Sunday, April 26, 2009

Yevchenko Veterans' Sanatorium, Odessa, Ukraine


Today I interviewed Bohrdan Taras Kondratiuk in the hospital for veterans' though there's no doctors here, just nurses, but at least it's warm and dry, and this is luxury in the dead of winter in this country. He told me his experience. He was headed to Kiev after an exhausting campaign. Because he was told that Kiev was totally safe and quiet, fuly resuplied and peaceful. But when he got there he was surprised that the city was in chaos, a complete mess. There he was told that the government had moved to Sevastopol. He was ordered to oversee the escape route at Patonia Bridge. There were thousands of people waiting to escape from Kiev. It was a compete mess on top of that bridge, they had to revise every single person, their whole body to make sure that they weren't infected, until he heard something, engines, he saw the planes coming he thought they were going to bomb the part behing the bridge so nomore people could escape, but he realized they were coming directly to the bridge, he thought that they were going to kill them all, but when he saw the omb drop he realized thy had a parachute, they were throwing nuclear weapons at the people. Everyone just fell as if they were put to sleep, but then all the infected people started reanimating, which made their labor easier, only zombies where up, so they shoot them out. I think this was a cruel act by the government eventhough it was easier to spot the living dead.

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Armagh, Ireland


Today I interviewed Philip Adler, this interview wasn't planned, I just met him. He talked to me about his experience in Hamburg, how everyone was retreating there to ride ships and get out of there, but when they got there, everything was gone, no ships, just zombies and refugees. They had to protect the city until the backups arrived, but they never did. Until one day they got a call from the headquarters to retreat to a position in Denmark. The special thing about this order is that they were told to not bring the refugees with them. This was a tough decision to make, and it probably was a good one. He couldn't believe the orders so he had to reaffirm several times until he spoke to General Lang, who told him that the orders where right. He told me how he was so mad because they had to leave the refugees behind. He had a plan to kill General Lang, but when they got there he had killed himself, there's when Philip realized their retreat was part of the Prochnow's plan, the German version of the Redeker plan.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Robbin Islands, Cape Town Province, United States Of Southern Africa


Today I had an interview with Xolelwa Azania in his country south Africa, today was a sunny and hot day so he let me seat in his side by the window so I could feel the ocean breeze. This character wrote three books about the war. Today we talked about Paul Redeker, an Afrikaner.

He was employed by the government to write a plan for the safety of his country. Though his plan wasn't quite involving all the people, leaving a lot of them to death by setting them as a distraction. It was really good for the salvation of the nation. Many people disliked his plan so he's not liked by a lot of people. When I finished the interview it was quite a surprise all the security, and I realized that the guy I had visited was, in matter fact, Paul Redeker.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Parnel Air National Guard Base: Memphis, Tennessee


Today I met with Gavin Blaire, he pilots one of the dirigibles that are in charge of surveillance. He told me about his experience patrolling one of the highways, the I-80. He told me about thousands of cars packed in traffic, everyone trying to scape from the "plague". He tells he saw every kind of cars there in the traffic, abandoned cars, burned down cars, cars with people. He saw a lot of people walking and many more trying to get gas or a ride by exposing themselves, this was specially women. How he saw every car really close to each other without being able to even open the door. But the saddest thing is that the I-80 doesn't really take you anywhere you can be safe, both ends are heavily infested. I think there was technically nothing he could do to help or to exterminate. He saw a lot of people doing stupid stuff like breaking the only protection they had against the zombies, their windows and windshields. This is a very sad story because shows how desperation can take to stupidity.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Vaalajarvi, Finland


It's spring here in Finland, melting ice and warm afternoons, that's what puts this zone under hunting season. Here I met with Travis D'Ambrosia, the supreme allied commander. He explained to me the plans they had to exterminate the "plague" and the different phases within the plan. There were two phases, number one was creating an elite military group that will delay the "plague" so they could run phase two. This group was called the Alpha Teams, they were beyond the previous military groups, they were overly successful, but phase two never started. It consisted in recruiting the whole nation to a super army, no one left out. But it was way too expensive, and for it to run properly people should want to fight for their nation, but that sense of patriotism was gone after the last conflict, it just damaged the nation's morale. I think that if phase two was done, it wouldn't have helped a lot, or at all. The perfect proof, Yorkers, which was a complete failure.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

The Amazon Rain Forest, Brazil


I met with my host somewhere in Brazil, in the middle of the jungle. Everything looked so normal, as if nothing ever happened, just trees and animals. Soon we approached the village, hanging from trees, the houses made out of wood and resources easily found in this region. Here I talked to Fernando Oliveira, a surgeon. He told me about his experience with the "plague." He told me that the black market of organs was very popular, or used down in Brazil, and told me most of the origins of the organs, yes, mostly from Asia. He narrated me how everything occurred that day at the Hospital. He was supposed to do a heart transplant to some Austrian guy. The heart came from China, the flight was delayed, so they didn't have time to do any kinds of testings. was this an unwary decission, or just a desire to save a life? After some hours, Herr Mueller fell in a coma, yep, the heart was infected. Do you think this events helped the lague spread? I think that this situation, the black marketing of organs, brought from China helped spread the "plague" all aroud the globe, just helped, not provoqued the outbreaks. Also since the cause of this was unknown, I don't think they could have detected the virus untill the whole bloodstream was totally infected.