555 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
555 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
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CAN AIDS THREATEN YOU?
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by
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PHOEBE COURTNEY
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# What is it?
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# How Infectious is it?
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# Are Blood Transfusions Safe?
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# How Soon Will it Affect a Million Americans?
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AIDS (Acquired Immunodeficency Syndrome), the always fatal
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disease that was first reported in 1981, has grown from a
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handful of cases to an epidemic of catastrophic proportions. The
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astronomical growth of AIDS infection in the U.S. portends a
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destruction of human life exceeding casualties that would be
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suffered in a major war. Yet relatively few Americans really
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understand the disease, how it is transmitted, and the risks it
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poses to public health.
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Fewer still understand what can be done to stop this modern
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plague and why prudent public health measures have not been
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taken.
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In his book The AIDS Cover-up?, Gene Antonio charges:
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"Unfortunately for society, there has ben a constant campaign
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about the AIDS virus on the part of many public health officials
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and the media. Key facts regarding the nature of AIDS, its
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related conditions and its means of transmission have been
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glossed over and obscured."
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At first, AIDS was thought to be largely confined to male
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homosexuals and intravenous drug users. But cases of AIDS began
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appearing among hemophiliacs and blood transfusion recipients.
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Now it is widely reported that heterosexuals are at risk for
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AIDS. Thus AIDS is not a disease of homosexuals alone;
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it threatens millions of sexually active Americans regardless of
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age, gender or race. AIDS is transmissible from man to woman and
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from woman to man in wholly conventional sex.
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According to the AP on January 1, 1987, the federal Centers
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for Disease Control estimate that 1 million to 1.5 million
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Americans have been infected with the AIDS virus, and of that
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total, 20 percent to 30 percent will develop AIDS by the end of
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1991.
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Earlier, on December 12, 1986, the federal Centers for
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Disease Control stated:
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"By 1991, heterosexual cases could make up nearly 10 percent
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of AIDS cases. The AIDS case count in the United States stands
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at 28,098, twice the number reported 13 months ago. Although
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heterosexual cases are growing the fastest, nine out of 10
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cases continue to occur in homosexual men and those who inject
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drugs."
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"GAY" INFLUENCE ON PUBLIC HEALTH POLICIES
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Quarantines to prevent the spread if infectious diseases are
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not uncommon. They have been applied with common sense for
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years. But now because of the political power of the highly
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organized homosexual lobby in population centers such as New
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York and San Francisco, some politicians have been hesitant
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about taking firm measures to protect against the spread of the
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death-dealing disease of AIDS, about which medical science
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still knows too little.
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In her syndicated column, Phyllis Schlafly puts it this way:
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"The media report daily on the subject of AIDS, but most
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reports are couched in semantics designed to shield the
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sensitivities of the homosexuals and to assert the 'civil
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rights' of people with AIDS over the rights of those who don't
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want to get AIDS.
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"The media may be partial to homosexuals and some politicians
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may be intimidated by them, but the grass roots are demanding
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action to protect the public health."
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In the August 1985 ISIS Newsletter (Institute for the
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Scientific Investigation of Sexuality), Dr. Paul Cameron
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declared:
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"I believe that the department of Health and Human Services,
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the Public Health Service and the Centers for Disease Control
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have been compromised by 'gay' activists and have bent their
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minds backwards so as not to 'offend' homosexuals."
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Kirk Kidwell in the September 29, 1986, issue of the New
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American magazine pointed out:
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"The major media, with its pro-homosexual bias, is not a
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reliable source of information. Government officials have been
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heavily lobbied by 'gay' activists. Even the medical
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establishment has, by and large, been co-opted by the homosexual
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movement.
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"In fact, opinion-makers in the media, government, and
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medicine look to the homosexual community as their best source
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of information about AIDS."
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No other disease in history with the potential of destroying
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millions of lives has been handled the way government health
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authorities are treating AIDS.
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A case in point is an authoritative article entitled "AIDS
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Warning - The Surgeon General's Report May Be Hazardous To Your
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Health" which appeared in the January 19, 1987, issue of The New
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American magazine*. On October 22, 1986, U.S. Surgeon General C.
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Everett Koop issued the Koop Report. It received quick praise
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from the American Academy of Family Physicians, the American
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Medical Association, and the Institute of Medicine of the
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National Academy of Sciences.
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More importantly, the Koop Report won sustained applause from
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the homosexual community. The national "gay" publication, The
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Advocate, for November 25, 1986, declared that the Report was
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"particularly gratifying." Jeff Levi, executive director of the
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National Gay Task Force said: "I thought it was very good."
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In his Report Dr. Koop deftly avoids the immorality of
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homosexuality. Instead, he consistently treats homesexuality as
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a respectable "alternative" lifestyle and speaks of "homosexual
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couples" and the need for children to be taught how to engage in
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"safe" homosexual practices.
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In this connection The New American article states:
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"It is an outrage that the Surgeon General's major
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recommendation for containing the AIDS epidemic is to turn our
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elementary school children over to the value-free sex
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educationists for further indoctrination on how to engage in
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'safe' homosexual relations."
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When Dr. Koop suggests that sex with the AIDS-infected is
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"safe" if condoms are used, he may be guilty of misleading
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people to engage in dangerous, perhaps lethal behavior. Whether
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or not the U.S. Surgeon General's advice constitutes criminal
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negligence is an intriguing legal question.
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The Koop Report urges the public to contact homosexual and
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pro-homosexual organizations for additional information on AIDS,
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including: the National Gay Task Force, National Coalition of
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Gay Sexually Transmitted Disease Services, National Council of
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Churches AIDS Task Force, and the Gay Men's Health Crisis.
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Thus the Koop Report places the government's stamp of
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approval upon a lifestyle whose values and behavior are inimical
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to the best interests of heterosexual society and sends an
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erroneous message to both homosexuals and heterosexuals. It
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tells the homosexual that his sexual behavior is acceptable with
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some minor refinements, and it tells the heterosexual that there
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is nothing inappropriate with "safe" homosexual behavior. Both
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messages are wrong.
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The director of United Families of American, Robert L.
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Bartleson, may have put his finger on the problem when he noted
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that "more than half of Dr. Koop's experts are 'gay rights'
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advocates." Dr. Koop has made the strategic error of placing
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homosexual "civil rights" above the need for a sound policy to
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contain AIDS and protect the public.
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Certainly Dr. Koop's' suggestions for coping with the AIDS
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crisis indicate the something is seriously wrong at the U.S.
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Department of Health and Human Services.
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WHAT IS AIDS?
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In view of the foregoing, what are the true facts regarding
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the approaching AIDS catastrophe?
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Gene Antonio's new book The AIDS Cover-up?* is a
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comprehensive analysis of the AIDS threat. He spent the past
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several years researching the subject. The 376 footnotes in his
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book are mostly from medical journals.
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Following are a few of the facts contained in Gene Antonio's
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book:
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As the name implies, the Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome
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(AIDS) is best known for producing an inability of the body's
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immune system to ward off infections.
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The agent which causes AIDS is a retrovirus designated HTLV-
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III/LAV (human T-cell lymphotropic retrovirus/lyphadenopathy-
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associated virus). The AIDS virus reproduces with rapidity.
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After infection occurs, the AIDS virus travels throughout
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various parts of the body. The AIDS virus has been isolated from
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plasma, serum, saliva, tears, semen, urine, cerebrospinal fluid
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and brain tissue.
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When the AIDS virus invades white blood cells, their ability
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to defend against infection is seriously impaired. The helper T-
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cells lose their normal role and become AIDS virus factories. In
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the process, the T-cells are gradually destroyed, and as they
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disappear the main initiator of the immune response is lost.
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This effectively devastates the immune system.
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After entering the body, the time it takes for the AIDS virus
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to produce deadly effects varies among individuals.
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The first stage is an asymptomatic carrier stage. The
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individual is infected with the virus but shows no detectable
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signs or symptoms. The AIDS virus infiltrates the eyes, brain,
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lungs, liver, spleen, kidneys and other organs of infected
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person, including those who appear symptomless. However, persons
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carrying the AIDS virus, including those who have not yet
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developed visible symptoms, are able to infect others.
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The second stage of AIDS virus infection occurs when an
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infected individual begins to manifest symptoms which can
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include sudden unexplained weight loss, drenching night sweats,
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persistent diarrhea, swelling of the lymph nodes in the armpits
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and groin, chronic fatigue and/or psychogenic disturbances. This
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has been called the AIDS-Related Complex (ARC) or the pre-AIDS
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syndrome. Persons developing ARC are critically infected with
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the AIDS virus.
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The third stage is full-blown AIDS. More than half of those
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initially diagnosed with full-blown AIDS will be dead within
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eighteen months; more than 70 percent will be dead within two
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years. Virtually no one who has developed the syndrome was alive
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five years later.
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The AIDS virus belongs to the family of lentiviruses. These
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lentiviruses (the name is derived from the Latin lentus-"slow")
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are called slow viruses because they frequently have a lengthy
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incubation period before symptoms develop. The average time from
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initial infection to development of symptoms can vary from
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several weeks to five years and more. Because the adverse
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effects of AIDS infection can take years to become manifest, it
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enables the epidemic to spread very rapidly.
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At the end of 1986, over 25,000 Americans have developed
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full-blown AIDS. Only persons with full-blown AIDS are reported
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by the federal Centers for Disease Control. However, the number
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of persons with pre-AIDS or AIDS-Related Complex (ARC), is
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estimated by some researchers to be ten times the number of
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full-blown AIDS cases or more than 250,000 cases. And, it should
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be emphasized that persons in this intermediate stage of AIDS
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infections are also capable of transmitting the AIDS virus to
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others.
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HOW INFECTIOUS IS AIDS?
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According to Dr. William A. Haseltine, a leading AIDS
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researcher at the Harvard Medical School in Boston.
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"Once infected, a person remains infected for the rest of his
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life. Once infected a person is infectious. It is not safe to
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assume otherwise."
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In graphic personal terms, this means that, once a person
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becomes infected with the AIDS virus, he or she can never engage
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in intimate sexual activity without endangering the life of
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another person.
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In the 1985 guidelines for preventing health-care workers
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from becoming infected by patients with AIDS, the federal
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Centers for Disease Control warn repeatedly that such workers
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should avoid contact, not only with the blood of AIDS patients,
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but with "other body fluids" as well. The guidelines state:
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"Because of the theoretical risk of salivary
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transmission...during mouth to mouth resuscitation, special
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attention should be given to the use of disposable airway
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equipment or resuscitation bags and the wearing of gloves when
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in contact with blood or other body fluids."
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Dr. Richard Restak, a prominent Washington neurologist, who
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has been studying AIDS as a brain-related disease, asserts that
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AIDS victims "should not work as dental or medical technicians,
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and should not be employed as food handlers."
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In the previously mentioned Koop Report, Surgeon General C.
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Everett Koop claims: "Although the AIDS virus has been found in
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tears and saliva, no instance of transmission from these body
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fluids has been reported."
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On the contrary, Dr. Jerome Groopman of Harvard University
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and Dr. Robert Gallo of the National Cancer Institute (and the
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co-discoverer of the original AIDS virus) reported in a leading
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British medical journal, The Lancet of December 22/29, 1984,
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that saliva was the mode of transmission from a man with
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transfusion-acquired AIDS to his wife. Their relationship was,
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according to Groopman, "limited to kissing."
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The Koop Report also claims: "There is no danger of AIDS
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virus infection from visiting a doctor, dentist..."
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The truth is that there is danger of contracting AIDS from
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any health worker using invasive procedures. The Centers for
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Disease Control on November 15, 1985 and April 11, 1986, issued
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recommendations for preventing transmission of AIDS between
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dentists and patients. These recommendations including, the
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wearing of masks and gloves, have been adopted by the nation's
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dentists.
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Dr, William Haseltine stated in the New York Times of March
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18, 1986, "Anyone who tells you categorically that AIDS is not
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contracted by saliva is not telling you the truth. AIDS may, in
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fact, be transmissible by tears, saliva, body fluids and
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mosquito bites."
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The public has been repeatedly told that the AIDS agent is an
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extremely frail virus, incapable of living outside the body for
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any extended period of time.
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The findings in 1985 of French researchers -- specialists
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from the Pasteur Institute's elite Viral Oncology Unit went
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unmentioned by major public health officials and were virtually
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blacked out by the media. However, the Journal of the American
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Medical Association of November 22/29, 1985, commented in the
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Medical News section:
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"A recent report from the Pasteur Institute in Paris by the
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investigators who originally isolated the lymphadenopathy virus
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suggests that the AIDS virus might be pretty tough. The French
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study finds that virus survives ten days at room temperature
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even when dried out in a petri dish."
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The French researchers give specific safety precautions for
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medical and dental personnel which clearly intimate that oral
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transmission of AIDS through saliva is a danger to be reckoned
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with.
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This brings up some alarming questions. What about when an
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AIDS virus carrier coughs or sneezes infected secretions into,
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for example, a punch bowl or salad bar? What about when a cook
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or waiter contaminates food with infected saliva or other body
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fluids -- i.e., coughs, or sheds infected tears while slicing
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onions or sustains a cut and contaminates the food with blood?
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The Koop Report claims: "There are no known cases of AIDS
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transmission by insects, such as mosquitoes."
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The New American of January 19, 1987, refutes this statement
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by saying:
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"This is a misleading statement. Dr. Koop should be aware
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that a leading French scientist found that many insects in
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Central Africa are infected with the AIDS virus, including
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mosquitoes, cockroaches, ticks, and tsetse flies."
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Harvard Medical School's Dr. Haseltine points out that "AIDS
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may, in fact, be transmissible by...mosquito bites." In Florida,
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Dr. Mark E. Whiteside, co-director of the Institute of Tropical
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Medicine in Miami, believes that environmental factors,
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including "blood-sucking insects" play a role in spreading AIDS.
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Dr. Whiteside wrote in Genetic Engineering News, November-
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December 1986: "Blood-sucking insects [mosquitoes and bedbugs]
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are a logical means of transfer of blood-borne agents,
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especially in the tropics."
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HOW DANGEROUS ARE BLOOD TRANSFUSIONS?
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An estimated 3 million Americans receive blood transfusions
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each year.
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ABC TV's 20/20 program on December 4, 1986, informed the
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public that the nations blood supply is tainted with AIDS. Since
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1979 over 26 million blood transfusions have been administered
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and it is now thought that a substantial number of those
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transfusions were contaminated. An AIDS screening system was not
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developed until March 1985, and it is unable to detect strains
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of the rapidly mutilating AIDS virus.
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Gene Jeffers of the American Red Cross in Washington stated
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on June 8, 1985, that how many people will develop AIDS from
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blood they received before the mass screening started is not
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known because the incubation period of the virus may be as long
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as five years.
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The New England Journal Of Medicine has reported that the
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AIDS virus may persist without causing symptoms in an infected
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person for more than four years and still be transmissible
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through blood transfusion.
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In his aforementioned book, Gene Antonio states that it is
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estimated that virtually all hemophiliacs in the United States
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and elsewhere who have received clotting-factor concentrates
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derived from blood collected in the U.S. prior to 1985 have
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become infected with the AIDS virus. Nine thousand hemophiliacs
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plus an additional 20,000 other blood transfusion recipients are
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now permanently infected with the AIDS virus. Many, if not most,
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will die of full blown AIDS or subsequent brain disease. There
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is now a dramatic upswing in transfusion-related cases of full-
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blown AIDS. This will increase as the virus incubates.
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Hemophiliacs and other victims of HTLV-III tainted blood have
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been used by the media to support the contention that AIDS is
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not particularly related to homosexuality. However, hard
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evidence revels that the vast majority of hemophiliacs and other
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blood recipients have fallen prey to liver disease and AIDS
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infection as a direct consequence of blood donated by
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homosexuals.
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The AIDS blood-screening test now in operation has a major
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flaw: it still permits a significant number of persons who are
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asymptomatically carrying the virus to slip through.
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In her syndicated column of September 3, 1986, Phyllis
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Schlafly asks:
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"Why are we continually told that the AIDS-antibody test will
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screen out all AIDS-infected blood when the fact is that there
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can be a six-month lag between the time a person becomes
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infected with AIDS and the time that person shows 'positive' on
|
|||
|
the AIDS-antibody test?"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
And Gene Antonio puts it this way:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Since some persons infected with AIDS are able to pass the
|
|||
|
test undetected, the blood supply still cannot be described as
|
|||
|
safe."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Apparently the American Medical Association is becoming
|
|||
|
alarmed because on November 6, 1986, the AMA recommended that
|
|||
|
people anticipating elective heart, chest or orthopedic surgery
|
|||
|
have their own blood collected in a six week period before the
|
|||
|
operation. The method, called autologous blood transfusion,
|
|||
|
eliminates the risk of contracting AIDS or other communicable
|
|||
|
diseases associated with receiving someone else's blood, said
|
|||
|
Dr. Ira Freidlander, a member of the AMA's Council on Scientific
|
|||
|
Affairs.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IS A VACCINE POSSIBLE?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Why are we given extravagant news coverage of speculation
|
|||
|
about a cure for AIDS, when in truth there is no prospect for a
|
|||
|
cure in the foreseeable future because AIDS is a "lentivirus," a
|
|||
|
deadly and little understood family of viruses that has been
|
|||
|
completely resistant to treatment or vaccine?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
According to Gene Antonio, "The AIDS virus mutates very
|
|||
|
rapidly. New variant strains of the virus make vaccine
|
|||
|
development prospects bleak and could result in changes of modes
|
|||
|
of transmission."
|
|||
|
The November 24, 1986, issue of Newsweek quotes Mark Feinberg
|
|||
|
of Stanford University as saying that AIDS is basically unlike
|
|||
|
any disease that is prevented by vaccination for it attacks the
|
|||
|
very antibody-producing machinery that a vaccine is supposed to
|
|||
|
stimulate.
|
|||
|
The body's natural defenses are incapable of combating the
|
|||
|
AIDS virus. With other diseases, the immune system produces
|
|||
|
antibodies which attack and kill invading organisms. Vaccines
|
|||
|
are utilized to raise antibody levels in the blood stream high
|
|||
|
enough to kill invading pathogens. In the case of infection with
|
|||
|
the AIDS virus, the antibodies which develop have little or no
|
|||
|
capacity to neutralize the effects of the virus. Researchers
|
|||
|
dare not inject even a minute amount of AIDS virus into humans
|
|||
|
as a means of raising antibodies to ward off the disease.
|
|||
|
On October 29, 1986, a National Academy of Sciences panel,
|
|||
|
stating the AIDS epidemic could result in one of the worst
|
|||
|
catastrophes of the 20th century, indicated a vaccine to prevent
|
|||
|
the disease "is at least five years away," and despite some
|
|||
|
recent encouraging test results, drugs that conquer the disease
|
|||
|
"may also be years away."
|
|||
|
On January 19, 1987, even U.S. Surgeon General C. Everett
|
|||
|
Koop, who has tried to gloss over the AIDS threat as documented
|
|||
|
in this pamphlet, admitted:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Make no mistake about it, AIDS is spreading among more
|
|||
|
people and it is uniformly fatal. No cure or vaccine is in sight
|
|||
|
in the foreseeable future."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CIVIL RIGHTS OR PUBLIC HEALTH?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In the past, once the source of an epidemic was identified,
|
|||
|
the information led public-health authorities to map out a
|
|||
|
counter-strategy. But these are not normal times. Homosexual
|
|||
|
activists are well-organized and well financed. possessing links
|
|||
|
to both major political parties. They have strong media
|
|||
|
influence (Gay Media Task Force) and strong medical ties.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"The spirit of the age," says syndicated columnist Jeffery
|
|||
|
Hart, "regards disapproval of homosexuality as simply bigotry,
|
|||
|
and the Liberal mentality is zealous in its efforts to protect
|
|||
|
homosexuals from any disagreeable consequences of their
|
|||
|
practices whether social, economic, or medical consequences."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Richmond (Va.) News leader had this comment:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Meanwhile helpless citizens are falling victim to AIDS-
|
|||
|
carriers who contracted the disease through anti-social
|
|||
|
lifestyles. Yet any mention of restraining the carriers
|
|||
|
activities or of isolating them, draws fevered objections from
|
|||
|
the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and homosexual groups
|
|||
|
such as the Lambda Legal Defense and Education Foundation."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In spite of the AIDS epidemic, militant homosexuals are
|
|||
|
pushing ahead with demands for "gay rights" legislation.
|
|||
|
They want protected status in employment and housing; the
|
|||
|
right to teach in public schools and to advocate homosexuality
|
|||
|
through sex-education classes.
|
|||
|
"Gay rights" legislation is now pending in cities and States
|
|||
|
throughout the country as well as in Congress.
|
|||
|
In 1985, House resolution #230, which came to be known as the
|
|||
|
"Gay Bill of Rights" was introduced in Congress, but was tabled
|
|||
|
because of the growing AIDS epidemic. Now it is being introduced
|
|||
|
in this 100th Congress where it has some chance of passing
|
|||
|
because of Liberal gains in the House and Senate in the 1986
|
|||
|
congressional elections. Among other things this bill would make
|
|||
|
it a CRIMINAL OFFENSE" for churches, schools, businesses and
|
|||
|
local, State and federal agencies to refuse to hire homosexuals
|
|||
|
for ANY reason.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In an article in the September 6, 1986, issue of Human Events
|
|||
|
entitled "AIDS: A Record of Shocking Negligence -- Official
|
|||
|
'Reassurances' Mistaken," M. Stanton Evans concludes by stating:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Gay rights groups and those who seek their support have been
|
|||
|
treating AIDS as a political 'civil rights' issue, rather than a
|
|||
|
public-health issue. If any other disease were involved, the
|
|||
|
standards would be much more rigorous. The identical standards
|
|||
|
should be applied to AIDS.
|
|||
|
"Spreading a contagion with a 100 percent mortality rate is
|
|||
|
not a civil right."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
And the Richmond (Va.) News Leader agrees:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"AIDS no longer is a civil-rights issue affecting primarily
|
|||
|
homosexuals. It is now a public-health issue focused on an
|
|||
|
incurable disease. Regarding AIDS, concerns for the public
|
|||
|
health become paramount."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
WHAT MUST BE DONE
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Our public-health authorities must be made to realize that
|
|||
|
their first responsibility is to protect the public's health,
|
|||
|
not the perceived "civil rights" of homosexuals or drug users.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
# As a first practical step to stemming the most blatant
|
|||
|
sources of AIDS contagion, the high risk homosexual
|
|||
|
bathhouses and "clubs" must be closed permanently by
|
|||
|
federal edict.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
# There must be federal bans on all high-risk group members
|
|||
|
from donating blood, contributing semen to sperm banks, and
|
|||
|
donating organs. The present AIDS blood-screening test
|
|||
|
still permits a certain percentage of those infected with
|
|||
|
AIDS to slip through the safety net and endanger people's
|
|||
|
lives. All prospective donors must be required to sign a
|
|||
|
statement under oath that they are not members of a high-
|
|||
|
risk group. Mandatory federal penalties should be imposed
|
|||
|
on violators.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
# There should be federal registration of all persons
|
|||
|
diagnosed with full blown AIDS, pre-AIDS (ARC) and those
|
|||
|
testing positive with the AIDS blood-screening test.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
# Federal penalties should be imposed on physicians failing
|
|||
|
to report persons diagnosed with full-blown AIDS,
|
|||
|
intermediate AIDS or the a symptomatically infected.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
# Public and private employers should be permitted to utilize
|
|||
|
AIDS risk-factor questionnaires and AIDS- blood-screening
|
|||
|
tests in hiring.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
# The U.S. Surgeon General should insist that anyone with
|
|||
|
AIDS should not work as a health-care provider or as a food
|
|||
|
handler.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Dr. Richard Restak has noted:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Quarantines have been very effective in beating outbreaks of
|
|||
|
scarlet fever, small pox and typhoid in this century."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
And Dr. James Curran of Harvard has stated:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"This is a plague and menace, and I see nothing wrong with
|
|||
|
quarantine on a constitutional level."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In conclusion, Dr. James I. Slaff of the national Institutes
|
|||
|
of Health warns:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"The AIDS virus shows every sign of being just as deadly as
|
|||
|
the plague during the Middle Ages. We are on a crash course with
|
|||
|
reality. This is not a practice run. There is no second chance.
|
|||
|
AIDS may be to the twentieth century what the Black Plague was
|
|||
|
to the fourteenth century.
|
|||
|
"The alarm must be sounded, loudly and persuasively. If it is
|
|||
|
not, the conclusion is inescapable: millions may die."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
****************************************************************
|
|||
|
This is a transcript of "Tax Fax # 217, from the Independent
|
|||
|
American, P.O. Box 636, Littleton Colorado, 80160.
|