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View Full Version : Ex-Rad, the U.S. Military's Radiation Wonder Drug



ktlight
1st May 2011, 08:50
These are tragic and tense days indeed in Japan.

The immense loss of life and absolute devastation caused by last week’s earthquake and tsunami is heartbreaking – and serve as the culprits in this unimaginable tragedy. The tension, felt by its citizens and far beyond the country’s borders, centers most immediately on what happens next at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear facility.

Reports of radioactive contamination and a potential meltdown at the complex have many Americans wondering how prepared our own government would be in the event something similar occurred here. More specifically, could the the health of residents living near a severely damaged nuclear reactor in the U.S. be ensured?

Thanks to the advanced work of the men and women who develop our nation’s military medicine, the answer is yes – but only if the government now takes the necessary steps.

In what has to be one of the greatest accomplishments in the history of military medicine, the U. S. military has developed a radiation protection drug known as Ex-Rad that can give protection through DNA repair against otherwise lethal dosages of radiation. Ex-Rad, which is administered as an injection or orally, can be given either before or after exposure. While Ex-Rad officials are continuing to work with the FDA, it has successfully cleared two clinical studies showing it is safe.

Ex-Rad’s life-saving utility isn’t limited to countering radiation exposure near a compromised nuclear facility. From potentially enabling cancer patients to withstand greater levels of radiation to protecting soldiers deployed into radioactive “hot zones,” this drug delivers critical help and hope.

During most of the last decade, U.S. military scientists at the Armed Forces Radiobiology Research Institute have worked with some of the best scientists in the American private sector to develop this radiation protection wonder drug.

As someone who’s had the privilege to interact with these scientists over the years and watch the development of Ex-Rad, I’ve seen it grow from just a dream into a very real capability that can save lives.

Unfortunately, due to a lack of media awareness about its development in the U.S., Ex-Rad is probably the most important new drug the American public has never heard of. But thanks to the public writings of senior scientists from the U.S. Department of Defense, the private sector, and the prestigious Radiation Effects Research Foundation (based in Hiroshima, Japan) the secret about this breakthrough drug is finally getting out. And it’s happening not a moment too soon.

source

http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2011/03/16/ex-rad-militarys-radiation-wonder-drug/

Lord Sidious
1st May 2011, 09:19
I wonder if it has a sting in it's tail?
Does it do something else as well as ''cure'' radiation issues?

fathertedsmate
1st May 2011, 10:37
22 yrs in military,last 10 with ptsd (no help) nearly cured, nothing the military puts into you is for your benefit, you can be assured the end result will be NO pension collected, ptsd = heavy metal and chemical poisoning,which the tests are designed to not pick it up as metals become part of your body

Lord Sidious
1st May 2011, 11:06
22 yrs in military,last 10 with ptsd (no help) nearly cured, nothing the military puts into you is for your benefit, you can be assured the end result will be NO pension collected, ptsd = heavy metal and chemical poisoning,which the tests are designed to not pick it up as metals become part of your body

I have heavy metals in me too.
Do you know how you got that?
And no, they do nothing for our benefit and once they are done with you, they throw you away like an empty coke can.
I am glad to hear that you are nearly cured.

phillipbbg
1st May 2011, 12:01
It always amazes me that there is always a Pill to cure or protect you in this world....... why is there not a machine that can de-rad a person? especially when they know about how nature de-pleats radiation and they know how to speed the process up.... but I suppose you wouldn't be able to introduce other substances under test to a large group of population without needing there consent... Mmmm

Sounds like medical experimentation coupled with drug company profits as usual.....