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- From: weemba@sagi.wistar.upenn.edu (Matthew P Wiener)
- Newsgroups: sci.skeptic,soc.culture.african.american
- Subject: Re: AIDS and the CIA (was Question)
- Message-ID: <98209@netnews.upenn.edu>
- Date: 18 Nov 92 17:33:24 GMT
- References: <1992Nov17.021106.10158@vax.oxford.ac.uk> <97979@netnews.upenn.edu> <1992Nov18.013618.10207@vax.oxford.ac.uk>
- Sender: news@netnews.upenn.edu
- Reply-To: weemba@sagi.wistar.upenn.edu (Matthew P Wiener)
- Followup-To: sci.skeptic
- Organization: The Wistar Institute of Anatomy and Biology
- Lines: 89
- Supersedes: <98188@netnews.upenn.edu>
- Nntp-Posting-Host: sagi.wistar.upenn.edu
- In-reply-to: mcbean@vax.oxford.ac.uk
-
- David--could you please use crossposting instead of posting your reply
- twice? I didn't see your duplicate copy in scaa at first.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- In article <1992Nov18.013618.10207@vax.oxford.ac.uk>, mcbean@vax writes:
- >>>Am I missing sonething here?
-
- >> Yes. A few neurons. Maybe some spare glia.
-
- >Thanks for the mature response...
-
- Sorry. I'm getting tired of cheap leading questions. Your working
- model of how it could be done seems to be on par with a Hollywood mad
- scientist.
-
- >>> They didn't create syphillis but they
- >>>sure as hell experimented with it, so why couldn't AIDS experiments
- >>>have been conducted (irrespective of whether they did or not).
-
- >> With what? On what? Where was there the faintest clue that there
- >> was this very slow acting immune compromising sexually transmitted
- >> virus out there? WHERE?
-
- >Could it be possible that they were just f**king around not sure what
- >they were dealing with?
-
- Obviously, much of research consists of trial and error shooting in the
- dark, see what works, see what doesn't. But in the case of HIV and AIDS,
- nothing short of nature shoving it into our collective faces was going
- to enable us to recognize them. They are subtle. Heck, anything with
- the immune system is subtle.
-
- >>>It would seem logical that it wasn't genetically engineered but that
- >>>don't stop them from injecting it...
-
- >> Tell us how they found it first.
-
- >I was actually trying to get some information on what may or may not have
- >occurred, not engage in some nitpicking, childish diatribe.
-
- Here's the information: it's just not possible. The knowledge it would
- have taken to breed and recognize AIDS would be nothing short of psychic.
-
- > I do
- >believe somebody posted a reference that retroviruses were first
- >identified in 1910 on scaa.
-
- I think that was a sheep leukemia virus. Just breeding it is not going to
- lead to HIV. The peculiar nature of retroviruses, and why anyone should
- be fascinated by them, was not recognized until the late 60s. It turns
- out that HIV is the most complicated of the known retroviruses--part of
- the reason it mutates so fast.
-
- How, in fact, would someone breed HIV back in the fifties, assuming they
- even had a sample? Today, it's still very difficult to culture. People
- use T-cells, and interleukins and/or interferons to help them grow, and
- other details. And it has to be done under extraordinarily cautious
- conditions. (Here, in Wistar, the HIV lab is behind nasty double doors,
- and has all sorts of DANGER signs, and special instructions about gowns
- and gloves and so on. The rabies lab, by comparison, just has a very
- special DANGER sign. Both are located in remote locations.)
-
- So even culturing the virus was impossible until the sixties. Which
- meant our hypothetical evildoers were relying on animals or prisoners,
- looking for interesting diseases in them. But how are they going to
- recognize that they have discovered a particular immune disease? The
- very notion is somewhat modern, perhaps the fifties. And AIDS does not
- present itself in some obvious fashion. A range of secondary effects,
- from pneumonia to skin blotches to dementia--that could be anything.
- Especially if they occur years and years after infection. The cause and
- effect between the two is impossible to see without detailed post-sixties
- knowledge of immunology.
-
- Understand, none of this knowledge has been easy, either. It's been a
- major international effort of research, in both virology and immunology,
- with an incredible amount of scientific genius, and the surprises keep
- coming. Secret CIA work in this would have been zilch in comparison.
-
- If someone in the sixties wanted to kill off Africans at genocidal rates,
- there were fairly straightforward methods. The simplest would have been
- to refuse to contribute to the $300,000,000 WHO smallpox vaccination
- campaign. At 2,000,000 dead Africans EVERY YEAR, that would have been
- a lot more effective than today's 2,000,000 total HIV+ Africans.
-
- The next simplest would be to sell them guns. If you think about it,
- the CIA probably loves people wasting their basal ganglia on the AIDS
- nonsense, rather than investigating what they have in fact done over
- the years. You're not, by any chance, in their employ?
- --
- -Matthew P Wiener (weemba@sagi.wistar.upenn.edu)
-