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The Government's Tick Problem

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I know you have had a tick on you

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before. Did you know that in 1982 a

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scientist named Willie Bergdorfer

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discovered the bacterium that causes

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Lyme disease? A little bullseye

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infection around a a nasty tick bite.

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They named the disease after him.

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Borelia Berg Dorfery. Hilarious name.

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Tragic disease. What they didn't tell

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you is that he spent the previous 30

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years weaponizing ticks for the United

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States military. And before he died, he

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sat in front of a camera and told the

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truth to a few people. This has recently

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been declassified and conspiracy

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theorists were proven right once again.

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All right, guys. Yeah. I mean, what?

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Again, again, and again, and again. How

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are we always this right all the time?

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This is crazy. I'm not really a

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conspiracy theorist, but like a little

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bit though. Kind of. I'm starting to

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become more and more of one. I don't

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exactly trust the powers that be.

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You want to see the type of motherucker

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that trusts the powers that be? Friend

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of the show, Arnuki Beast. Spooky

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Island. Press like. Willie Bergdorfer

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was born in Basil, Switzerland in 1925.

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Willie studied zoology, parasettology,

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and bacteriology at the University of

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Basil. and in 1951 he finished his PhD.

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His thesis was on burellia spyroets in

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ticks. He was 26 years old and already

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one of the world's foremost experts on

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tickborne pathogens. His entire academic

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career up to that point had been spent

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studying how spyroet bacteria survive

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and reproduce inside of a tickenheimer

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and how ticks transmit those bacteria to

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a new host when they suckle them. They

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feed. That is exactly what Lyme disease

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is. A spyroet transmitted by a tick

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during feeding. That's Lyme disease. L

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YME. You probably know somebody who's

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been infected and probably still dealing

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with it even years later. 3 days before

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Christmas 1951, he arrived at the Rocky

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Mountain Laboratory in Hamilton, Montana

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in a snowstorm. RML was a National

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Institutes of Health facility originally

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set up to study Rocky Mountain spotted

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fever. It also housed the largest living

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tick collection in the United States,

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which is disgusting and scary. And it

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had a second purpose that wasn't exactly

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televised. The US Army was running a

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biological weapons program out of Fort

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Dietrich, Maryland, and they needed

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someone who understood ticks better than

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anyone on the planet. Willie Burgdorfer

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was theiring guy. Port Dietrich, if you

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didn't know, was the center of the

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American biological weapons programs

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from 1943 to 1969. It was run by the US

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Army Chemical Corps. And by the late

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1950s, the operation was big as they had

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labs that could breed 130 million yellow

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fever mosquitoes per month and 50

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million fleas per week. Thank God. They

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had a million liter gas tight test

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sphere called the eightball where they

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tested airborne pathogens on animals and

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humans. At least they were volunteers

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most of the time, right? They had an

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entire enmological weapons department

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dedicated to turning insects into

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delivery systems of biological weapons.

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The logic is very simple and even

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scarier than let's say the logic of a

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bomb. Bomb kills people in a blast zone

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and then that's it. An infected insect

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bites someone, that person gets sick,

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the insect is still alive, bites another

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person. You don't have to keep dropping

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bombs. You just drop a bunch ofing bugs

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and they just work and live and people.

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Willie Burgdorfer's first assignment was

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to figure out how to package plague

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infected fleas into cardboard tubes so

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they could be loaded into cluster bombs

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and dropped from airplanes. That's

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awesome. What is he? a aing scaven. His

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ongoing work luckily moved away froming

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plague bombs to tick. He developed

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techniques for force-feeding them

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through glass capillary tubes filled

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with pathogens. Okay, we're back to

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theing scaven fever, tomia, epidemic

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typhus, rabies, western ecoin

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encphilitis. All my homies hate western

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ecoin encphilitis. He and an

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entomologist named James Oliver worked

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on a program to drop weaponized ticks

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from aircraft over enemy territory. A

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military document from the era explained

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the system. Arthropods, these little

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guys, inject the agent directly into the

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body so that a mask is no protection to

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a soldier and they will remain alive for

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some time, keeping an area constantly

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dangerous. This all went on from 1953 to

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1969, the year of our lord. And the

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whole time, Burgdorfer lived a

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completely normal life in Hamilton,

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Montana.

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A relatively normal life when you're

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spending your days developing scaven

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weapons tactics and bomb delivery

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methods. He married a local fellow named

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Dale C in 1953. It was it was a woman.

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They had two sons. He coached little

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league, went to church, and was known

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around town as the tick guy at the Rocky

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Mountain Lab. He would help you identify

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a bug and then he also just happened to

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spend his mornings force-feeding

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pathogens to tick through glass tubes

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for the DoD. So that's kind of like a

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you know kind of a put into perspective

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sort of moment. Eventually Chris Newbie

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began an investigation that later

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uncovered that Burgdorfer maintained a

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Swiss bank account throughout his career

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separate from his NIH salary which she

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traced through documents in his personal

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files and he never explained what it was

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for. The reason I bring that up is

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because this wholeing thing is a really

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strange web, a strange

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bug nest of web pieces that's really

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freaky and it's a rabbit hole and a

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conspiracy and we'll get into it and

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it's been declassified recently and we

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were right the whole time. Burgdorfer

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wasn't working alone. Fort Dietrich had

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recruited scientists through a program

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called Operation Paperclip which brought

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over 1,600 German and Austrian

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scientists to the United States after

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World War II. Some of them were

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bioweapons researchers who had

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experimented on prisoners in

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concentration camps. All of them were

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Nazis. Kurt Blom, the deputy Reich

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health leader, had proposed spreading

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malaria using mosquitoes as delivery

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systems and tested it on prisoners at

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Dau and Bookenbald. Edward May ran the

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enmological division of the SS Institute

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for Practical Research and received a

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commission in 1943 to experiment on

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concentration camp prisoners with

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humanly harmful insects. That's a quote.

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One of them was a man named Eric Tr who

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had been the lab chief at the leading

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boweapons facility uh Rhymes Island

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which was in the Baltic Sea where he

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worked directly under Hinrich Himmler on

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weaponizing animal diseases using biting

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insects specifically ticks. The were in

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on it as well. Chob came to the United

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States in 1949, consulted at Fort

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Dietrich, and helped establish a new

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research facility modeled after his era

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island lab. And that facility was built

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on an island off the coast of Long

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Island, New York. Talked about it once

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before with my buddy Isaiah and Jackson

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in the Redthread Podcast. Go check that

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out maybe if you want to. But things

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have changed cuz [ __ ] got declassified.

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But we'll get to it anyways. We'll get

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to the the cool island facility first.

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what the government actually did with

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the weapons Burgdorfer was building.

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Let's talk about that for a minute. So,

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Burgdorfer and Fort Dietrich had the

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weapons. The question is, what did they

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do with the weapons? In 1962, the

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Kennedy administration launched

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Operation Mongus, which was a covert

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campaign to destabilize Fidel Castro's

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Cuba. Many things were done to

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destabilize Castro's Cuba. Most people

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know about the poisoned cigars and the

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exploding seashells, all that [ __ ]

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crazy [ __ ] What you might not know is

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task 33b. A declassified status report

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reads, quote, "Plan for incapacitation

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