AIDS is quite possibly one of the most horrific developments this past century. Millions of dollars are being poured into research and yet a cure still seems all but completely elusive. Gone are the days of carefree sex ’n’ drugs ’n’ rock ’n’ roll, as the deadly virus does not seem to be at all choosy in who it targets. Shocking as the whole phenomenon would be if this really was a natural plague, theory has it that the AIDS virus was in fact artificially manufactured by the U.S. government to kill African-Americans and this is being taken very seriously by the black community. Rumors are being circulated that the disease was developed to kill off the so called “useless eaters” of the human race—blacks, homosexuals and drug users to be more precise. The Minister of Health for Louis Farrakhan’s Nation of Islam, Dr. Abdul Alim Muhammed, has called for a formal investigation. In his words:
“We
know from the Congressional Report that money was appropriated for the creation
of artificial biological agents to defeat the human immune system. This took place
in July of 1969. Ten million dollars was allocated to the U.S. army. So . . .
let there be hearings to uncover the files.”
Many
African-Americans quote this experiment, which took place at Tuskegee as
grounds for skepticism about the government’s intentions. From 1932 to 1972
about four hundred poor black men were used as guinea pigs as scientists studied
the effects of syphilis left untreated. And what’s more, as Thomas Blocker,
Director of Health Professions at Morehouse College says: “A number of people have
the idea that there’s always the possibility that people who are disadvantaged
may be used as guinea pigs in terms of medicine.”
We
cannot know about the origins of AIDS. We do not know whether the most lethal
worldwide killer was born of some warped conspiracy in the name of population
control or scientific experiment. But they certainly succeeded if a conspiracy
was at work. Perhaps they had not bargained for such dramatic results.
No comments:
Post a Comment