Sabotage At Pirbright Linked To Religious Extremists
UK - "Sabotage is emerging as the most likely cause of the recent FMD outbreak in England". This is according to former NZ Animal Health Committee observer and London-based independent researcher Don Stewart.Both groups are inculcating themselves by gaining employment deep within important and strategic institutions, like old-fashioned East-West spies of the Cold War Era
Don Stewart, former NZ Animal Health Committee observer.
"One of several motives may include, for example, retaliation for the killing of sacred bulls in Wales recently, although Indian-indigenous Hindus would not be involved if that were the case", Mr Stewart added. "The point is", he continued, "Officials currently investigating the whole drama are philosophically ill-equipped to manage the issue if sabotage of this nature is the cause of the latest outbreak of FMD.”
Following up his earlier release on 6 August with News Agency PR-GB, Mr Stewart said, "I am surprised so many newspapers have picked up on the possibility of sabotage, since my earlier release, reporting similar conclusions but not the religious aspect. However, the very tight security procedures, at Pirbright and at the neighbouring commercial laboratories, which never envisage sabotage from ‘within’, logically indicates that no conclusion other than sabotage can be assumed now".
When asked if he could assist the investigators, Mr Stewart said, "they only have to give me a call but their antipathy to non-evolutionist Christian analysts rules-out any likelihood that they will." Mr Stewart explained from his experience with these institutions and the people who design them, "the one factor that they overlook is the many strange non-Christian, political-, religious- or theological-philosophies that motivate many people today, especially ‘radically-inclined’ employees within these institutions".
Mr Stewart said, "the essentially non-'religious', materialistic, secular, evolutionist and commercial philosophies of the designers or creators of institutions like Pirbright and the modern agricultural systems of today, are naively ignorant of some of the enemies who are opposed to them and right within their midst."
Mr Stewart said there is a "parallel between certain animal welfare activists coming form a neo-Hindu or neo-Buddhist perspective who want to stop humans eating meat and Muslim Jihadists. Both groups are inculcating themselves by gaining employment deep within important and strategic institutions, like old-fashioned East-West spies of the Cold War Era, only this time it is within hospitals and scientific establishments rather than the Foreign and Commonwealth Office or Armed services as in the Philby-Burgess-McLean era in the 1950s.