| #21 - Posted 22 May 2008, 8:04 AM | |
Location: Cuba, it is a secret the censors are looking for me Join date: December 2007 Member #: 9 Posts: 13576 | RE: Wright Says U.S. Government Capable Of Creating AIDS Virus try to imagine the level of the minds who are posting this idiocy ....gives new meaning to lunatic fringe lets get ready to RUUMMMMMMBBBLLLEE |
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| #22 - Posted 22 May 2008, 8:11 AM | |
Location: Cuba, it is a secret the censors are looking for me Join date: December 2007 Member #: 9 Posts: 13576 | RE: Wright Says U.S. Government Capable Of Creating AIDS Virus This is for example the truth about Tuskegee...crazy and dishonest refers to Wacky Rev Wright Wright says the U.S. government “purposely infected African-American men with syphilis.” This is a lie, and no knowledgeable historian says otherwise. And yet, this untruth pops up routinely. In March, CNN commentator Roland Martin defended Wright, saying, “That actually did, indeed, happen.” On Fox News, the allegation has gone unchallenged on Hannity & Colmes and The O’Reilly Factor. Obery Hendricks, a prominent author and visiting scholar at Princeton University, told O’Reilly “I do know that the government injected syphilis into black men at the Tuskegee Institute. Now we know that the government is capable of doing those things.” To which O’Reilly responded: “All right. All governments have done bad things in every country.” True enough. And what the U.S. did at Tuskegee was indeed bad, very bad. But it didn’t do what these people say it did. So what did happen? In 1932, public health researchers set out to study syphilis, particularly among African Americans, who had higher infection rates than whites. They recruited 399 black men who already had syphilis. The doctors infected no one. In fact, the patients were selected in the first place because they were tertiary-stage syphilitics who were no longer contagious. The researchers studied the progress of the disease, without treating it, for 40 years. Prior to the availability of penicillin in the 1940s and 1950s, the researchers couldn’t have treated the men even if they wanted to. Even after standardized penicillin treatments were available, it wasn’t clear that the patients could have been helped. Some of the doctors believed that treating the decades-long infections would kill the men. Among scholars who’ve studied Tuskegee, there’s a lot of debate about how much — if any — racism was involved in the experiment. But no one disputes that Tuskegee had nothing whatsoever to do with genocide or even a desire to spread the disease among the black population. lets get ready to RUUMMMMMMBBBLLLEE |
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