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"W" is for
Wicked
(apologies to
lektrik.com) by Paul
deParrie |
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"A righteous man regardeth the life of his beast: but the tender
mercies of the wicked are cruel." Proverbs 12: 10 (KJV) George W(icked) Bush has now made slaves of 60 innocent children. With his announcement of federal funding for "existing cell
lines" from 60 already-murdered Unborn, Bush has condemned these
innocent children to perpetual servitude as providers of experimental fodder
for researchers and "medicine" for sick people who have no problems
with becoming cannibals to save their own sorry behinds. In perpetuity, these children’s "cell lines" – read: bodies –
will be harnessed to the medical-industrial complex as useful (and
especially, profitable) stem cell factories. The only grace note here is that these children are not conscious of this
corpse abuse. In a little German town called Nuremberg, half a century in time and a
billion miles in moral outrage away, "doctors" and
"scientists" were tried for their good-for-society experiments
using the corpses of executed Jews. "I accepted those brains, of course," said one of them trying to
dodge the noose by claiming that the Jews were dead anyway. Bush chillingly repeats the mantra of those guilty of crimes against
humanity. The accused at Nuremberg swung from ropes or ended their days behind
prison walls. May history repeat for Bush and his ilk. History is replete with such atrocities – and such excuses. Most times,
there is not even an attempt at justice in this life. (Thank God for the
judgment in the next.) Nuremberg taught us that, in medical experiments, there was no substitute
for full, knowing, and voluntary consent. However, even the "good guys" at Nuremberg – the U.S. – who were
removing the splinter from Germany’s eye, had a log in their own eye during
the Tuskeegee Experiments conducted for 40 years (well back into the time
they were sitting in judgment of Germany) until they were revealed in 1972.
Here, the good guys had allowed black (or should I say "nigger") men
to suffer the untreated ravages of syphilis just so they would have a solid
understanding of how the disease incrementally destroyed human beings. The
U.S. Public Health Service left 600 of these men untreated – all the while
pretending to provide health care to them. As a result of that "experiment" being exposed, a new criteria
was added: The subject of any experiment must be a potential beneficiary of
the experiment. However, even if that was a good hindsight, remember that while we were
condemning Germany for not obtaining consent, none of these 600 had given
their consent. Now we embark on a whole new level of hypocrisy. A "pro-life"
president is not only offering up the remains of these murdered children for
the "greater good" without their consent, none of these children
have any hope of benefiting from these experiments – violations of both
Nuremberg and Tuskeegee lessons. Whoops! I forgot. These children were "dead already." In that light, I seem to recall that there were displays at Aushwicz of
masses of human hair (and other items) taken from "already dead"
Jews. Maybe Bush could suggest to European Union leaders that the hair be
recycled into felt for linings in Nazi troop uniforms . . . er, blankets for
the homeless. There is so much good that could come from all that material left over
from what the Nazis did. One can only pray for a Nuremberg II. |