Coding the Future

Kris Newby Lyme Disease Was A Consequence Of U S Biological Weapons

Bitten The Secret History Of lyme disease And biological weapons Book
Bitten The Secret History Of lyme disease And biological weapons Book

Bitten The Secret History Of Lyme Disease And Biological Weapons Book Author kris newby discusses getting diagnosed with lyme disease and then discovering that it was most likely a biological warfare weapon created by the u.s. Kris newby’s book, bitten: the secret history of lyme disease and biological weapons, is a wakeup call. t he mainstream “origin story” of lyme disease in the united states goes like this: in the 1970s, a mysterious ailment afflicted a group of people in and around lyme, connecticut. eventually, scientists determined it was caused by a.

Bitten The Secret History Of lyme disease And biological weapons
Bitten The Secret History Of lyme disease And biological weapons

Bitten The Secret History Of Lyme Disease And Biological Weapons The incident was an international scandal. the reputational damage to the chemical and biological weapons program could not be undone, and the accident set in motion a chain of events that would end in president richard m. nixon terminating the u.s. offensive biological weapons program on november 25, 1969. Kris newby is the author of the book “bitten: the secret history of lyme disease and biological weapons.” book honors. 2020: international book award winner in narrative non fiction. 2020: nautilus silver book award in journalism & investigative reporting. 2019: #1 best book in public health by bookauthority. 2019: bookworm best books of 2019. 336 pp.; $28.99. bitten: the secret history of lyme disease and biological weapons by kris newby adds significantly to our understanding of lyme disease, while oddly seeming to avoid mention of what we already knew. newby claims that if a scientist named willy burgdorfer had not made a confession in 2013, the secret that lyme disease came from. The book is seen as a crucial contribution to understanding the larger implications of lyme disease, including its historical ties to u.s. biological warfare research. newby's work is compared favorably to other books on similar topics, like "lyme disease and the s.s. elbrus" by rachel verdon and "lab 257" by michael carroll.

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