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Abort Mission! Run Forest Run!

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The decision was made to abort the mission.

(Notice the baby’s leg position. This is how these artificial creatures feed. Why are they wearing baby carriers with the baby positioned outward? When they have always carried the baby towards the body.)

abort 
1 verb If an unborn baby is aborted, the pregnancy is ended deliberately and the baby is not born alive.
2 verb If someone aborts a process, plan, or activity, they stop it before it has been completed.

If you don’t have eyes to SEE, You better wear glasses like DMC.

(Ignore the Hollywood gloss, what is the movie really saying?)

Traumatic brain injury is a signature wound of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. But the military still has no objective way of diagnosing it in the field.

Brain Injuries Are Common in Battle. The Military Has No Reliable Test for Them.

Ayn al Asad Air Base in western Iraq after an Iranian missile attack on Jan. 8. The number of service members experiencing symptoms associated with brain injuries has since topped 100. 

U.S. troops at Ayn al Asad Air Base in western Iraq hunkered down in concrete bunkers last month as Iranian missile strikes rocked the runway, destroying guard towers, hangars and buildings used to fly drones.

When the dust settled, President Trump and military officials declared that no one had been killed or wounded during the attack. That would soon change.

A week after the blast, Defense Department officials acknowledged that 11 service members had tested positive for traumatic brain injury, or TBI, and had been evacuated to Kuwait and Germany for more screening. Two weeks after the blast, the Pentagon announced that 34 service members were experiencing symptoms associated with brain injuries, and that an additional seven had been evacuated. By the end of January the number of potential brain injuries had climbed to 50. This week it grew to 109.

The Defense Department says the numbers are driven by an abundance of caution. It noted that 70 percent of those who tested positive for a TBI had since returned to duty. But experts in the brain injury field said the delayed response and confusion were primarily caused by a problem both the military and civilian world have struggled with for more than a decade: There is no reliable way to determine who has a brain injury and who does not.

Top military leaders have for years called traumatic brain injury one of the signature wounds of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan; at the height of the Iraq war in 2008, they started pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into research on detection and treatment. But the military still has no objective tool for diagnosing brain injury in the field. Instead, medical personnel continue to use a paper questionnaire that relies on answers from patients — patients who may have reasons to hide or exaggerate symptoms, or who may be too shaken to answer questions accurately.

(Image, Take your sh+t and leave.)

The military has long struggled with how to address so-called invisible war wounds, including traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder. Despite big investments in research that have yielded advances in the laboratory, troops on the ground are still being assessed with the same blunt tools that have been in use for generations.

The problem is not unique to the military. Civilian doctors struggle to accurately assess brain injuries, and still rely on a process that grades the severity of a head injury in part by asking patients a series of questions: Did they black out? Do they have memory problems or dizziness? Are they experiencing irritability or difficulty concentrating?

“It’s bad, bad, bad. You would never diagnose a heart attack or even a broken bone that way,” said Dr. Jeff Bazarian a professor of emergency medicine at the University of Rochester Medical Center. “And yet we are doing it for an injury to the most complex organ in the body. Here’s how crazy it gets: You are relying on people to report what happened. But the part of the brain most often affected by a traumatic brain injury is memory. We get a lot of false positives and false negatives.”

Without a good diagnosis, he said, doctors often don’t know whether a patient has a minor concussion that might require a day’s rest, or a life-threatening brain bleed, let alone potential long-term effects like depression and personality disorder. 

At Ayn al Asad, personnel used the same paper questionnaires that field medics used in remote infantry platoons in 2010. Aaron Hepps, who was a Navy corpsman in a Marines infantry company in Afghanistan at that time, said it did not work well then for lesser cases, and the injuries of many Marines may have been missed. During and after his deployment, he counted brain injuries in roughly 350 Marines — about a third of the battalion.

After the January missile attack, Maj. Robert Hales, one of the top medical providers at the air base, said that the initial tests were “a good start,” but that it took numerous screenings and awareness among the troops to realize that repeated exposure to blast waves during the hourlong missile strikes had affected dozens.

Traumatic brain injuries are among the most common injuries of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, in part because armor to protect from bullet and shrapnel wounds has gotten better, but they offer little protection from the shock waves of explosions. More than 350,000 brain injuries have been reported in the military since 2001.

The concrete bunkers scattered around bases like Ain al Assad protect from flying shrapnel and debris, but the small quarters can amplify shock waves and lead to head trauma.

The blasts on Jan. 8, one military official said, were hundreds of times more powerful than the rocket and mortar attacks regularly aimed at U.S. bases, causing at least one concrete wall to collapse atop a bunker with people inside.

Capt. Geoff Hansen was in a Humvee at Ayn al Asad when the first missile hit, blowing open a door. Then a second missile hit.

“That kind of blew me back in,” he said. “Blew debris in my face so I went and sat back down a little confused.”

(Note: I included the image to this story.) From the below link, To ensure their own survival, parasites alter the appearance and behavior of their hosts. SEE, https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/top-10-real-life-body-snatchers-116692496/) 

A tangle of factors make diagnosing head injuries in the military particularly tricky, experts say. Some troops try to hide symptoms so they can stay on duty, or avoid being perceived as weak. Others may play up or even invent symptoms that can make them eligible for the Purple Heart medal or valuable veteran’s education and medical benefits.

(Note: Pay Attention to words used, A tangle of factors… And odd word usage or order, stay on duty, (or?) avoid being perceived as weak.)

And sometimes commanders suspect troops with legitimate injuries of malingering and force them to return to duty. Pentagon officials said privately this week that some of the injuries from the Jan. 8 incident had probably been exaggerated. Mr. Trump seemed to dismiss the injuries at a news conference in Davos, Switzerland, last month. “I heard they had headaches,” he said. “I don’t consider them very serious injuries relative to other injuries I have seen.”

In the early years of the war in Iraq, troops with concussions were often given little medical treatment and were not eligible for the Purple Heart. It was only after clearly wounded troops began complaining of poor treatment that Congress got involved and military leaders began pressing for better diagnostic technology.

Damir Janigro, who directed cerebrovascular research at the Cleveland Clinic for more than a decade, said relying on the questionnaire makes accurate diagnosing extremely difficult.

“You have the problem of the cheaters, and the problem of the ones who don’t want to be counted,” he said. “But you have a third problem, which is that even if people are being completely honest, you still don’t know who is really injured.”

In civilian emergency rooms, the uncertainty leads doctors to approve unnecessary CT scans, which can detect bleeding and other damage to the brain, but are expensive and expose patients to radiation. At the same time doctors miss other patients who may need care. In a war zone, bad calls can endanger lives, as troops are either needlessly airlifted or kept in the field when they cannot think straight.

Mr. Janigro is at work on a possible solution. He and his team have developed a test that uses proteins found in a patient’s saliva to diagnose brain injuries. Other groups are developing a blood test.

Both tests work on a similar principle. When the brain is hit by a blast wave or a blow to the head, brain cells are stretched and damaged. Those cells then dispose of the damaged parts, which are composed of distinctive proteins. Abnormal levels of those proteins are dumped into the bloodstream, where for several hours they can be detected in both the blood and saliva. Both tests, and another test being developed that measures electrical activity in the brain, were funded in part by federal grants, and have shown strong results in clinical trials. Researchers say they could be approved for use by the F.D.A. in the next few years.

The saliva test being developed by Mr. Janigro will look a bit like an over-the-counter pregnancy test. Patients with suspected brain injuries would put sensors in their mouths, and within minutes get a message that says that their brain protein levels are normal, or that they should see a doctor.

But the new generation of testing tools may fall short, said Dr. Gerald Grant, a professor of neurosurgery at Stanford University and a former Air Force lieutenant colonel who frequently treated head injuries while deployed to Iraq in 2005.

Even sophisticated devices had trouble picking up injuries from roadside bombs, he said.

“You’d get kids coming in with blast injuries,” he said, “and they clearly had symptoms, but the CT scans would be negative.”

He was part of an earlier effort to find a definitive blood test, which he said in an interview was “the holy grail.” But progress was slow. The grail was never found, he said, and the tests currently being developed are helpful for triaging cases, but too vague to be revolutionary.

“Battlefield injuries are complex,” he said. “We still haven’t found the magic biomarker.”

Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/15/us/brain-injuries-military.html

The parasites are placed in the food and water. There is largely no way to avoid it if you are confined to a military diet. (i.e. rely on them for your substance.)

Always be mindful of what happens in another part of the land. Because it may rear its ugly head on your shore. 

Afghan Pedophiles Get Free Pass From U.S. Military, Report Says

New York “Times” Jan. 23, 2018

On 5,753 occasions from 2010 to 2016, the United States military asked to review Afghan military units to see if there were any instances of “gross human rights abuses.” If there were, American law required military aid to be cut off to the offending unit.

Not once did that happen.

That was among the findings in an investigation into child sexual abuse by the Afghan security forces and the supposed indifference of the American military to the problem, according to a report released on Monday by the Special Inspector General for Afghan Reconstruction, known as Sigar.

The report, commissioned under the Obama administration, was considered so explosive that it was originally marked “Secret/No Foreign,” with the recommendation that it remain classified until June 9, 2042. The report was finished in June 2017, but it appears to have included data only through 2016, before the Trump administration took office.

The report released on Monday was heavily redacted, and at least in the public portions it did little to answer questions about how prevalent child sexual abuse was in the Afghan military and police, and how commonly the American military looked the other way at the widespread practice of bacha bazi, or “boy play,” in which some Afghan commanders keep underage boys as sex slaves. 
 

“Although DOD and State have taken steps to identify and investigate child sexual assault incidents, the full extent of these incidences may never be known,” the report said, referring to the departments of Defense and State.

Sigar said it had opened an investigation into bacha bazi at the request of Congress and in response to a 2015 New York Times article that described the practice as “rampant.” The article said that American soldiers who complained had their careers ruined by their superiors, who had encouraged them to ignore the practice.
Read the rest of the story, https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/23/world/asia/afghanistan-military-abuse.html

U.S. Soldiers Told to Ignore Sexual Abuse of Boys by “Afghan” Allies Click link for story. 

LASTLY, avoid anything that says SMART (example, Smart Water, would have some sort of Nanotechnology, hydrogel in it.)

________________________________________________

When the Men are in trouble, the Women come on-line  (Click Link)

I have seen our Men be attacked by parasitic predators.

While conducting the research and investigations into the missing Women and Children I would, too often, come across our Men in compromising positions. Whether locked in a car with a so-called White man explaining themself to the point of tears while the car’s air conditioning is running so loud I could hear it. (They often blow scopolamine (or some other mind altering substances) out of the vents.) To seeing “White men” hugged-up on so-called Black men while they sat looking dazed. Now our men despise their women; when historically they have never been like that before.

“Black” man give him back his wars, pick-up your sh+t and leave.


There is No next “lifetime”. This is it. Make your move, be belligerent! Don’t agree to anything and don’t sign (signature) anything. If you feel you must put something, write RESCIND OFFER. NO CONSENT!

Source: DoMoreGoodDeeds.Wordpress.com (Abort Mission! Run Forest Run! | Do More Good Deeds! (wordpress.com)

Scopolamine, World’s Deadliest Drug | Do More Good Deeds! (wordpress.com)

BELLIGERENT CLAIMANT, BELLIGERENT CLAIMANT | Do More Good Deeds! (wordpress.com)

The System vs. The People: A Gross Injustice, The System vs. The People: A Gross Injustice | Do More Good Deeds! (wordpress.com)



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    Total 2 comments
    • Grimes

      In the video, Don’t Cha

      Important things to note from the video: The red head woman hugs the brown girl, as the lyrics are saying “leave it alone…” then she does a flip! I am showing you this because these people spoke to each other through CHANGES THEY MADE to movies and videos. This is why it is ,Extremely important to be for TEAM ME. (yourself)! https://domoregooddeeds.wordpress.com/2021/08/09/team-me-and-fk-their-shet-up/

      So Watch the video and Break it down Frame by Frame.

    • Grimes

      Covid Bugs (Shedding and other such creatures)

      Have you seen little white floating things in the air? Maybe you’ve thought they could be seeds or even bugs?
      (That title comes from this news article. https://www.wvlt.tv/content/news/What-are-those-white-tufts-floating-in-the-air-448483203.html THIS IS IMPORTANT, READ IT.)

      There are lots of tiny little bugs floating in the air.
      A lot of which clogs the pores of your skin and scalp.

      There are important areas to keep clean of floating dust particles (tiny microscopic bugs). Those areas are: Arm pits, Genitals (private parts), Chest (breast) and Back (especially the Spin and shoulder/back muscles). Keep handy wipes with you to keep those areas clean of dust particles. Also keep a little spray bottle mixed with a little bleach and water too! These particles can clog your pores or enter the body.

      If the dust particles clog or enters the body you may experience a Rash, or in extreme case Skin Peeling.

      Talcum powder (and baking soda) can help with keeping the skin dry, as these dust particles seem to require moisture to move and enter the body.

      Another area to keep clean of dust particle buildup is the scalp and hair. Massage baking soda onto your scalp to clean and remove any buildup of dust particles. It can also be used to rid the scalp and hair of lice or other types of bugs.

      Sprinkle some Baking Soda on a paper towel, napkin or plate. Wet scalp/ hair, dip fingers into Baking Soda then massage…

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