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Say for instance they wanted to find out if a guy identified as having a dangerous disease could fly from country to country without being stopped. Same sort of thing they do when the smuggle forbidden items through security in order to test the system.
First they establish a "positive" on a TB test (not so hard if you have a handy supply of the bug, say in your father in law's laboratory. He's a good citizen, he'll help out. He'll know how to make it harmless, too!)
Fact is you don't really have TB, you just test positive once and then some doctors claim you are resistant. That too could be faked. Your mission is accomplished, no one is really endangered, and the folks who sent you now know exactly how simple it would br for even a known contagious person to travel all over the effin world without anybody being able to do a thing about it. And so do any real terrorists who wish to try it with the real thing. Eventually TB Man's erratic, attention -getting behavior attract4ed somebody's attention, and they got him to medical care, as they should have. But boy o boy, did everybody flunk that test. But why wouldn't they? The guy tested negative twice on standard tests, and he didn't look sick! (and wouldn't in this scenario.
No doubt they didn't expect to get caught out quite so publicly. Now, in th privacy of a remote medical facility, they can "cure" him.
Anyway, I'm just spinning imaginary scenarios in my head about this very strange news item with so many mysteries and odd concidences. Tin Foil Hat stuff.
After all, the father-in-law rushed out to deny any involvement--even before we knew there was a father in law.
Smells bad.
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