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| Subject: “Mysterious Hallucinations Spread by Touch” Forcing Hospital To Quarantine Police, Patients Wed Oct 19, 2016 11:58 am | |
| http://www.shtfplan.com/headline-news/mysterious-hallucinations-spread-by-touch-forcing-hospital-to-quarantine-police-patients_10192016 “Mysterious Hallucinations Spread by Touch” Forcing Hospital To Quarantine Police, Patients Mac Slavo October 19th, 2016 SHTFplan.com Comments (36) Read by 3,357 people | .st_fblike_vcount iframe {height: 40px; width:50px;}
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First thought that comes into your mind? Maybe MK Ultra? Maybe new experimental drugs? Maybe a secret government test on the general population? Your guess is as good as mine, but this story is downright weird. Something is causing first responders and some of the people they interact with to become disoriented and hallucinate – though no good explanation is apparent. According to KIMA-TV: - Quote :
- This week, an emergency room in the Pacific Northwest was briefly quarantined after five people—including two police officers and a hospital worker—experienced mysterious hallucinations from an unidentified illness believed to be spread by touch.
According to Oregon Live, the enigmatic incident began early Wednesday morning when a 54-year-old caregiver in North Bend, Oregon, called police to report seven or eight people “trying to take the roof off her vehicle.” Police say they found nothing, but after the caregiver reported the unseen vandals a second time, sheriff’s deputies escorted her to a nearby hospital for suspected hallucinations. Shortly afterward, however, one of the deputies began experiencing similar symptoms and returned to the hospital. Soon after that, the other deputy, a hospital worker and the caregiver’s 78-year-old patient also began hallucinating and were hospitalized. Initially, authorities tried to explain it away by suggesting that the elderly woman was using or wearing fentanyl patches, which sometimes have a side effect of hallucinations. But those reports proved to be incorrect, as it fails to explain how those who started hallucinating would have come into contact with, let alone spread the issue. The Oregonian reported this, but their readers picked apart the weak case, which does little to explain the phenomenon: - Quote :
- A haz-mat team checked the house but found nothing suspicious. They figure it was the fentanyl, a powerful narcotic.
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- The 78-year-old woman uses fentanyl patches. Though all of the patches were accounted for, the deputies figured they still ended up being affected anyway, Downing said.
“They think they got exposed from handling and being in the same room with everybody,” he said. But whatever is causing hallucinations may have been spread through personal contact – though it isn’t exactly clear what the culprit may be. Then again, one has to wonder if we are all being subjected to experimentation… perhaps to see who is affected, and how many people panic. Exposure to electromagnetic energy has been known to cause hallucinations that are otherwise unexplainable, but that would affect only those in path of the frequency, not those who had hand-to-hand contact. As Melissa Dykes explains, the extremely bizarre and unexplainable can be simulated and recreated in a lab using sophisticated electromagnetic technology on the brain: |
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