Saturday, October 07, 2006

AIDS: The "Perfect" Disease

In the quest to find coveted vaccines against cancer, unscrupulous researchers injected human subjects with an array of dangerous viruses and cancer-causing agents. Consider:
* Throughout the 1950s researchers injected human subjects with transplanted cancer cells to see if human tumors were “transmissible.” They were.[1]
* In the 1960s, cancer researchers injected people with experimental monkey cancer and tumor viruses to see if animal viruses were capable of crossing the species barrier to cause tumors in humans. They were.[2]
* In the late 1970s, researchers mixed these same monkey sarcoma viruses with newly cultured monkey immunosuppressive viruses to see if they would grow in human cell cultures. They did.[3]
* In the early 1980s, an epidemic of rare sarcomas began in human populations suddenly infected with a mysterious immunosuppressive virus. This virus (HIV) was traced to a monkey virus similar to those grown in human cell cultures by cancer researchers just prior to the AIDS epidemic.
This brief sampling of published, cold-blooded human experimentation in decades of cancer vaccine research brings up horrifying questions about more recent developments, such as:
- Could the AIDS/cancer epidemic that exploded on the scene in the 1980s be the logical culmination of a horrific series of human experiments designed to induce cancer with viruses for vaccine research?
- Is this why researchers are confidently predicting that the AIDS-induced cancer epidemic will lead to long-sought human cancer vaccines, mirroring success in animal cancer vaccine experiments with immunosuppressive viruses?
In a shocking exposé by Jerry Leonard, AIDS: The “Perfect” Disease, the author shows why viruses like HIV were engineered for cancer research and provides evidence that vaccines were not only the goal behind AIDS but the source of it. He builds a case that public vaccine campaigns were used as the vehicle to create a “model infection” of human cancer, and thereby replicate decades of successful lab-animal experiments in human populations.
Moreover, the author chillingly describes why he believes that these types of experiments using vaccine programs will continue uninterrupted, with ever more powerful genetic engineering techniques, until the public realizes what is being done and demands that the exploitation end.
This book is designed to alert and educate the public as to how the goals of cancer researchers, noble though they may be, are being achieved through dangerous and unethical means.
Informed action is imperative. Such experiments must be exposed and halted, now.

To Practice Safer Sex

A few days ago, an article from my local newspaper caught my attention for showing a statistic of Aids positive carriers in Malaysia. It shows the number of AIDS positive carriers from the year 1996 till 2005, it has increased from 6 to 13,000 people, which shocked me by its increased number.
From the report being made, it wrote that the main cause for spreading the virus is unprotected sex. Therefore, I really think that to educate the new generation to practice safer sex instead of forbid them to have unmarital sex has become a necessary for schools sex education.
There're many tools that you can really use to practice safe sex, but today I only want to focus on the most commonly use tool of all nation - Condoms.
Although many statistics have shown that the condoms are not a 100% guarantee of safe sex against AIDS, pregnancy and even sexually transmitted diseases due to possibility of human or mechanical errors. But if you follow the correct way of using condoms, you can avoid these errors to gain near to 100% protection.
Here're some few tips you may want to know before using condoms to protect you and your partner:
1. Use ONLY water-based lubricant (or known as lube). As far as I know, if you are going to use oil-based lube such as vaseline, hand creams and oil lotions, it is going to break latex. So please keep oil only to your salads and cars.
2. Latex condoms are the most effective way to prevent pregnancy and to protect against STDs and HIV. I know there're condoms made from lambskin, but it doesn't even block HIV disease and STDs unless you're allergic to latex, I would recommend that you use the second best condoms made from polyurethane. So remember, only latex condoms provide the best protection against STDs.
3. Always place the condoms in a safe place where it does not covered with heavy items or to put together with sharp objects such as car keys in your pocket. Keeping condoms in your wallet is also a bad idea because the pressure for squeezing it might damage the latex body.
4. Condoms also have a shelf life, so check the expiration date.
5. Put on a condom even though you decided to have only oral sex with your partner. Body fluid including semen might transmit STD or HIV through mouth if not careful. So why risk it? You could use a non-lubricated or flavored condom. Trust me, they taste a lot better.
6. I know only a few ladies would do this (or guys), but do remember to use a condom on any sex toy if you're going to use it. Another very IMPORTANT tip for ladies to remember is do not switch the toy from anus to vagina, or from one person to another without putting on a new condom.
So Men, practice putting on a condom until you feels comfortable wearing it. Practice makes perfect, and you'll impress your partner. Ladies, practice putting a condom on a banana or any other object that fits your description.
Practicing safer sex doesn't mean eliminating the fun of sex from your life; it is all about caring for your partner and for yourself. Seriously, practicing safe sex means reducing the chance of acquiring sexually transmitted diseases, HIV, gonorrhea, chlamydia, syphilis, hepatitis B, and genital herpes (to name a few), it is worth it to learn more about protecting yourself. Meanwhile many women and men say they have better sex when they use condoms. They are able to focus on their sexual pleasure without distractions about unintended pregnancy and sexually transmitted infection. Some couples put the condom on as part of their foreplay. Many men are able to stay erected longer.