• FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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    12 days ago

    One person. That’s all it takes.

    They find the person shopping or something, routine. Spritz some flu into their face. (Well, more discretely, but yeah.)

    They go to the hospital, pay the guy a visit when, spritz some MRSA on his linens or something. Plenty of opportunity. Even better, spritz it on everyone’s linens so it looks like an outbreak.

    Slip in, visit the guy and inject a stroke causing drug. Maybe even something as innocuous as just injecting an air bubble into his artery.

    Maybe a small support team. But really, you think Boeing doesn’t already have a hitter on the payroll?

    • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      This isn’t Hollywood. You can’t just walk into an ICU ward and inject someone.

      • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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        12 days ago

        Well, I have not done the injecting bit, but I have just walked into more than one ICU… It’s not hard. Nurses and security both are over staffed and underpaid.

        (I work in contract security- at one point part of my job was pen testing. Chilled with an interesting fellow named Edgar, while waiting to get caught. Didn’t have anyone to talk to, so, we just chatted. Mostly he chatted.)

        harder at night but only because there’s fewer people.

        Unless there’s a specific reason someone needs high security… the security is largely a joke.