It's not crop dusting...it's human dusting

Discernment is defined as the ability to judge wisely. Across California, people are being called upon to exercise their discernment to determine whether they are hearing truth or lies in the mouths of government officials like Ag Secretary A.G. Kawamura and his cohorts who have developed a plan to spray pesticides on some 7,000,000 human beings.

Without any testing, Kawamura and his allies have pronounced their pesticide of choice ‘safe’. Here is a typical statement from a man who is eager to begin applying pesticides to humans as quickly as possible.

“When will it become obvious to the public that environmental alarmists take whatever position stands in the way of human progress?” asked Dr. Jay Lehr, science director for The Heartland Institute. “The moth is destructive to society, and pheromones are safe and effective. Let’s get on with their use.”

What Evil Sounds Like

When one researches the nuclear testing that was carried out in the 1950s and 60s in the American southwest, one may start to feel that A.G. Kawamura and his associates must have been running things then, too. Here are some quotes that may sound all too familiar to today’s Californians.

“Health and safety authorities have determined that no danger from or as a result of AEC activities may be expected. All necessary precautions, including radiological surveys and patrolling of the surrounding territory, will be undertaken to insure that safety conditions are maintained.”

“Every test detonation in Nevada is carefully evaluated as to your safety before it is included in a schedule. Every phase of the operation is likewise studied from the safety viewpoint…all such findings have confirmed that Nevada test fallout has not caused illness or injured the health of anyone living near the test site.”

It took nearly half a century for government officials to finally acknowledge that the nuclear testing had harmed Americans. By then, it was much too late.

What Do The Victims Of Evil Sound Like?

“We’re not numbers, we’re not statistics, we’re human beings.”

“It’s amazing that there should be so many cancer cases in an area as small as this. It’s to the point now where there’s not a person in town who hasn’t lost at least one relative or knows of several people who have died of cancer.”

“There’s been wrong done. There’s no relief in knowing your son died of negligence. I don’t want to be a rabble-rouser or anything but I don’t want another generation to go through this. Cancer is such a long, painful, drawn-out death.”

“We trusted the government, we figured that it was necessary because, after all, the government does look after us, and they’re over the people and they will take care of anything that needs to be taken care of to see that it’s healthy, or otherwise…so we didn’t worry about it.”

These are quotes from our government’s guinea pigs in the nuclear testing public health crisis. I do not want to hear these words in the mouths of my California neighbors, but when I hear the father of baby Jack Wilcox tell the press that the aerial spraying in 2007 almost killed his son, I know I’m not hearing an echo from the 50s. This is now, but the situations are the same.

We are using our discernment. We are unwilling to overlook the obvious evil in any plan which exposes human beings to chronic doses of carcinogens, mutagens, and particulate plastic pollution.

When we hear Secretary Kawamura say, “I am confident that a thoughtful review of the facts about this pest will show anyone that this program’s success is critical to our economy, our environment, and public health,” we understand that he is pinning his hopes for personal fortune on our stupidity.

Secretary Kawamura would like us to be so undiscerning that we can be fooled into thinking that it is the moth which poses the threat to our environment and public health.

We will not be brainwashed by twisted statements like these.

We are not tricked into believing that spraying pesticides on human beings is important for public health.

We are not quite that dumb.

It is pesticide, it is CDFA and the USDA that pose the threat to our environment and to human health. It is pesticide that is the problem – not a moth.

Patriotism Has Been Undermined By Government Bodies

In the 1950s and 60s, it was possible for the U.S. government to trade on the trust of patriotic Americans who were confident that their safety was in good hands. But since then, actions like those of the CDFA have undermined the basic belief system of Americans who are deeply loyal to the constitutional tenets of freedom and inherent human rights. The U.S. government had a great thing going for themselves, but then we had to deal with the fallout of their nuclear bombs, their DDT, their Agent Orange. We have come to experience a national cringing when yet another government official starts telling us that something is ‘safe’.

It is tragically evil that our own governmental agencies have destroyed the American people’s faith in the goodness of government.

This time, A.G. Kawamura, you and your ilk will not play us for fools.