T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
383.1 | RE 383.0 | EDEN::KLAES | The Universe is safe. | Mon Jun 15 1987 16:33 | 12 |
| Why is every new disease considered THE disease to end all
diseases? The Black Plague of the Fourteenth Century was very
devastating - it was far easier to catch than AIDS, and there was
almost no protection against it at the time - yet the human race
did not die out, and in fact we are back to overpopulation status
again.
If "Gaia" wanted to clean out the human closet, it should have
picked a much more widespread disease.
Larry
|
383.2 | not only humans... | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | | Mon Jun 15 1987 16:52 | 35 |
| AIDS may affect a lot of species besides humans. Something
with a lifespan under five years, may be relativly unnaffected
by a disease with such a long incubation period. Many insects
in Africa are known to be carrying the virus, but are not believed
to be a part of the transmission cycle with humans.
Where did it come from?
1) Gaia, or planet earth fighting back.
2) escaped from a biological warfare lab.
3) random arrival, piggyback on a meteor
4) virus harbored by a previously isolated tribe,
they have immunity, but we don't.
5) Psychicly generated, from buildup of negative
thought forms.
I have heard believers in each of these possible sources. #2,
that alleges the virus escaped from a warfare lab is probably the
most popularly believed rumored source. (see the cover of the new
"Y & T" album, "Contagious") The Russians have published a little
propaganda accusing a USA biological lab in Maryland of having created
the virus.
The public will never know the source of this virus. All of
this is purest speculation. I tend toward theories #2 + #4, myself.
If Gaia does have it in for our species, there is probably little
we can do about it. Gaia apparently monitors the gaseous balances
in the atmosphere, and our technological tinkering may have alerted
this hypothesized being. Since the largest part of Gaia is
apparently made up of single cell bacteria and viruses, a disease
might just be the type of weapon Gaia would use against us.
If this is the case, I sure hope Gaia can distinguish one human
from another, as that is an enemy I do not want to have.
Alan.
|
383.3 | | INK::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Mon Jun 15 1987 17:16 | 22 |
| Re .0:
>All life on earth, save the "Modern" Human Being, seems to respect
>this theory. It is only we who think we can "outdo" this planet,
>by changing the land and sky, putting things where they weren't
>intended, and taking for ourselves what isnt ours to have.
Well, most life seems to operate on the basis of fitting into the
ecology, but that might not be the same thing. Ask any dinosaur.
Also, I dunno -- who's trying to "outdo" this (or any) planet?
And how? Abnd finally, what are we "taking" that isn't "ours to
have"?
>If not, then, why is it [AIDS] here and why does it only affect
>Humans?
We don't know it's only affecting humans; it's too new. Also, we've
never been victims of the tobacco mosaic virus ... because we and
tobacco plants are different parts of the natural scheme of things.
Things are more subtle than they may seem.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
383.4 | Prediction Predicament | VENTUR::LIBRARY | | Mon Jun 15 1987 17:16 | 6 |
| I would really like to know if anyone knows if Nostradamus predicted
the outbreak of what we know and call AIDS?
Thanks.
|
383.5 | The Gaia Hyp., AIDs and the *other* Gaia hyp. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Jun 15 1987 19:58 | 97 |
| There are really *two* Gaia hypothoses floating around the original
one and the mystical one.
The original Gaia hypothosis is simply a proposal that scientists
change the scope of their thinking. Traditionally it was realized
that living organisms, even the very simplest, demonstrate homeostasis
-- mechanisms by which they monitor their own condition and feedback
corrective measures to keep things at a desired point. In even
moderately complex organisms (e.g., an amoeba) the various feedback
mechanisms interact with each other to produce very complex results.
It wasn't long before these properties were extrapolated to "social
groups" of related organisms.
The next step was a broader understanding of ecology -- which includes
complex feedback mechanisms between genetically un-related organisms.
Then there is the concept called (among other terms) co-evolution,
the idea that organisms evolving in contact with each other effect
each others evolutionary development so that they each evolve to
take advantage of the other as part of their feedback mechanisms.
The Gaia hypothosis is that what we would normally term geological
processes are affected, over long enough time-spans, by biological
activity. As a result, the entire biosphere has evolved to use
and to modify the geological environment as part of its homeostatic
mechanisms. At this point, it becomes difficult to distinguish
the long-term behaviour of the atmosphere and crust from the organisms
which interact so intimately with it. Furthermore, since they interact
through the Earth itself, one cannot really talk about distinct
communities of organisms. At a sufficient time scale, the biosphere/
geosphere as a whole act as a single complex homeostatic mechanism.
Note that there is nothing really mystical about this whole proposal,
everything works in ultimately mechanical ways to restore balance.
Changes in temperature cause changes in plant cover, which changes
carbon-dioxide and water vapor content which effects heat etc. (I
can't think of the details at the moment).
The AIDs pandemic relates to this in a perfectly straight forward
way. It's interpretation doesn't really require the Gaia hypothosis
since it is purely biological -- it is part of the "ecological"
hypothosis, instead. When the population density of an organism
goes above a certain point, it makes it easy for a pathogen to be
transmitted. Deadly pathogens (bacteria, virii etc.) are normally
evolutionarily selected against since they are likely to kill their
hosts before they can be transmitted to a new one. With sufficient
population density (especially when combined, as in the Black Plague,
with unsanitary conditions) deadly diseases can be transmitted before
killing the host and therefore have an available ecological niche
to "radiate" into. There is thus a homeostasis mechanism at work:
if population density increases beyond a certain point then pathogens
will evolve to decrease the population.
Where did AID's come from? The previous list doesn't mention the
possibility which is considered far and away the most likely by
virtually all scientists. The AIDs virus mutated from a strain
previously harmless to humans. When this occured in the past, it
quickly died out, since it tended to kill its host before being
transmitted. Now it has occured when conditions were right for
it to be transmitted before killing its host, so now it survives.
Retro-virii such as the AIDs virus are very hard to isolate. It
was found only because of new technology (if the epidemic had occured
ten years before, the AIDs virus would probably not have been
identified) and because the disease itself told them where to look.
The virus was previously harmless either because it previously had
at most only mild symptoms, because its previous symptoms looked
like something else, or most likely because it previously normally
only infected animals (an African green monkey is the primary
candidate). As has recently been announced, the AIDs virus is mutating
and a phenomenal rate, so what it "was" only a few years ago is
probably very different from what it is now.
Personally I think that the Gaia Hypothosis is a powerful, heuristic
metaphore which encourages some much needed systems thinking about
issues which are too often ignored. My guess is that as an
*explanatory, scientific theory* it will be falsified, but we will
see.
The mystical Gaia Hypothosis attributes a literal vitality (in the
original sense of the word) to the Earth. It further attributes
purpose (rather than evolved function) and even emotion to the Earth.
I have no beef with those who believe in the mystical Gaia Hypothosis
go -- as spiritual ideas go it is truely elegant. Keep in mind,
however, that it is not what the scientists who understand the Gaia
hypothosis are talking about.
By the way -- people live according to their nature and with nature
as much as any other organism. Individual organisms, and even species
have evolved to be rather short sighted. The power to effect our
environment that we have evolved to is such that normal short-sighted
nature is likely to lead to cataclysm unmatched since similarly
short sighted organisms changed the atmosphere from reducing to
oxidizing.
Topher
|
383.6 | | WORM::ACKLEY | alan the plasmoid | Tue Jun 16 1987 11:29 | 17 |
| RE .5 and .2
>Topher's account of the source of the virus in .5 should
have been on my list in .2, I agree. It is clear that this
virus evolves quickly, and is a member of a class of viruses
known to behave in this way. I didn't mean for my list in .2
to include all possibilities.
In general, I agree that the virus probably came from some
natural source, however given the dramatic impact of certain
movies and books ( like "The Stand") the average person will
probably believe the virus came from a bio-warfare lab. I
suspect the Russian propaganda will succeed in angering most
of the world against the US, in spite of the mounting evidence
that the epidemic started in Africa.
Alan.
|
383.7 | ***RESEARCH ON AIDS*** | ZEKE::LINEHAN | | Tue Jun 16 1987 17:35 | 10 |
| The virus came from a monkey in AFRICA called THE GREEN MONKEY
it was transfered through natives that got bred, if you get my drift.
Believe it or not this information came from my son who is fifteen.
In the school system he goes to they have a very strong awareness
program that has to do with sex, aids and drugs. This is what their
research produced.
Nancy
|
383.8 | MISSPELLED | ZEKE::LINEHAN | | Tue Jun 16 1987 17:37 | 1 |
| SORRY FOR THE MISSPELLING. BRED SHOULD BE BORED.
|
383.9 | Green Monkey to Pandemic in 8 years | BROWNY::BERNSTEIN | Life is Not a Malfunction | Tue Jun 16 1987 18:04 | 14 |
| Regardless of how the AIDS virus first got into humans, the
effects of blood pooling surely brought the US and Africa to the
current stages of pandemic.
A likely reason why gay men were the largest group affected first is
that they were commonly given a hepititus vaccine (I think it was a
vaccine...though it might have been a drug to cure the condition. In
SOAPBOX is an article that I got this info from, .1 to the AIDS topic
in there.) which was made from large amounts of pooled blood. It is
still unclear where all of this blood originally came from, but private
companies that did the pooling do not have to disclose exactly where
they got it. Generally, it was from Africa and the Carribean.
Ed
|
383.11 | The Infected Pool | BROWNY::BERNSTEIN | Life is Not a Malfunction | Wed Jun 17 1987 10:34 | 14 |
| This is getting a little off the topic (This is DEJAVU, not
SOAPBOX, right?) but it is such an important discussion, that I
should probably put some of the article in here. It is fascinating,
and rather horrifying. Whether this particular vaccine played a
major or minor role in the spread of AIDS, there was a large, even
tremendous amount of blood pooling done by private and public agencies
(Such as the World Health Organization) in the third world, and
much of that pooled blood was imported into the more 'advanced'
(sorry, I can't say it with a straight face without the quotes ;-)
countries as various blood components. There is still a lot unknown,
like how long would the virus survive in the blood pools...but to
me it sounds tragically plausible.
Ed
|
383.12 | From Interview Magazine | BROWNY::BERNSTEIN | Life is Not a Malfunction | Wed Jun 17 1987 11:01 | 173 |
|
INTERVIEW MAGAZINE
" Health: All about AIDS "
DR. MATHILDE KRIM
by Larry Kramer
BACKGROUND:
Mathilde Krim, Ph.D., is Co-chairperson of the American Foundation for AIDS
Research. (Elizabeth Taylor is the Foundations's National Chairperson, and its
board not only includes some of the country's most distinguished doctors and
scientists, but also such members as Warren Beatty, Barbra Strisand, Woody
Allen, Liz Smith, Katherine Graham and Leonard Bernstein.)
...
LARRY KRAMER: Let us begin by mentioning three recent newspaper articles. The
first said that AIDS is now the biggest killer of straight women between-
MATHILDE KRIM: The ages of 25 and 29.
LK: And that in a few years it's going to be the biggest killer of straight
women period.
MK: The biggest killer of people in the years during which they're sexually
active. Men and Women.
...
[Discussion of education, and publicizing the dangers of AIDS, as
well as expression of frustration at a drug, AZT, which was known
to be effective, but was given out only to a limited number of AIDS
patients.]
LK: How do you make the most of your time?
MK: I talk a lot to the media and the press on basically medical and
scientific information. I do a lot of public speaking, because in many states
they just now are setting up their educational program, and they're just
learning. In the Midwest, this is a new problem for them. I try to fight the
idea that the gay men are giving us AIDS. I explain that we probably gave it
to the gay men to start with, by inoculating them with infected gamma
globulin which is probably what happened.
LK: The gamma globulin we received to protect us against exposure to
hepatitis was infected?
MK: That's right. The gamma globulin was made in the early '70s out of
pooled human blood that was not collected in this country. It was bought
in the Caribbean and Africa.
LK: That's what you think?
MK: It's a hypotesis, but it makes a lot of sense to me, and it also makes a
lot of sense from the epidemiological standpoint, because if one person had
caught AIDS in Haiti or somewhere and had come back to this country and given
it to another person, who gave it to another person, we would have seen a
picture like this: one case on year, ten cases the next year, 20 cases a year
later and so forth - a slow buildup. In 1981, after having identified the
first five cases in L.A. and the first nine cases here [NYC], people started
looking around, and suddenly we had several hundred the same year, and then
several thousand a year later.
What occurred was what we call a multi-focal infection. Many people must have
become infected at the same time. How can such a thing happen? I first thought
it was during the clinical trials of gamma globulin preparations for
prevention of hepatitis that the infection occurred, but I checked the dates.
These trials started in '78, '79. That's too late; we already had cases then.
The infection occurred at least five years prior to that. It must have
occurred in the early '70s, and in those years, industrial companies - not the
not-for-profit blood centers, but the for-profit blood industry - were buying
blood from prisoners and from overseas, including Africa and the Caribbean. If
they purchased lots of blood where many individual blood donations were
infected, and they pooled all this blood and concentrated all the gamma
globulin, an infectious virus in large amounts would become trapped in the
gamma globulin. The purification steps, in combination, are able to inactivate
a large proportion of the virus, but only a proportion of the virus, because
one doesn't want to damage the antibody proteins in the process. If you start
with a big enough concentration of virus in the original blood, you may end up
with blood with an infectious virus at the end. The experiment was actually
done in the lab and published: You need to start with a high concentration of
virus, but if you do, you find infectious virus at the end. So it is
technically possible in the time frame.
LK: We were all getting gamma globulin shots back in the early '70s. The
minute you said you'd been to bed with someone who came down with hepatitis,
your doctor would pop you a shot. It was like taking aspirin for a cold.
MK: That's right. As hepatitis is highly prevalent among gay men, doctors
did that routinely. Recent gamma globulin is clean of virus. It's made up of
American blood that is screened.
LK: Well, then, why weren't there more straight cases in the early days?
MK: No other group was so constantly, almost habitually, given gamma globulin
as gay men. Ron Grossman [a physician with a large gay practice] told me it
was absolutely routine to give gamma globulin.
LK: How many shots in the course of a year is routine?
MK: Ten, twelve. [per-person]
LK: Oh, I see - big, big receivers of gamma globulin, not just your odd
shot here and there.
MK: Now, we don't have absolute proof, but there is this belief that a little
dose of virus is perhaps something that we can overcome - even rabies virus,
which is also lethal. When the dose is too big and the virus has time to
multiply sufficiently to overcome antibody immune reactions and so forth, the
infection really takes hold. So it's possible that rare, small doses would
not achieve infection, but repeated or large doses would.
LK: Is this your idea?
MK: It's my idea; I don't know that anybody else thought of it. I've also
never heard the question asked, "Why gay men?" Why? Certain behaviors may
facilitate the spread of the infection, but they don't create it.
LK: Is there any way to investigate this?
MK: It's very difficult. These preparations of gamma globulin were made by
private industry, and they're not going to volunteer the information to us. We
could go through their freezers, dig out some of the preparations and check
them, but it may be impossible. In order to preserve gamma globulin in a
functioning condition, your have to keep it at a temperature that eventually
destroys the virus.
LK: What do you think are our chances of getting a vaccine for AIDS?
MK: They're quite good. There's nothing that indicates the vaccine will not
be possible. We don't have all the positive answers in yet, but we also don't
have any major obstacles. We have five different methods for developing a
vaccine, and several of them seem to work, so I'm pretty sure we'll have
something.
LK: In a couple of years?
MK: It depends for whom. I think for people at risk, who are willing to
volunteer for clinical trials of vaccines, safety trials, there may be
something available within months - we're that close. Now for the population
at large, with little babies, that's ten years away.
...
MK: Organized religions are going to have to do some rethinking. I think
there will also be a decrease in birthrates, because large numbers of people
will be effectively unable to procreate. There will also be a very large
number of children who will be abandoned because they are infected, and since
it is cruel and expensive to keep these kids in institutions, I think adoption
laws will be come more flexible. This is one good consequence of a bad
situation. And so there will be more children raised in unconventional
families. I also think our whole medical health delivery system, already
obsolete and failing in many ways, will completely crack at the seams because
of AIDS. We have to - at long last - devise a system that is much more
diversified in the kinds of services it can offer. The acute-care hospital
will be used much less. We're going to have to create nursing home-style
facilities and hospices and home care. Much of it has started, or has been
advocated but never adopted because there has been tremendous resistance from
the medical profession.
Great article, you should pick up a copy -
Interview Magazine
Febuary 1987 - $2.50
__________________________
Ed
|
383.13 | Not really the place for detailed discussion... | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Wed Jun 17 1987 12:21 | 11 |
| RE: .11,.12
Hmm. I would say that it is plausible but unlikely. I'm no expert
in this area but I have seen no indication that it is widely held
by those who are. The two major facts presented as requiring this
theory to explain them, the sudden onset and the initial concentration
in gay men, seem to be quite adequately explained by conventional
infection theories. It apparently dismisses as coincidental the
other major early at-risk group -- Hatians.
Topher
|
383.14 | AIDS and back to the main topic. | HPSCAD::DDOUCETTE | Common Sense Rules! | Thu Jun 18 1987 09:48 | 13 |
| re: .13
Not necessarily, If the hemoglobin was imported from Haiti then
the link is formed.
Overall:
Mankind is now effecting the Global Ecosystem in ways unimaginable
by previous generations. Even today our government isn't addressing
the acid rain issue. If we continue our growth undifferent to our
impact on the Earth, we may break the system and find our home
inhabitable.
and something else will evolve to take our place.
|
383.15 | Plasma? | NEXUS::MORGAN | Walk in Balance on the Earth Mother | Thu Jun 18 1987 23:58 | 3 |
| I heard that it was spread via blood plasma from North Africa. Do
the time frames {plasma from the 70's} coincided with where we are
today?
|
383.17 | Not *simply* a stereotype. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Jun 22 1987 11:13 | 15 |
| RE: .16
The stereotype is that this behavior is characteristic of *all*
male gays. It does seem to be true of some -- particularly young ones.
Since AIDs doesn't have any obvious symptoms of its own (its symptoms
are the appearance of certain rare diseases, which nevertheless
can arise on their own without AIDS being present) it took a while
before it was recognized. Thus it is not surprising at all that
it appeared suddenly with lots of cases right "at the beginning".
I really don't think that this is particularly appropos this newsgroup,
however.
Topher
|
383.18 | Random comments | FDCV13::PAINTER | Is we is or is we isn'... | Mon Jun 22 1987 13:22 | 24 |
|
My doctor is married to someone who is currently doing AIDS research,
so we've had a couple of conversations on this topic.
Having been a subscriber of scientific-type magazines for many years,
I first remember reading about this disease at least 5 years ago.
Why, then, has it taken so long to get the funding required to AIDS
research to find a cure to this disease and to educate the general
public as to the dangers of this disese?
I asked my doctor this, and his reply was that since the disease
seemed to be limited to homosexuals and 'undesirable communities',
at the time, the majority of the public turned a cold shoulder.
(thereby judging them and comdemning them to suffering and certain
death without any hope of a cure being discovered). It wasn't
until people outside of these communities became affected that
the public interest was *finally* piqued.
Just passing along a few of my thoughts and observations.
|
383.19 | | GRECO::MISTOVICH | | Mon Jun 22 1987 14:02 | 16 |
383.21 | Aids meditation available | PUZZLE::GUEST_TMP | HOME, in spite of my ego! | Mon Jul 13 1987 20:29 | 16 |
| For whatever it is worth to anyone else, I have included
in 358.73 some of the highlights from notes I have taken from
some Lazaris workshops in regards to aids.
Yesterday, at yet another workshop, it was mentioned that
Lazaris has donated a short talk and a meditation (45-minute tape)
to an organization in L.A. whose name I don't remember but it
is run by a woman (I think it is called the Hayes Organization
or something similar.) It could prove of value to someone who
is in need in this area.
The Lazaris (Concept:Synergy) address, however, is
279 S. Beverly Drive #604
Los Angeles, CA. 90212 Phone # 213-285-1507
Frederick
|
383.22 | One man?!?!? | JJM::ASBURY | | Tue Dec 29 1987 13:54 | 16 |
|
Sometime in the last few days, I half heard a news report which
claimed that researchers have narrowed it down to one man who brought
the AIDS virus to the United States from Africa quite a few years
ago. Apparently, this man had an incredibly voracious sexual appetite,
hence the quick spread of the disease - rather than one case one
year, two or three cases the next year, etc. Also, apparently, he
eventually was aware that he had the disease and of the primary
way(s) in which it is spread, yet he continued to satisfy his desires,
intentionally spreading AIDS.
Has anyone else heard this story? What do you think?
-Amy.
|
383.23 | true | ERASER::KALLIS | Has anybody lost a shoggoth? | Tue Dec 29 1987 14:14 | 13 |
| Re .22 (Amy):
Yes, it was a man who's referred to as "Patient Zero." He was an
airline employee, apparently quite handsome, and he had many liaisons.
He was the sort of Typhoid Mary of the late 20th Century. The Center
for Communicable Diseases in Atlanta is reported to have all the
data in him (he, needless to say, died some time ago).
What do I think? I think that some people with AIDS don't mind
taking others with them. :-( Is is moral, ethical, or even nice?
No. So what else is new?
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
383.24 | Did this man have a conscience? | BSS::BLAZEK | A new moon, a warm sum... | Tue Dec 29 1987 17:14 | 15 |
| re: .22
I just read an article on the man known as Patient Zero. Out
of the first 200 reported AIDS cases, 40 of the men had slept
with PZ. PZ was a Canadian, and he had an unusual name I can
not remember now. He was a flight attendant.
He cooperated fully with the Center for Communicable Diseases
as far as giving names, dates, parties, etc., but he remained
sexually active until the last of his days. He was quoted as
saying something to the effect that "if I have it there's no
reason everybody else shouldn't."
Carla
|
383.25 | let's undo the sadness... | 30841::GUEST_TMP | HOME, in spite of my ego! | Tue Dec 29 1987 18:29 | 22 |
| re: Patient Zero
It's truly sad that people are so "selfish" and greedy in
their searches for love. This guy wanted others along for his
"death-ride" as a way to combat loneliness. This speaks highly
to the concept (as put forth by Lazaris) of the homosexual population
(in general) having a certain "defensive" attitude about themselves.
In their "defense" they attack. Clearly this is not limited to
the homosexual populace nor to AIDS victims alone. It is a pretty
"good" way to demonstrate that the approach to love taken by gay men
(i.e., by having sex with as many men as possible) is apparently
(to me, at least) not the answer to love. As Lazaris, again, has
suggested, the message here is that there are "better" or more
appropriate ways to love.
Most of our "lessons" seem to have a similar sad ring to them.
This is why, as Lazaris has repeatedly suggested (and clearly spells
out in his new book,) it is time to change our reality to a new
world, and not by trying to carry on with the methods from our
pasts.
Frederick
|
383.26 | Don't judge a group by the actions of 1 person | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | God is nobody. Nobody loves you. | Wed Dec 30 1987 08:30 | 16 |
| Re .25 (Frederick)
I kind of have to dispute the idea that PZ was searching for love in
his last days. Deliberately giving someone AIDS (or any communicable
disease, esp. a non-curable one) is a pretty heinous thing to do. Some
areas have ruled that this is a form of assault. I think it was a
combination of a greedy search for pleasure and a "misery loves
company" concept.
I don't think the majority of the homosexual population would do such a
thing. I also fail to see how they (as a group) are attacking anyone.
From what I've seen they just want to be left alone to do what they
wish with whom they wish.
Elizabeth
|
383.27 | | SPIDER::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Wed Dec 30 1987 11:12 | 4 |
| I agree Elizabeth. PZ was an evil man and love had nothing to do
with it. Nor does PZ represent the homosexual community, just those
who were promiscious and (sadly) soon to die.
|
383.28 | While in the supermarket checkout line..... | CLUE::PAINTER | Life only appears to be chaotic. | Wed Dec 30 1987 11:41 | 7 |
|
The article I read on this person was in 'People' magazine where
their top 25 'people' for 1987 were listed. Made me shudder just
to look at his picture. Apparently the estimated number of encounters
he had after contracting AIDS and before dying (at age 32 a few
years ago) was somewhere around 2500.
|
383.29 | Understanding how to love isn't apparent. | 30786::OPER | | Thu Dec 31 1987 00:57 | 66 |
| re: .26
Let me attempt to clear up what I think was misunderstood.
I haven't got any personal agendas against what you say; I've known
a few gay and bi-sexual men and several bi-sexual and homosexual women
and I feel that their lifestyles are their own. I think that you
need to recognize, however, that there are many "levels" of reality
and I was talking to a level which I think you missed.
What level is that? Well, the level you spoke about is fairly
obvious.. gays are "people" first and foremost and have the same
sensitivities as all the rest of us. The point is, though, that
we VERY RARELY understand our own thoughts and feelings, LET ALONE
anyone else's. It never ceases to amaze me when you find that someone
has done such-and-such and people say "Gosh, I had no idea they
had those thoughts, etc." In "truth" we have our emotions well
hidden. When we express them (if we do) they are frequently bizarre
(to others, and sometimes even to ourselves.) The issue I wish
to make clear here is that *you* (*none of us*) knows what is in
someone else's "mind." So, the contention is that all of us
(and gays in particular) have a difficult time expressing or "finding"
love. If you think this over, I believe you will agree. Why?
Because of society's stigma (in general) towards the like-sex
proclivities we are talking about. Is it any wonder then that these
individuals should feel some resentments towards society and
its populace? While most of them may have managed to work much
of this out, maybe many have not. Please, I'm not "picking" on
gays, for this could apply to many segments of our society. Let
me quote something from "The Sacred Journey..." by Lazaris here
(without permission) which I think will bring home the point I was
originally trying to make.
On page 62 he talks about the Skill and Art of Loving. He talks
about things to do for love and this is number 4.
"Know. There are two ways of knowing someone-through inflicting
pain or through seeking understanding. Because so many are afraid
of love, they inflict pain-on themselves and on others. Your ther-
apists, through psychological studies of surviving prisoners of
war, know that an interesting, if not bizarre, relationship developed
between captive and captor. Through the pain, they came to know
each other more deeply than either anticipated.
Yes, one route of knowing is through pain, but there is another
route. Seeking understanding begins with a conscious desire and
concludes with a conscious commitment. It involves taking the time
to really reach out-tenderly, to reach out...to develop the skill
of loving, seeking understanding of yourself and others. You are
not in this world to be understood. You are here to be understanding."
Another point I was attempting to show was that many gays have
taken the attitude (again, not just gays) that they could demonstrate
how much love they had by how much sex they had...that by having
sex they were obviously showing their love. Obviously, hetero-sexuals
in our society feel this, too, and yet they, as a "class", don't
usually have *as much* indiscriminate sex. Sex is not love. It
is an expression of love. Having lots of sex is not necessarily
having lots of love. It so happens that at this point in our
history/time/space that it "befell" upon the gays to experience
this "lesson" before or more than it befell upon others. From their
experience we can learn...ALL of us can learn.
Once more--->this is all GENERALITIES. I agree that PZ was
particularly greedy and heinous. Very few humans, I think, would
show that kind of callousness. But I also believe that, deep, very
deep, down inside, all he really sought was love...to feel it and
to give it. He failed miserably.
Frederick
|
383.30 | Sexual programming differences between M & F | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | God is nobody. Nobody loves you. | Thu Dec 31 1987 10:04 | 19 |
| re .26 (Frederick)
I don't think you are talking about the differences between gays
and straights as much as you are about the societal differences
between men and women.
Gay men are (as a generality) very promiscuous. Gay women (as a
generality) are not. Heterosexuals of both sexes are (as a generality)
not promiscuous. Why gay men? Perhaps because part of the definition
of macho in our society is how much a young man can "score". Women are
taught "nice girls don't", unless there is love and commitment. So, in
the case of gay men, you have 2 involved who are thinking "let's
score", so they do. The other situations you have women involved with
the "let's at least get to know each other first" attitude, which slows
things down. I don't think there is any real significant difference in
the area of love between gays and non-gays. It is really just another
sad commentary about sexism.
Elizabeth
|
383.31 | | AKOV11::FRETTS | you are a shining star... | Thu Dec 31 1987 10:12 | 12 |
|
Re: last few
What my understanding of what Frederick is saying is that we all
have the same longing for love. It's just that it's expression
gets distorted in many different ways when it is filtered through
the personality and all that has affected it - pain, guilt,
love, hate, frustration, satisfaction, and on and on.
Carole
|
383.32 | 2c worth | VINO::EVANS | | Wed Jan 06 1988 13:07 | 21 |
| I haven't seen this stuff about "patient zero"; however, given the
current situation regarding gays in this country, coupled with the
current AIDS problem, I'd be very careful about what I said and
to whom I said it.
My initial reaction to the reference to this (alleged) person was
that it sounded like some homophobic set-up. "Gay guy spreads disease
without regard to ...etc. etc." Bad, bad, gay guy. I'm not sure
now *what* to think, but I know people in general are not thinking
clearly about AIDS. This could even be some kind of hoax,
misinformation, or whatever...
And: bottom line....does it really matter how it got here? It's
here, and we have to deal with it.
Please don't misunderstand me - no-one here has said anything
homophobic - I just wanted to say that we all need to be careful
about what we say (and think!)
Dawn
|
383.33 | This discission isn't for _The National Inquirer_, after all | ERASER::KALLIS | Has anybody lost a shoggoth? | Wed Jan 06 1988 14:33 | 27 |
| Re .32 (Dawn):
>My initial reaction to the reference to this (alleged) person was
>that it sounded like some homophobic set-up. "Gay guy spreads disease
>without regard to ...etc. etc." Bad, bad, gay guy. I'm not sure
>now *what* to think, but I know people in general are not thinking
>clearly about AIDS. This could even be some kind of hoax,
>misinformation, or whatever...
I doubt that the Center for Disease Control in Atlanta has the time
or desire to perpetrate hoaxes. If (as I suspect is probable) Patient
Zero has been identified, it's an important medical datum. Moral
judgements aside, it tells us something about the way the disease
was vectored. Psychologically, it suggests the mind-set of someone
who knows he has a terminal, incurable, and contageous disease (not
as a generalization, but to show one probable problem from a medical
perspective). More important, if the liaisons with Patient Zero
can be traced and some of those did _not_ result in AIDS, then it
might help researchers find a cure.
>And: bottom line....does it really matter how it got here? It's
>here, and we have to deal with it.
Indeed. And the more information we can obtain, the better armed
we can be to deal with it.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
383.34 | Reports and reports of reports. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Wed Jan 06 1988 16:06 | 21 |
| RE: .33
Let's keep in mind, however, Steve, that unless you are on the Center
for Disease Control's press release mailing list we have a *report*
on what was said by the CDC. The probability is very high that
that report is distorted, the only question is whether whatever
distortions have been made are particularly significant to this
discussion.
General:
This Patient Zero thing is, however, rather explanatory. A not
particularly contagious disease like AIDS needs to somehow infect
a rather large number of people before it can spread. Unless it
reaches a "critical mass" of sources of exposure for each individual
in a population it will die off. In effect, it needs a large enough
"seed" to start crystalization (how's that for a metaphor?). A
single super-active individual would go far in explaining how that
critical mass could be reached.
Topher
|
383.35 | bummer | BUSY::MAXMIS11 | Serendipity 'R' us | Wed Jan 06 1988 16:58 | 10 |
| I would like to suggest that Patient Zero probably did not know
he had a fatal disease for quite some time. I figure that to be
the case because AIDS surfaces as a succession of seemingly unrelated
medical problems. It probably took a very long time for anybody
to put two and two together. All the while he was infecting those
who were close to him. What a downer it must have been for him
when he found out! Not only is he going to die, but so are those
with whom he had physical relations.
Marion
|
383.36 | He was real | CSC32::M_BAKER | | Wed Jan 06 1988 17:07 | 12 |
| 20/20 had a story about this guy. They gave his name, had pictures of
him and interviews with some of his partners and the CDC people who
worked with him. His existence was revealed by a gay newspaper man
in San Franciso who wrote a book about the AIDS crisis called
"And the Band Played On" or something like that. The book blasts
the government for not spending enough money soon enough, the CDC
for not doing more about Patient Zero, and the gay community for
not taking more precautions. I haven't read the book but I read
an excerpt in the Denver paper. It appeared to be a well written
and balanced book. It obviously did not appear to be homophobic.
Mike
|
383.37 | Also 60 Minutes?? | CIMNET::PIERSON | | Wed Jan 06 1988 18:51 | 15 |
| 20/20?
hmmmm I thought I saw it on 60 minutes, oh well could be wrong.
The versions here are about what I remember. Initially, of course,
he had no knowledge of what he was spreading, or that he was
spreading anything. However, the direct quotes, from the researchers
that dealt with him after he was diagnosed, and before he died,
indicated that he WAS willfully spreading the disease, even after
he knew he was infectious.
This would appear to have been a _very_ twisted person. I supect
that homophobes are fooling themselves. Nothing, so far, indicates
that AIDS is peculiar to gays, it just got started with that group
first.
dave pierson
|
383.38 | He was one of the 1st, but not necessarily #1 | GRECO::MISTOVICH | | Thu Jan 07 1988 12:55 | 11 |
383.39 | Who was patient 0? | NEXUS::MORGAN | In your heart you KNOW it's flat. | Thu Jan 07 1988 18:45 | 12 |
| Reply to .38, Mistovich,
There was quite a lot of discussion on that subject in GDE. I don't
think that patient 0 had that much to do with the spread of Aids
since many people contracted the disease through blood transfusions
of blood plasma from Africa.
For instance, I remember that 20/20 or 60 Minutes said there are 6,000
(?) hemophiliacs in Germany that have Aids, contracted from blood
transfusions alone. Green Monkeys are native in Africa and it seems
that blood plasma from poor Africians was much more likely to be
patient 0.
|
383.40 | Mr Zero | CSC32::M_BAKER | | Thu Jan 07 1988 19:26 | 6 |
| Somebody had to be the first person to bring the disease to the US,
he happened to be that person. It could have been anybody of any
sexual orientation or as Mike says, it could have been a pint of blood
from Africa.
Mike
|
383.41 | How Did This Note Get Into DEJAVU Anyway? | GRECO::MISTOVICH | | Tue Jan 12 1988 12:46 | 13 |
383.42 | The AIDS/Syphilis connection | SHRBIZ::WAINE | Linda | Tue Jan 12 1988 13:37 | 19 |
|
I do not believe that Patient Zero is responsible for the spread
of AIDS. I've been doing a lot of research on this. (See Holisitic
note 203, and Human_Relations note 431). It seems to me that the
majority of AIDS patients (especially patients with PCP or Kaposi's
Sarcoma) are people suffering from tertiary syphilis. There is
a very good article on this in the January 1988 issue of THE ATLANTIC
MONTHLY. Another good article is also in the January 1988 issue
of SPIN. It almost seems like HIV is a "by-product" of tertiary
syphilis, not the CAUSE of "AIDS". It is interesting to note that
Dr. Gallo, who "discovered" HIV, could only "cause AIDS" in the
blood of leukemic patients, NOT in the blood of patients with healthy,
normal immune systems.
Oh well,...that's my 2 cents worth....
Linda
|
383.43 | | SALEM::STPIERRE | | Fri Jan 15 1988 12:10 | 5 |
| I read somewhere (Omni I think) that scientists did some research
on a young man who died in 1969, and discovered the AIDS virus.
According to the article, it was before Patient Zero.
Deb
|
383.44 | Non-significant infections. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Jan 15 1988 12:58 | 16 |
| AIDS could have entered this country multiple times with no
effect. Its characteristics are such that it would have to come
in contact with a particularly susceptible population (such as
the sexually-hyperactive segment of the male gay community, or
the intravenous drug sub-culture) and have to almost similtaneously
infect a significant portion of that community. If it hadn't done
that the probability that it would survive and spread (i.e., infect
at least one other and frequently more than one other person on
the average before it kills its host) would be very small. There
could be multiple infections over a long period, therefore, which
though shedding light on the disease and its history, would not
have much to do with the source of the current epidemic. Patient
Zero might well explain how the virus overcame that difficult
threshold on *this* importation.
Topher
|