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From: F J BERNAL <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, September 23, 2000 3:11 PM
Subject: [STOPNATO.ORG.UK] (Fwd) Scientist 'killed Amazon indians to test race theor


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It will make you feel sick...


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Scientist 'killed Amazon indians to test race theory'

      Geneticist accused of
      letting thousands die in
      rainforest

      Paul Brown, Environment
      correspondent
      Saturday September 23, 2000

      Thousands of South American
      indians were infected with
      measles, killing hundreds, in
      order to for US scientists to study
      the effects on primitive societies
      of natural selection, according to
      a book out next month.

      The astonishing story of genetic
      research on humans, which took
      10 years to uncover, is likely to
      shake the world of anthropology
      to its core, according to
      Professor Terry Turner of Cornell
      University, who has read the
      proofs.

      "In its scale, ramifications, and
      sheer criminality and corruption it
      is unparalleled in the history of
      anthropology," Prof Turner says
      in a warning letter to Louise
      Lamphere, the president of the
      American Anthropology
      Association (AAA).

      The book accuses James Neel,
      the geneticist who headed a
      long-term project to study the
      Yanomami people of Venezuela
      in the mid-60s, of using a virulent
      measles vaccine to spark off an
      epidemic which killed hundreds
      and probably thousands.

      Once the epidemic was under
      way, according to the book, the
      research team "refused to
      provide any medical assistance
      to the sick and dying Yanomami,
      on explicit order from Neel. He
      insisted to his colleagues that
      they were only there to observe
      and record the epidemic, and
      that they must stick strictly to
      their roles as scientists, not
      provide medical help".

      The book, Darkness in El Dorado
      by the investigative journalist
      Patrick Tierney, is due to be
      published on October 1. Prof
      Turner, whose letter was
      co-signed by fellow
      anthropologist Leslie Sponsel of
      the University of Hawaii, was
      trying to warn the AAA of the
      impending scandal so the
      profession could defend itself.

      Although Neel died last February,
      many of his associates, some of
      them authors of classic
      anthropology texts, are still alive.

      The accusations will be the main
      focus of the AAA's AGM in
      November, when the surviving
      scientists have been invited to
      defend their work. None have
      commented publicly, but they are
      asking colleagues to come to
      their defence.

      One of the most controversial
      aspects of the research which
      allegedly culminated in the
      epidemic is that it was funded by
      the US atomic energy
      commission, which was anxious
      to discover what might happen to
      communities when large numbers
      were wiped out by nuclear war.

      While there is no "smoking gun"
      in the form of texts or recorded
      speeches by Neel explaining his
      conduct, Prof Turner believes the
      only explanation is that he was
      trying to test controversial
      eugenic theories like the Nazi
      scientist Josef Mengele.

      He quotes another anthropologist
      who read the manuscript as
      saying: "Mr. Tierney's analysis is
      a case study of the dangers in
      science of the uncontrolled ego,
      of lack of respect for life, and of
      greed and self-indulgence. It is a
      further extraordinary revelation of
      malicious and perverted work
      conducted under the aegis of the
      atomic energy commission."

      Prof Turner says Neel and his
      group used a virulent vaccine
      called Edmonson B on the
      Yanomani, which was known to
      produce symptoms virtually
      indistinguishable from cases of
      measles.

      "Medical experts, when informed
      that Neel and his group used the
      vaccine in question on the
      Yanomami, typically refuse to
      believe it at first, then say that it
      is incredible that they could have
      done it, and are at a loss to
      explain why they would have
      chosen such an inappropriate
      and dangerous vaccine," he
      writes.

      "There is no record that Neel
      sought any medical advice
      before applying the vaccine. He
      never informed the appropriate
      organs of the Venezuelan
      government that his group was
      planning to carry out a
      vaccination campaign, as he was
      legally required to do.

      Fatalities

      "Neither he nor any other
      member of the expedition has
      ever explained why that vaccine
      was used, despite the evidence
      that it actually caused or, at a
      minimum, greatly exacerbated
      the fatal epidemic."

      Prof Turner says that Neel held
      the view that "natural" human
      society, as seen before the
      advent of large-scale agriculture,
      consists of small, genetically
      isolated groups in which
      dominant genes - specifically a
      gene he believed existed for
      "leadership" or "innate ability" -
      have a selective advantage.

      In such an environment, male
      carriers of this gene would gain
      access to a disproportionate
      number of females, reproducing
      their genes more frequently than
      less "innately able" males. The
      result would supposedly be a
      continual upgrading of the human
      genetic stock.

      He says Neel believed that in
      modern societies "superior
      leadership genes would be
      swamped by mass genetic
      mediocrity".

      "The political implication of this
      fascistic eugenics is clearly that
      society should be reorganised
      into small breeding isolates in
      which genetically superior males
      could emerge into dominance,
      eliminating or subordinating the
      male losers in the competition for
      leadership and women, and
      amassing harems of brood
      females." Prof Turner adds.

      In the memo he says: "One of
      Tierney's more startling
      revelations is that the whole
      Yanomami project was an
      outgrowth and continuation of the
      atomic energy commission's
      secret programme of experiments
      on human subjects.

      "Neel, the originator of the
      project, was part of the medical
      and genetic research team
      attached to the atomic energy
      commission since the days of the
      Manhattan Project."

      James Neel was well-known for
      his research into the effects of
      radiation on human subjects and
      personally headed the team that
      investigated the effects of the
      Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs
      on survivors and their children.

      According to Prof Turner, the
      same group also secretly carried
      out experiments on human
      subjects in the US. These
      included injecting people with
      radioactive plutonium without
      their knowledge or permission.

      Nightmarish

      "This nightmarish story - a real
      anthropological heart of darkness
      beyond the imagining of even a
      Joseph Conrad (though not,
      perhaps, a Josef Mengele) - will
      be seen (rightly in our view) by
      the public, as well as most
      anthropologists, as putting the
      whole discipline on trial," he
      says.

      "This book should... cause the
      field to understand how the
      corrupt and depraved
      protagonists could have spread
      their poison for so long while they
      were accorded great respect
      throughout the western world...
      This should never be allowed to
      happen again."

      Yesterday Professor Turner told
      the Guardian it was unfortunate
      that the confidential memo had
      been leaked, but it had
      accomplished its original purpose
      in getting a full response from the
      AAA.

      A public forum would be held at
      its AGM in November to discuss
      the book its revelations and
      courses of action.

      In a statement yesterday the
      association said "The AAA is
      extremely concerned about these
      allegations. If proven true they
      would constitute a serious
      violation of Yanomami human
      rights and our code of ethics.
      Until there is a full and impartial
      review and discussion of the
      issues raised in the book, it
      would be unfair to express a
      judgment about the specific
      allegations against individuals that
      are contained in it.

      "The association is anticipating
      conducting an open forum during
      our annual meeting to provide an
      opportunity for our members to
      review and discuss the issues
      and allegations raised in the
      book."



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