Monday, April 18, 2011

Kim Komando touts Asthmapolis. Who are they ?

Asthmapolis has at its head a CDC spook.

Caveat emptor.

They want you to slap a GPS on your inhaler to record where you were when you used it.

They obviously know something was there when you did it. They are looking for something in particular. They aren't possibly going to record thousands of inhaler puffs world-wide without knowing what they're looking for because they can't possibly know what was in the air everywhere... unless they put it there.


At the center of Asthmapolis is the Spiroscout, a device that uses GPS to determine the time and location when an inhaler is used, and then stores or sends that information to a remote server.

It’s small and lightweight, easy to mount securely on the end of most inhalers, and simple to transfer to a new canister. Lights on the device let you know when it has detected use, and also show remaining battery level.

The Spiroscout lasts 2+ days between charges depending on how often its used, and recharges quickly anywhere with a wall charger or USB power source. You connect it to USB port on PC to download information from device and transfer to the Asthmapolis website.

The Spiroscout inhaler tracker will be available to the public later this Fall. If you’d like to reserve one please let us know.

Now, if anyone doesn't think that this isn't their "uh oh" response to their chemtrail murders and maimings, just go back to sleep or return to the food you're eating, and make Them happy.

This government was sold chemicals by lying MIC sales people who assure them that it's safe and will save the poor children "dying" from Global Warming.

Why does a skeletal website want to give you a GPS for your inhaler to record where you are when you use it ?

Why does the owner of the site have their name locked down such that you only get that it's hosted by Bluehost ?

They're hiding their backers. Why isn't there one word about who is funding this on the site ?


For the last two years, David has been an Epidemic Intelligence Service officer at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, where he is assigned to the Air Pollution and Respiratory Health Branch. During this time, he has provided epidemiological support to the National Asthma Control Program, and investigated the health effects of exposure to mold in New Orleans, to chlorine gas in South Carolina, to carbon monoxide in Florida, and to ambient ozone among student athletes in Georgia. In addition, he helped establish emergency illness and injury surveillance in coastal Mississippi after Hurricane Katrina. As a Health and Society Scholar, David will continue developing experimental methods to examine clinical decision-making in asthma and to investigate ethnic disparities in diagnosis and treatment of the disease. In addition, he plans to study the development of asthma and allergy among immigrants to the United States, and use new biomarkers of airway inflammation to explore the environmental factors influencing respiratory health at the population level.


Citizens of countries that have been determined by the U.S. Secretary of State to be State Sponsors of Terrorism External Web Site will not be able to get security clearance to work at CDC and should not apply to the EIS Program. Countries currently on this list include: Cuba, Iran, Syria, and Sudan.

SPQR

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