http://www.salon.com/2014/09/04/10_of_the_most_evil_medical_experiments_in_history_partner/
Evil scares us. Arguably our best horror stories, the ones that give us nightmares, are about evil people doing evil things—especially evil experiments. The Island of Dr. Moreau by H.G. Wells is a classic that comes to mind. In modern cinema, movies like The Human Centipede continue that gruesome tradition. But these are fictional. The truth is that we need only look at recent human history to find real, live, utterly repugnant evil. Worse yet, it is evil perpetrated by doctors.
Here are 10 of the most evil experiments ever performed on human beings—black and other people of color, women, prisoners, children and gay people have been the predominant victims.
1. The Tuskegee Experiments
There’s a good reason many African Americans are wary of the good intentions of government and the medical estblishment. Even today, many believe the conspiracy theory that AIDS, which ravaged the African-American community, both gay and straight, was created by the government to wipe out African Americans. What happened in Tuskegee, Alabama in 1932 is one explanation for these fears.
At the time, treatments for syphilis, a sexually transmitted disease that causes pain, insanity and ultimately, death, were mostly toxic and ineffective (things like mercury, which caused, kidney failure, mouth ulcers, tooth loss, insanity, and death). Government-funded doctors decided it would be interesting to see if no treatment at all was better than the treatments they were using. So began the Tuskegee experiments.
Over the course of the next 40 years, the Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male denied treatment to 399 syphilitic patients, most of them poor, black, illiterate sharecroppers. Even after penicillin emerged as an effective treatment in 1947, these patients, who were not told they had syphilis, but were informed they suffered from “bad blood,” were denied treatment, or given fake placebo treatments. By the end of the study, in 1972, only 74 of the subjects were still alive. Twenty eight patients died directly from syphilis, 100 died from complications related to syphilis, 40 of the patients’ wives were infected with syphilis, and 19 children were born with congenital syphilis.
2. The Aversion Project
These are probably not the worst things that one person decided to do to another. There is a darkness in humanity. We call our compassion 'humanity' - yet it is something that we can easily turn off, like a switch. Each of us has the ability to just not care - some of us choose not to exercise that ability while others live it in every moment. There are many factors that contribute to this, but in the end it comes down to our society as a whole not providing the support structures that each person requires to function with humanity at all times and in all contexts. Consider the families of poverty: majority of them receive little to no support, mental illness is high, drug and alcohol abuse is high, illiteracy is high - the list goes on - if you are living in these circumstances then it is very likely that you're not going to care very much about many things, you may even reach a point where you are willing to hurt or kill without remorse in order to get whatever thing it is that you do value. This is only one aspect - the experiments listed above were carried out by doctors in the most part which implies that they most likely did not come from a life of poverty - what does this tell you? Privilege does not ensure the development of a healthy member of society either. The problem includes social and economic status, but is not limited to those things. The very nature of a person who is willing to harm to further their own goals indicates that that person does not regard those whom he/she harms to be equal to him/her. They do not think how the person they are harming has hopes and dreams and things to love, they think about how they can further their own desires. The experiments above were done because the scientists/doctors could - it was that simple. They could ask any question in any way without fear of repercussions - this was enough to coax their darkest curiosities out into the open.
Evil scares us. Arguably our best horror stories, the ones that give us nightmares, are about evil people doing evil things—especially evil experiments. The Island of Dr. Moreau by H.G. Wells is a classic that comes to mind. In modern cinema, movies like The Human Centipede continue that gruesome tradition. But these are fictional. The truth is that we need only look at recent human history to find real, live, utterly repugnant evil. Worse yet, it is evil perpetrated by doctors.
Here are 10 of the most evil experiments ever performed on human beings—black and other people of color, women, prisoners, children and gay people have been the predominant victims.
1. The Tuskegee Experiments
There’s a good reason many African Americans are wary of the good intentions of government and the medical estblishment. Even today, many believe the conspiracy theory that AIDS, which ravaged the African-American community, both gay and straight, was created by the government to wipe out African Americans. What happened in Tuskegee, Alabama in 1932 is one explanation for these fears.
At the time, treatments for syphilis, a sexually transmitted disease that causes pain, insanity and ultimately, death, were mostly toxic and ineffective (things like mercury, which caused, kidney failure, mouth ulcers, tooth loss, insanity, and death). Government-funded doctors decided it would be interesting to see if no treatment at all was better than the treatments they were using. So began the Tuskegee experiments.
Over the course of the next 40 years, the Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male denied treatment to 399 syphilitic patients, most of them poor, black, illiterate sharecroppers. Even after penicillin emerged as an effective treatment in 1947, these patients, who were not told they had syphilis, but were informed they suffered from “bad blood,” were denied treatment, or given fake placebo treatments. By the end of the study, in 1972, only 74 of the subjects were still alive. Twenty eight patients died directly from syphilis, 100 died from complications related to syphilis, 40 of the patients’ wives were infected with syphilis, and 19 children were born with congenital syphilis.
2. The Aversion Project
These are probably not the worst things that one person decided to do to another. There is a darkness in humanity. We call our compassion 'humanity' - yet it is something that we can easily turn off, like a switch. Each of us has the ability to just not care - some of us choose not to exercise that ability while others live it in every moment. There are many factors that contribute to this, but in the end it comes down to our society as a whole not providing the support structures that each person requires to function with humanity at all times and in all contexts. Consider the families of poverty: majority of them receive little to no support, mental illness is high, drug and alcohol abuse is high, illiteracy is high - the list goes on - if you are living in these circumstances then it is very likely that you're not going to care very much about many things, you may even reach a point where you are willing to hurt or kill without remorse in order to get whatever thing it is that you do value. This is only one aspect - the experiments listed above were carried out by doctors in the most part which implies that they most likely did not come from a life of poverty - what does this tell you? Privilege does not ensure the development of a healthy member of society either. The problem includes social and economic status, but is not limited to those things. The very nature of a person who is willing to harm to further their own goals indicates that that person does not regard those whom he/she harms to be equal to him/her. They do not think how the person they are harming has hopes and dreams and things to love, they think about how they can further their own desires. The experiments above were done because the scientists/doctors could - it was that simple. They could ask any question in any way without fear of repercussions - this was enough to coax their darkest curiosities out into the open.
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