Reposting from tail end of a Friday night bread. An anon’s q to Q in Bread #6642:
>Q, are you going to let the people know about Human Test Subjects and how what is happening is what Hitler did but being called volunteerism. See the Belmont Report.
>>5199173 (B #6642 from Friday night)
It instantly brought to mind the Crooked Foundation, as we are already familiar with their “dealings” in Africa, Haiti — and Big Pharma.
“Questions of justice have long been associated with social practices such as punishment, taxation and political representation. Until recently these questions have not generally been associated with scientific research. However, they are foreshadowed even in the earliest reflections on the ethics of research involving human subjects. For example, during the 19th and early 20th centuries the burdens of serving as research subjects fell largely upon poor ward patients, while the benefits of improved medical care flowed primarily to private patients. Subsequently, the exploitation of unwilling prisoners as research subjects in Nazi concentration camps was condemned as a particularly flagrant injustice. In this country, in the 1940's, the Tuskegee syphilis study used disadvantaged, rural black men to study the untreated course of a disease that is by no means confined to that population. These subjects were deprived of demonstrably effective treatment in order not to interrupt the project, long after such treatment became generally available.”
https://www.hhs.gov/ohrp/regulations-and-policy/belmont-report/read-the-belmont-report/index.html#xjust