Monday, July 30, 2007

Zombie soldiers in Iraq?

According to a source with battlefield knowledge of the war in Iraq, the US soldiers have been finding syringes with large-bore, very long needles in the insurgents' encampments. These aren't ordinary needles like you might use to shoot insulin or anti-tetanus serum into someone's arm; they are the kind of needle that doctors will use to pierce the sternum to inject adrenalin directly into the heart of a dying drug overdose victim.

The soldiers that the needles appear to have been used on are not ordinary, either. They can be shot several times and they will just keep coming, impervious to pain and the normal debilitation from blood loss. If they aren't physically knocked down by a bullet, they will continue to fight until they drop dead. And if they are not shot, they will fight until they drop dead anyway, with no visible injuries. Whatever is in the drug cocktail they're getting shot into their chest cavity, it makes them super-strong, super-tough, and then it kills them.

Chillingly, there is suspicion that the men who are being "zombified" in this way are not volunteers. They are being conscripted, having their consciousness altered somehow, and turned loose to fight under the influence of some drug that will kill them even if the US soldiers don't.

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