Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/04/25
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 09:01 PM 4/25/06 -0700, Adam Bridge wrote: >For a long time I worried that AIDS was a test vector for a biological >weapon gone astray. I guess they have proved it isn't. While this is an interesting point, it does bring to mind that the panic over any given development of technology or mishap of nature does not necessarily mean the end of humanity. Almost all of us are naturally immune to sexually transmitted diseases, including AIDS. I am NOT suggesting that engaging in the sort of wild sex you guys seem to enjoy without protection is wise, as who wants to push the envelope of risk? But, in the end, epidemiology has concluded that most of us are not at risk to contract such diseases as, if the reverse were true, then the human race would have had close to a 100% rate for syphilis and the like centuries ago, and the same for AIDS. In other words, the average human seems to bear some immunity to these diseases and the immunity to these increases with time. Those liable to contract it die off, and those resistant to it survive. Darwin, and all of that evolution stuff. The idea that AIDS is a biological weapon run amok is an interesting one but not likely as it has no ready antidote, and that is the entire idea of a real biolgoical weapon: you need something to make the enemy IMMEDIATELY ill and yet of a nature allowing a ready cure once you have occupied their country. An ideal such weapon would be a virus which would afflict the populace of an enemy state with a heavy stomach flu which results in retching and cramps and the outhouse-scoots and the like, then the nation is occupied, and the antidote is applied. AIDS takes years after infection to develop, and so is a most unlikely weapon and its transmission vector is also rather unwieldy. (Does anyone else on the LUG recall Zappa's THINGFISH? Galoot Cologne, indeed!) Of course, the Christers jumped on the initial syphilis epidemic in France in the 1600's as a sign of God's wrath on wordly intempereance, precisely as their successors today swear that AIDS is proof that God condemns homosexuality. The logical proof for this escapes me, but, then, I am a theological amatuer at the best of it. I spent too many years studying ancient philosophy and reading the Bible in the original to understand some of the interpretations given it over the years as these interpretations both defy logic and offend the text to satisfy me. But, again, what do I know? A cousin of mine died in 1981 of a then-undiagnosed illness which we now know to be AIDS. He was not the first, but he was toward the first of the line to die from AIDS in this nation. And my sister died of Hodgkin's in 1975. Had either contracted their illnesses three or four or five years later than they did, they both would probably be around today, given the progress in treatment. As it is, they are among the very few in my family tree to have reached adulthood and to have died young: most of us linger on into our 80's with bad habits such as smoking and drinking and die in a fit of pique at watching the news. I might end up as yet another Eternal Photographer as is Ted Grant. Marc msmall@aya.yale.edu Cha robh b?s fir gun ghr?s fir!