies dangerous microbes that could be used to threaten the military or the American public, such as organisms causing Ebola, smallpox, anthrax and plague. The CDC issued a "cease and desist order" in July 2019 to halt the center's research because it lacked " sufficient systems in place to decontaminate wastewater," the center said in a statement. 这个被关停的军方生物实验室是研究Ebola,天花,炭疽, 鼠疫等相关病毒的实验室。 之后的2个月,美国就爆出了电子烟导致死亡的不明肺炎。2,051例确诊,死亡总人数已 达39人。大致和新冠死亡率吻合。 一个猜想就是,那个研究所有了泄露,才被关闭的,可能当时新冠病毒就流出来了。后 面变异了,再流到其他国家。 ================================================================ gvcc 发表于 3/12/2020 2:44:00 PM
Deadly Germ Research Is Shut Down at Army Lab Over Safety Concerns Problems with disposal of dangerous materials led the government to suspend research at the military’s leading biodefense center.
By Denise Grady Aug. 5, 2019
Safety concerns at a prominent military germ lab have led the government to shut down research involving dangerous microbes like the Ebola virus.
“Research is currently on hold,” the United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, in Fort Detrick, Md., said in a statement on Friday. The shutdown is likely to last months, Caree Vander Linden, a spokeswoman, said in an interview.
The statement said the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention decided to issue a “cease and desist order” last month to halt the research at Fort Detrick because the center did not have “sufficient systems in place to decontaminate wastewater” from its highest-security labs.
But there has been no threat to public health, no injuries to employees and no leaks of dangerous material outside the laboratory, Ms. Vander Linden said.
In the statement, the C.D.C. cited “national security reasons” as the rationale for not releasing information about its decision.
The institute is a biodefense center that studies germs and toxins that could be used to threaten the military or public health, and also investigates disease outbreaks. It carries out research projects for government agencies, universities and drug companies, which pay for the work . It has about 900 employees.
The shutdown affects a significant portion of the research normally conducted there, Ms. Vander Linden said.
The suspended research involves certain toxins, along with germs called select agents, which the government has determined have “the potential to pose a severe threat to public, animal or plant health or to animal or plant products.” There are 67 select agents and toxins; examples include the organisms that cause Ebola, smallpox, anthrax and plague, and the poison ricin.
In theory, terrorists could use select agents as weapons, so the government requires any organization that wants to handle them to pass a background check, register, follow safety and security procedures, and undergo inspections through a program run by the C.D.C. and the United States Department of Agriculture. As of 2017, 263 laboratories — government, academic, commercial or private — had registered with the program.
The institute at Fort Detrick was part of the select agent program until its registration was suspended last month, after the C.D.C. ordered it to stop conducting the research.
The shutdown was first reported on Friday by the Frederick News-Post.
The problems date back to May 2018, when storms flooded and ruined a decades -old steam sterilization plant that the institute had been using to treat wastewater from its labs, Ms. Vander Linden said. The damage halted research for months, until the institute developed a new decontamination system using chemicals.
The new system required changes in certain procedures in the laboratories. During an inspection in June, the C.D.C. found that the new procedures were not being followed consistently. Inspectors also found mechanical problems with the chemical-based decontamination system, as well as leaks, Ms. Vander Linden said, though she added that the leaks were within the lab and not to the outside world.
“A combination of things” led to the cease and desist order, and the loss of registration, she said.
Dr. Richard H. Ebright, a molecular biologist and bioweapons expert at Rutgers University, said in an email that problems with the institute’s new chemical-based decontamination process might mean it would have to go back to a heat-based system “which, if it requires constructing a new steam sterilization plant, could entail very long delays and very high costs.”
Although many projects are on hold, Ms. Vander Linden said scientists and other employees are continuing to work, just not on select agents. She said many were worried about not being able meet deadlines for their projects.
Missteps have occurred at other government laboratories, including those at the Centers for Disease Control and the National Institutes of Health. And in 2009, research at the institute in Fort Detrick was suspended because it was storing pathogens not listed in its database. The army institute also employed Bruce E. Ivins, a microbiologist who was a leading suspect — but who was never charged — in the anthrax mailings in 2001 that killed five people. Dr. Ivins died in 2008, apparently by suicide.
-at-military-lab-amid-safety-concerns.html
给出的原因是 The biodefense center studies dangerous microbes that could be used to threaten the military or the American public, such as organisms causing Ebola, smallpox, anthrax and plague. The CDC issued a "cease and desist order" in July 2019 to halt the center's research because it lacked " sufficient systems in place to decontaminate wastewater," the center said in a statement.
2/2 美国疾控中心主任被抓了个现行。零号病人是什么时候在美国出现的?有多少人被感染?医院的名字是什么?可能是美军把疫情带到了武汉。美国要透明!要公开数据!美国欠我们一个解释!
赶紧转给川普,强烈要求美国给中国一个道歉,强烈要求美国给世界一个道歉,lol
他是代表中国官方的吧?
是,他是外交部发言人之一。
今天mitbbs菌斑几头人渣五毛都在渲染是美军投毒,
这些畜生不如的东西告诉大家,中国共产党是人类的公敌,是比COVID-19更加可怕的病毒
这不就和Pompeo泼华为脏水,Cotton放炮武毒所造毒,是一样的行为么?
只要你有能力,我认为你有动机,不管有没有证据,先泼你一身屎再说
你要被迫自证清白,就是为我提供进一步阴谋论的材料
说到底,这种言论就不是为了发掘什么真像,而是互相造势洗脑的手段
赵立坚和Cotton或者Pompeo相比,还说不清谁更troll呢。你咋光悲愤中国人造谣,不悲愤美国人造谣?
美国对华友好人士,经此一疫,以后就该绝种了吧。互相憎恨的大国,想着就瑟瑟发抖。见证一个又一个历史时刻,唉,大家都好好活着啊。
你懂不懂什么是民主体制? 从你的发言就知道你是一个奴才
指控华为是有证据的
我关注华为案子两年,到目前为止没有任何证据表明华为监控过任何人。反方向的affidavit(审查华为软件没有发现任何疑点)倒是有好几件了
不影响美国普通人一听到华为就条件反射spyware
什么是洗脑,这就叫洗脑。
对着洗呗。打得一拳开,免得百拳来。美国住了这么久,还不明白这个道理?
不是正在引渡孟碗舟吗,这些都是公开审理的,法庭上会公布证据的,当然你可以去质疑任何证据,一切都是透明的
这还要证据吗?武汉这么多天都看见的啊。这都是什么奇怪的脑回路?要是其他国家传入的,就这个病毒一个月就可以把医疗系统整崩溃的威力,其他国家会瞒得住?
美华是美国人又不是中国人,有什么倒霉的? 这个病毒就应该叫武汉病毒和中国病毒因为它是从那个地方产生的
就是啊,这个病传染性那么强,怎么可能瞒得住
美国司法部竟然没向五毛提供证据?!真是太不专业,太不讲道理了
spyware好像没实证,和伊朗得交易呢?加上不透明的公司背景,夺取技术和市场的手段,确实让人忌惮。
反正都开打了,就各凭手段吧,把华为唱成白莲花就不需要了。
新冠是RNA病毒,不到冬季可能传染性还不强,加上那时候病毒还没变异。
意大利伊朗是病毒测序和最初的不一样,应该是变异成了更强的毒株。
变异更强,简直太可怕了
所以你看东岸这么惨,基本都是意大利输入进来的,属于强力毒株。纽约今天又大爆发了。
中国太多的没脑眼瞎的愚民,要不也不会有这么多阴谋论。从只传黄种人,到流感死亡人数,一个接一个无耻的阴谋论。直接把证据拿出来甩在ccp 脸上让他们闭嘴,让全世界看清ccp 的无耻行为不好吗?省的那几只外交狗到处乱咬。
同学,讲点基本事实好吧。如果是美国这边始发,就算夏天没传开,case也肯定比中国多。一旦入冬了,那也该是美国这边先爆炸的好吧。要变也是美国先变异。把这锅往美国头上扣,这是脑子有病吧。
还有电子烟就更胡扯了。电子烟肺炎都不传染,难道和新冠区别还不明显么?
真是对你们这帮五毛无语了。。。。
美国政府始终把人民的健康放在第一位,它是民选政府受人民的监督!你去FDA的网站看看,几乎每天都有食品或其它商品被政府强制召回或商家主动回收从市场上由于食品被查出污染或可能的污染。 CDC 进行类似的监督工作,并且让人民知情。粪坑国的问题是老百姓是奴才,死了都不知道是怎么死的
我能问问为啥六毛都用拼音做ID吗?
哈哈哈哈哈,你去CDC网站上看看,然后告诉我美国现在的总检测人数,总感染人数是多少呗?
昨天CDC的数字还停留在460多人呢。现在CDC还坚持每两天更新一次数字呢
老子是美国人,老子就爱骂美国政府乱象。你们这些坐船来的天天跪舔政府,为什么不滚回中国?
生理性不适
这个帖子跟胡锦涛那个一对比,哎,为什么中国变成这样了?海外华人真的很惨
你看,又来了一个例子,甭管有没有证据都要往华为头上扣屎盆子,这不就是我说的洗脑产物?
你有没有想过这是第三方app缓存的图片?图片在源头被审查了,app抓下来的不就是这种东西么?
这不是我说的,是水木社区ITExpress版讨论2天的共识。那个版常年骂政府骂墙,你们不用担心这个结论是带节奏
之前还有人说华为的健康app 缓存用户数据去服务器也是spyware,对这种偏执狂真是无语。google那才是真的在扫描你的相册,缓存你的app数据,这帮人又假装不知道了
不要用华为,微信
5毛你不仅要治脑子,还要治一下眼睛
我是美国人,我就爱骂美国政府里的乱象。这是我的天赋人权
你们这些政庇天天跪舔美国政府里的烂人烂事,你们为什么不滚回中国?
中国现在在国际上和朝鲜差不多,跳梁小丑一个。。。前段时间那么多厥词,美国媒体都没正眼瞧过。也就美华自己搁这儿生气
另外,一个劲儿说别人不抄作业。拜托有点逼数,中国政府在别的国家眼里就是西朝鲜疯子。。。
美国华人对这事最好低调点,或者直接跳出来反驳
简直是窝囊死了。。。
这样的指控不好回应,如果美国不公布可靠的证据,那就落入土共的口实,非常被动。
如果公布出来真是土共制毒,隐藏数据,土共的罪行暴露,怎么制裁?另外土工对欧洲是拉拢,
给意大利和其他国家什么物资和医生援助,对美国施压,如果美国无法和欧洲达成一致,那制裁也没有任何意义,
反而在国际上被孤立,本来禁了欧洲航班,欧洲人已经不满意了
土共的策略就是把川普搞下台,反正民主党都容易被蓝金黄
这还需要圆?笑死~~以这次病毒的传染能力,8月份泄露但现在,美国医院早垮了吧?美国医护得死多少,还轮得上美国和全世界华人贱得往国内寄口罩?害得全世界都缺口罩!
美国8月份若感染,加拿大、墨西哥、澳大利亚等早爆发了吧?只有墙内人才自以为是的认为美国人最爱的旅游胜地是中国吧?如果我记得没错,美国人票选的比较喜欢的亚洲旅游地是日本和泰国,中国还排不上头两名吧?就算美国人最爱去中国旅游,也是北京上海广州香港等地先爆发,怎么可能轮到武汉?
这是好事,共产党善于欺骗,平时外人容易被忽悠,看不清这个党的邪恶本质
但是这次赵立坚,王毅,华春莹,大外宣的粉红五毛们不得不出来现形,
很好的告诉了全世界共产党是个什么政权。
那日本人根本就没有在夏威夷被确诊为流感。