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originally posted by: knightsofhonor
Like I told the person above, what gives you, or any white supremacist, the right to determine who or who should not, be allowed to exist on earth?
originally posted by: badgerprints
originally posted by: knightsofhonor
Like I told the person above, what gives you, or any white supremacist, the right to determine who or who should not, be allowed to exist on earth?
So I'm a white supremacist?
I am speaking to a general audience, which is why I said You OR White Supremacist. Never said you were a white supremacist. I gave you links to info. What more did you want?
originally posted by: badgerprints
a reply to: knightsofhonor
So were you implying that I felt I had the right to deny someone the right to exist here on earth?
Maybe we've just gotten off on the wrong foot here but I haven't seen anyone (including myself) assert anything of the sort in this thread.
I asked for links because I wanted to find out more about what you were talking about.
Being lumped in with white supremacists doesn't make a participant in a thread very likely to listen or read any further.
By the way,
I did read the links you provided.
I am aware of many of the incidents noted. (and find them reprehensible)
I was not aware of the doctor in south africa and his activities.
I was aware of the eugenics in the US before WW2. It is discussed in Eric Larsons "In the Garden of Beasts" about the politics before the Nazi rise to power in the 30's
The book "medical Apartheid" looks interesting.
I ask for links in a lot of threads.
This is the first time I've had a reaction like this.
I will not offend you with my questions any longer.
Enjoy your thread.
originally posted by: FurvusRexCaeli
a reply to: knightsofhonor
So we have ...
a) a South African national, working for the South African government, accused of various things and acquitted of criminal charges;
b) the Tuskegee Experiment, which did not (to my knowledge) involve any Africans, and only a few hundred Americans;
c) a book about medical experimentation (not depopulation) conducted on black Americans (not Africans);
d) a list of medical experiments in Africa, which include several short-lived, isolated cases of coercive birth control or sterilization, and a couple drug trials that could have been done better. Basically, the same thing you see on any other continent in the 20th century.
e) an article about eugenics in the United States (not Africa), mostly the sterilization of the mentally handicapped and criminals (not Africans).
You have discovered that the poor in Africa are treated just like the poor everywhere else, and that US's idea of medical ethics was just as rotten as everyone else's before we started doing IRBs. Compared to the billions of dollars spent saving millions of lives in Africa, I'd say this is not convincing evidence of an active conspiracy to use ebola to depopulate Africa.