|
05 October 2010
By Jacob G. Hornberger If I had suggested that the U.S. government had
probably done syphilis experimentation on people other
than the Tuskegee experiments on unsuspecting American
black men, American statists would undoubtedly
respond, "Conspiracy theory! Conspiracy theory! It is
inconceivable that our government would do such a
thing." What's interesting about statists, however, is that
when it turns out that government officials really did
conspire to do horrific things to people, the statists
are never surprised. Sure enough, it turns out that federal officials
did conspire to commit syphilis experiments, not just
at Tuskegee but also on unsuspecting prisoners in
Guatemalan jails. The experiments took place in 1948 and just came to
light, thanks to a researcher who discovered the
experiments in notes kept by one of the federal
officials involved in the Tuskegee experiment. The
Guatemalan experiments have been kept secret until now
— some 64 years later, which confirms that federal
officials can be very adept at keeping nefarious
federal conspiracies secret. What U.S. officials did was bring prostitutes that
they knew were infected by syphilis into Guatemalan
jails to infect prisoners, so that U.S. officials
would be able to study the effect that antibiotics had
on the syphilis. Some of the prisoners, however, failed to contract
syphilis from the prostitutes. No problem. U.S.
officials simply used other ways to infect the men,
methods that are too gruesome to describe here. Keep in mind that these medical experiments took
place in 1948, about the time that U.S. officials were
prosecuting Nazi officials for subjecting human beings
to gruesome medical experimentation. Keep in mind also that this was the period of time
when the U.S. welfare state, which had been adopted in
the Franklin Roosevelt administration, was being
justified under the rubric of loving the poor, needy,
and disadvantaged. Statists would argue that that's a long time ago
and that the malefactors are now dead. Time to move
on, they always say. Of course, if any of the descendants of those
Guatemalan men were to retaliate with a terrorist
attack against the United States, federal officials
would immediately exclaim, "They just hate us for our
freedom and values! The fact that we intentionally
infected their father or grandfather with syphilis as
an experiment has nothing to do with it." Meanwhile, today's statists argue in favor of the
"state-secrets doctrine," claiming that federal
officials should have the power to keep all their
nefarious deeds in the so-called war on terrorism
secret. Never mind that 64 years from now, when Americans
living at that time discover the horrific and gruesome
things that CIA and U.S. military officials were doing
in the "war on terrorism," statists at that time will
say the same thing: that that's ancient history and
that it's time to move on. The state-secrets doctrine needs to be ditched,
completely. Nowhere does it appear in the
Constitution. Instead, it was created as a judicial
doctrine by the Supreme Court several decades ago, in
response to a request by federal officials in a civil
suit that reached the Court. The nasty little irony is
that the case in which the doctrine was created
involved, as it was discovered decades later, lies,
wrongdoing, and cover-ups by federal officials. In
other words, federal officials defrauded the Supreme
Court into adopting the state-secrets doctrine. We can't do anything for those Guatemalan men and
we can't do anything to the federal officials who
conducted those horrific experiments. But we can do
our best to ensure that federal officials cease and
desist from committing horrific acts against both
foreigners and Americans, including torture and abuse
of prisoners and detainees. The best way to do that — indeed, the best way to
restore a sense of honor and decency to our nation,
not to mention peace, prosperity, security, and
harmony — is to dismantle the CIA's and Pentagon's
overseas military empire, bring all the troops home
and discharge them, dismantle the enormous standing
army and military-industrial complex, abolish the CIA,
and open up all the files on all the nefarious things
that the CIA and the military have done to people,
from 1948 all the way through the present. Jacob Hornberger is founder and president of The
Future of Freedom Foundation.
|