Does the case of mad cow disease in Alberta worry you?

2 Comments

  • Cher - 10 years ago

    Yes, we should be concerned. My 42 year old younger brother contracted the disease in 2002, and died a year later after persevering what could only be described as a horrendous nightmare. The hospital went out of their way to cover his illness up, and zippered him into a plastic cage, referred to as a veil bed. The day he died, his fever was so high, I nearly burned my hand when I toughed him. The nurses wouldn't do anything to cool him down because he had a "Do not Resuscitate order." I have pictures of my brother whose body resembled those of the poor souls who didn't survive the Holocost due to starvation. The doctors begged us to allow an autopsy be done on my brother's body, and we agreed on the condition his brain tissue be sent to Britain for examination. We didn't receive the autopsy results for nearly a year, and the pathologist who completed my brother's autopsy told me he threw my brother's brain into the garbage. All levels of government covered his death up starting with Ralph Kline and his famous phase, "Shoot em, shovel em and forget em!" No one was interested in finding out what caused my brother to contract this disease, but we believe it occurred when he received cataract surgery in an eye surgeon's office, whose instruments were not properly disinfected. There are many cases of Crutzfeld Jacob throughout our province, in fact I recently heard of a wealthy businessman who died from mad cow disease; his daughter told me. Unfortunately nobody wants you to hear about it. You should be concerned about what the government and polititions don't want you to know. Wake up! Your life isn't worth a negative effect on Alberta's economy, at least in the governments mind.

  • Trevor Kwasney - 10 years ago

    Wishing media would quit calling it Mad Cow Disease.

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