What is the Definition of Biological Warfare? I will never believe in Racism. I believe in Character…

What is the Definition of Biological Warfare? I will never believe in Racism. I believe in Character…

What are the examples of biological warfare? Biological warfare is a deliberate use of biological agent such as bacteria, virus, rickttslae, and fungi, or their toxins, to kill or incapacitate human animals or plants as an act of war. If you find the source of where covid 19 came from, you will find the source of covid 19, the country of the source of war acting behaviour, and all the countries supporting them. China…World Health supported China. Biological warfare is when Biological and toxin weapons are either microorganisms like virus, bacteria or fungi, or toxic substances produced by living organisms that are produced and released deliberately to cause disease and death in humans, animals or plants. Anne Bressinger on New Tang Dynasty Television said that the note found in the United Nations stated they were going to depopulate. That has intent involved.
  • Anthrax (Bacillus anthracis)
  • Botulism (Clostridium botulinum toxin)
  • Plague (Yersinia pestis)
  • Smallpox (variola major)
  • Tularemia (Francisella tularensis)
  • Viral hemorrhagic fevers, including. Filoviruses (Ebola, Marburg) Arenaviruses (Lassa, Machupo)

What is the mortality rate for biological warfare? If we are compliant and follow the rules of isolating, of staying away from others, of getting boosters, of wearing masks, 2% and if not compliant the rate can be as high as 60%. 

Nuclear weapons have immediate effects once they hit the designated target. By contrast, biological weapons effects depend on the incubation period of the pathogens used.

The Biological Weapons Convention (BWC) effectively prohibits the development, production, acquisition, transfer, stockpiling and use of biological and toxin weapons. It was the first multilateral disarmament treaty banning an entire category of weapons of mass destruction (WMD).

While the UK and the USA were actively pursuing biological weapons, the Japanese military were the first to use them. In 1934, military physician General Ishii Shiro created Japan’s secret biological warfare programme, which lasted until 1945. Its main base was in Japanese-occupied Manchuria, near the city of Harbin.

The Source is using them today….Biological pathogens that cause death and lack of oxygen, muscle diseases so people cannot walk without walkers, the pathogens going after the cells in our bodies by entering the Ace 2 receptors. The epistemology of this virus has been studied until we are so tired of it, but nothing is being done by people cooperating to be rid of this pathogen.

The Nuremberg code of 10 points:

(1) Anyone being used for any biological experiment must enter the agreement of being used as a control subject for research  with complete free will and signature of consent. They must have the complete informed consent. People must know what they are getting into.

(2) The human experiment must be the only way to get the information. It must be based on animal experimentation. (Although a separate animal issue) from human homo sapiens, it must be based on some kind of ethical Science.

(3) Some completely untested technology must be based on that they were experiment on  – AI must be based on the best available Science.

(4) It must avoid any unnecessary suffering and Covid caused so much suffering in our world. There must be no human suffering in experimentation. Not to say there should be no suffering, but no unnecessary suffering. You can volunteer to go into it willingly.

(5) Death will not occur. There must be no reason to expect subjects will die.

(6) The risk taken must be proportionate to the potential benefit in outcome.

(7) There must be anticipation of any risk or injuries of death. People carrying out experimentation must think ahead. They must anticipate what can go wrong. Has that always been done, well it is up to your interpretation.

(8) The research must be closely conducted and supervised by proper ethical doctors and Scientists.

(9) The Subject may opt out at any time. the subject can walk away at any time.

(10) Scientists conducting the research must be prepared to terminate the research at any time.

What are long term effects of biological attacks…Possible long-term effects of such warfare include: chronic illness caused by exposure to chemical and biological agents; delayed effects in persons directly exposed (causation of cancer, severe damage to the human fetus, and detrimental alterations in the human gene); organic, particularly nervous, damage which lasts …Oct 4, 2021.

Which country has biological weapons?
Seventeen countries have had or are suspected of currently having a biological weapons programme. They include Canada, China, Cuba, France, Germany, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Japan, Libya, North Korea, Russia, South Africa, Syria, Taiwan, the United Kingdom, and the United States.Jun 2, 2021

The Nuremberg LAWS OF NAZI GERMANY: Two distinct laws passed in Nazi Germany in September 1935 are known collectively as the Nuremberg Laws: the Reich Citizenship Law and the Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honor. These laws embodied many of the racial theories underpinning Nazi ideology. They would provide the legal framework for the systematic persecution of Jews in Germany.

Adolf Hitler announced the Nuremberg Laws on September 15, 1935. Germany’s parliament (the Reichstag), then made up entirely of Nazi representatives, passed the laws. Antisemitism was of central importance to the Nazi Party, so Hitler had called parliament into a special session at the annual Nazi Party rally in Nuremberg, Germany.

 Nuremberg Laws proclaimed

Hermann Göring recites the preamble to the Nuremberg Laws at the seventh Nazi Party Congress. The laws would define German citizenship by blood and forbade marriages between Germans and Jews. A special session of the Reichstag (German parliament) enacted the laws, marking an intensification of Nazi measures against Jews.

  • National Archives – Film

Reich Citizenship Law

Fritz Glueckstein’s family on an outing

Fritz Glueckstein (left) on a picnic with his family in Berlin, Germany, 1932. Fritz’s father was Jewish—he attended services in a liberal synagogue—and his mother was Christian. Under the Nuremberg Laws of 1935, Fritz would be classified as mixed-raced (Mischling), but since his father was a member of the Jewish religious community, Fritz was classified as a Jew.

  • US Holocaust Memorial Museum, courtesy of Fritz Gluckstein

The Nazis had long sought a legal definition that identified Jews not by religious affiliation but according to racial antisemitism. Jews in Germany were not easy to identify by sight. Many had given up traditional practices and appearances and had integrated into the mainstream of society. Some no longer practiced Judaism and had even begun celebrating Christian holidays, especially Christmas, with their non-Jewish neighbors. Many more had married Christians or converted to Christianity.

According to the Reich Citizenship Law and many ancillary decrees on its implementation, only people of “German or kindred blood” could be citizens of Germany. A supplementary decree published on November 14, the day the law went into force, defined who was and was not a Jew. The Nazis rejected the traditional view of Jews as members of a religious or cultural community. They claimed instead that Jews were a race defined by birth and by blood.

Despite the persistent claims of Nazi ideology, there was no scientifically valid basis to define Jews as a race. Nazi legislators looked therefore to family genealogy to define race. People with three or more grandparents born into the Jewish religious community were Jews by law. Grandparents born into a Jewish religious community were considered “racially” Jewish. Their “racial” status passed to their children and grandchildren. Under the law, Jews in Germany were not citizens but “subjects” of the state.

This legal definition of a Jew in Germany covered tens of thousands of people who did not think of themselves as Jews or who had neither religious nor cultural ties to the Jewish community. For example, it defined people who had converted to Christianity from Judaism as Jews. It also defined as Jews people born to parents or grandparents who had converted to Christianity. The law stripped them all of their German citizenship and deprived them of basic rights.

To further complicate the definitions, there were also people living in Germany who were defined under the Nuremberg Laws as neither German nor Jew, that is, people having only one or two grandparents born into the Jewish religious community. These “mixed-raced” individuals were known as Mischlinge. They enjoyed the same rights as “racial” Germans, but these rights were continuously curtailed through subsequent legislation.

Samples of the Nuremberg Race Laws (the Reich Citizenship Law and the Law for the Protection of German Blood and Honor). [LCID: 73901]

Samples of the Nuremberg Race Laws

Samples of the Nuremberg Race Laws (the Reich Citizenship Law and the Law for the Protection of German Blood and Honor). Germany, September 15, 1935.

  • National Archives and Records Administration, College Park, MD

Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honor

The second Nuremberg Law, the Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honor, banned marriage between Jews and non-Jewish Germans. It also criminalized sexual relations between them. These relationships were labeled as “race defilement” (Rassenschande).

Nazi propaganda poster advertising a special issue of "Der Stuermer" on "Rassenschande" [race pollution]. [LCID: 32615]

Nazi propaganda poster for a special issue of “Der Stuermer” about “race pollution”

This image shows a 1935 poster by the antisemitic Der Stürmer (Attacker) newspaper. The poster justifies prohibiting “interracial” relationships between Jews and non-Jews under the Nuremberg Race Laws.

Many Germans reported suspicions of the “crime” of interracial relationships to the police. The police needed the public to be their “eyes and ears” in this and other matters. Informers were variously motivated by political beliefs, personal prejudices, the desire to settle petty quarrels, or the patriotic desire to be a “good citizen.”

“Everyone cringes with fear,” Jewish professor Victor Klemperer wrote in his diary in August 1933. “No letter, no telephone conversation, no word on the street is safe anymore. Everyone fears the next person may be an informer.”

The poster text reads: “Defiling the Race. Since 1923, Julius Streicher has enlightened the public about defiling the race. In 1935, the Führer declared defiling the race a criminal act, punishable by imprisonment. Nevertheless, thousands of race crimes continue to be committed in Germany by Jews. What is Race Pollution? Why did the Führer decree the Nuremberg Laws? Why does the Jew instigate the German woman to race defilement, systematically and on a mass scale? What are the consequences of defiling the race  for the German woman and the German girl? What are the consequences of race defilement for the German Nation? The new Stürmer special issue.”

  • Deutsches Historisches Museum

The law also forbade Jews to employ female German maids under the age of 45, assuming that Jewish men would force such maids into committing race defilement. Thousands of people were convicted or simply disappeared into concentration camps for race defilement.

Significance of the Nuremberg Laws

The Nuremberg Laws reversed the process of emancipation, whereby Jews in Germany were included as full members of society and equal citizens of the country. More significantly they laid the foundation for future antisemitic measures by legally distinguishing between German and Jew. For the first time in history, Jews faced persecution not for what they believed, but for who they—or their parents—were by birth. In Nazi Germany, no profession of belief and no act or statement could convert a Jew into a German. Many Germans who had never practiced Judaism or who had not done so for years found themselves caught in the grip of Nazi terror.

While the Nuremberg Laws specifically mentioned only Jews, the laws eventually extended to Black people and Roma and Sinti (Gypsies) living in Germany. The definition of Jews, Black people, and Roma View This Term in the Glossary as racial aliens facilitated their persecution in Germany.

During World War II, many countries allied to or dependent on Germany enacted their own versions of the Nuremberg Laws. By 1941, Italy, Hungary, Romania, Slovakia, Bulgaria, Vichy France, and Croatia had all enacted anti-Jewish legislation similar to the Nuremberg Laws in Germany.

Translation

Reich Citizenship Law of September 15, 1935
(Translated from Reichsgesetzblatt I, 1935, p. 1146.)

The Reichstag has unanimously enacted the following law, which is promulgated herewith:

Article 1
1. A subject of the state is a person who enjoys the protection of the German Reich and who in consequence has specific obligations toward it.
2. The status of subject of the state is acquired in accordance with the provisions of the Reich and the Reich Citizenship Law.

Article 2
1. A Reich citizen is a subject of the state who is of German or related blood, and proves by his conduct that he is willing and fit to faithfully serve the German people and Reich.
2. Reich citizenship is acquired through the granting of a Reich citizenship certificate.
3. The Reich citizen is the sole bearer of full political rights in accordance with the law.

Article 3
The Reich Minister of the Interior, in coordination with the Deputy of the Führer, will issue the legal and administrative orders required to implement and complete this law.

Nuremberg, September 15, 1935
At the Reich Party Congress of Freedom

The Führer and Reich Chancellor
[signed] Adolf Hitler

The Reich Minister of the Interior
[signed] Frick

Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honor of September 15, 1935

(Translated from Reichsgesetzblatt I, 1935, pp. 1146-7.)

Moved by the understanding that purity of German blood is the essential condition for the continued existence of the German people, and inspired by the inflexible determination to ensure the existence of the German nation for all time, the Reichstag has unanimously adopted the following law, which is promulgated herewith:

Article 1
1. Marriages between Jews and citizens of German or related blood are forbidden. Marriages nevertheless concluded are invalid, even if concluded abroad to circumvent this law.
2. Annulment proceedings can be initiated only by the state prosecutor.

Article 2
Extramarital relations between Jews and citizens of German or related blood are forbidden.

Article 3
Jews may not employ in their households female subjects of the state of Germany or related blood who are under 45 years old.

Article 4
1. Jews are forbidden to fly the Reich or national flag or display Reich colors.
2. They are, on the other hand, permitted to display the Jewish colors. The exercise of this right is protected by the state.

Article 5
1. Any person who violates the prohibition under Article 1 will be punished with a prison sentence with hard labor.
2. A male who violates the prohibition under Article 2 will be punished with a jail term or a prison sentence with hard labor.
3. Any person violating the provisions under Articles 3 or 4 will be punished with a jail term of up to one year and a fine, or with one or the other of these penalties.

Article 6
The Reich Minister of the Interior, in coordination with the Deputy of the Führer and the Reich Minister of Justice, will issue the legal and administrative regulations required to implement and complete this law.

Article 7
The law takes effect on the day following promulgation, except for Article 3, which goes into force on January 1, 1936.

Nuremberg, September 15, 1935
At the Reich Party Congress of Freedom

The Führer and Reich Chancellor
[signed] Adolf Hitler
The Reich Minister of the Interior
[signed] Frick
The Reich Minister of Justice
[signed] Dr. Gürtner
The Deputy of the Führer
[signed] R. Hess

 

Series: Nazi Racism

Switch Series

Critical Thinking Questions

  • Since the Nazis could never prove a biological, or racial, basis for Judaism, how did they define Jews in these laws? What questions does this raise?
  • What privileges and protections of German citizenship were now lost to those who were defined as Jewish?
  • How can knowledge of the Nuremberg Laws help citizens today respond to threats of genocide and mass atrocity in the world?

know  THE 10 POINTS OF THE NUREMBERG CODE:

The laws of the world are the Nuremberg code, Under the Star of David in “Oneness” where there is one God of Love. John in 1 John a friend of Jesus Christ was banned from Asia Minor by Greedy, Power hungry people of wealth because he was teaching Love like Jesus did. God Is Love is written over and over and over in 1 John. If you are wondering what God is. FACT! There are 10 points to the Nuremberg Code you must learn as there is only 1 God. “God is Love.” Jesus was a Jew, Mary was a Jew, St James was a Jewish Man who loved Jesus’s teachings, but nevertheless a loving Jew who knew loving love, love begats love, and God is Love. Hello!

Written by Carolyn d Hogarth Canada
United We stand, Divided we Fall….
 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *