VIVISECTION IS SCIENTIFIC FRAUD PART 2

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How public opinion is brazenly misled: "When the animal is to survive after surgery the procedures followed are comparable to those for human surgery." (Lawrence Galton in the New York Times Magazine, Feb. 26, 1967. Rebuttals were rejected.)

 

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Serial torture of primates with perforated skulls and electrodes implanted in the brains

 

How to build this cheap, space-saving restraining device for the transportation of heavily irradiated monkeys is described in Laboratory Animal Science, No. 3, June 1972

 

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In an experiment typical of a series conducted since 1966 at the V.S. Radiobiological Institute in Bethesda, Md., 239 rhesus monkeys were starved for 18 hours, then “encouraged” with electric shocks to run on a treadmill. After 8 weeks of this, they were subjected to heavy radiation and tested again on the treadmills until they died. Mean survival time for the vomiting, incapacitated monkeys was recorded as 37 hours.

 

New plastic helmet facilitates the infusion of various chemicals directly into the brain of fully conscious primates.

 

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To see how completely the psyche of a primate can be destroyed, a long series of physical and psychological tortures were devised, including the electrification of the food bowl.

 

After a severe brain operation, for which his cranium was split from front to back, this monkey was left to convalesce clinging to the wall, in one of the Rockefeller-funded hospitals.

 

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“Scientific” achievement: This chimp sadly waits for his release by death, after laboratory artists managed to cause him to contract syphilis, which normally doesn’t occur in the animal world.

 

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A computer replaces part of this monkey’s brain. Now the overgrown child at the controls watches in breathless fascination how he can cause the monkey to lift an arm by pushing a button.

 

Dazed chimp is studied for effects of isolation after Dr. Harry F. Harlow of the University of Wisconsin’s Primate Center had hit on a novel idea: he took 56 newborn chimps away from their mothers and kept each one in complete isolation for periods of up to 8 years, some in total darkness, for a study on “love” (sic). “The animal may chew and tear at its body until it bleeds,” Dr. Harlow reported, after observing his charges through a one-way screen.

 

DR. ROBERT WHITE FROM CLEVELAND, OHIO, USA

 

After transplanting numerous monkey heads, this “scientist” solemnly announced in 1977 that he was ready to transplant a human head. So far (1984) he has found no takers. Perhaps because word got around that it is not possible to make cut nerves grow together and to join the spinal cord to the head. The patient will probably always (if the operation succeeds) remain hospitalized, he will never be able to breathe without technical aids and will be unable to speak. But he will be able to suffer, as Dr. White’s monkeys did. None of them survived longer than 7 days. Their face became bloated, their tongue thickened, and their eyelids kept swelling until they closed down - forever.

 

 

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Preliminary to his transplants, Dr. White did various experiments, like emptying the brain of all blood, refrigerating the bloodless brain, then pumping the blood back in again. Anyone interested in a new head or body should write to: Dr. Robert White, Case Western Reserve U, Cleveland, Ohio, USA.

 

TO DIE LAUGHING

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What happens in a car accident is known ever since the first Daimler automobile was sent on the roads at the end of the last century. But just to make sure, and to justify huge grants received, the Medical Center of Tulane U, New Orleans, sent 350 rhesus monkeys crashing against a cement wall in 1965, even though monkeys, being lighter and far more elastic than man, can’t give a reliable answer. Above: the monkey screams in terror, as the laughing “pathologist” strives to good-humor him by tickling his armpit.

 

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He has witnessed the “whiplash experiments” of his companions. It’s his turn now. The Tulane experiments prompted other “scientists” to demolish vehicles and monkeys all over the USA, Japan and Europe. In 1968, Dr. Warren M. Crosby of Oklahoma U “improved” the whip-lash experiments by using pregnant baboons. He got a £103,800 Federal grant for his trouble and an article in Medical Tribune (Sept. 5, 1968). Clinical Medicine (June 1969) reported more such smash-up tests designed “to ascertain the amount of energy needed to produce brain concussion.” The solemn “conclusion” of those “scientists” had already been arrived at long ago by every four-year old child who ever pedaled a tricycle: “Velocity determines the degree of the damage.” (sic)

 

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Two more exhilarating experiments “for the benefit of mankind”, and to rate a slice of the Federal pie.

 

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