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【bio-news】控制艾滋病或许并非难事

Controlling HIV/Aids may not be difficult
Written by Yusupha Tunkara
Tuesday, 09 January 2007

At the present moment, the methods suggested for the control of HIV/Aids seem to be rather ineffective in stopping the after effects of the disease.
These after effects are population devastation and the wiping out of millions of people. The most common solution given to controlling the spread of HIV /Aids is wearing of a condom. What if HIV/Aids was not introduced into the population through sexual intercourse? At the moment, nations, communities and regions suffering from the menace of HIV/Aids pandemic have to find ways to replace the number of the people who are being wiped out due to the HIV/Aids virus.
One way of doing that is to encourage people to have as many children as they can. In fact governments, nations and communities affected by HIV/Aids should take measures to test the entire populations, find out who are infected and who are not and encourage those who are not infected to have many children. They should be encouraged, helped and rewarded for helping to replenish the population.

The elimination of population groups by a mysterious 'disease' is an event that is taking place. There should be no wasting of time or energy on solutions that will not work effectively. If HIV/Aids is being spread through sex of infected people to those who are not infected, then it is the duty of communities to develop ways to curb, control and stop the infected persons from infecting others. This can be done through testing the entire population and making sure those who are infected are treated and prevented from infecting others.

These are few ways through which HIV/Aids can be controlled and prevented from being a tool of genocide:

All governments, nations, communities must find ways to test their entire populations and to prevent infected people from infecting others.

All those who are healthy should be encouraged to have many children and larger families in order to make up for the many who are victims of the HIV/Aids infection.

Young people should be encouraged to marry at younger age, to stay married and to test before marriage.

Men and women should be forced to stop copying and following the customs of others or 'traditional' habits that are spreading more AIDS.

Men should be discouraged from having sex with other women and going to their wives for more sex, thus carrying diseases to their homes.

There should be unity of those who are the victims. Africans, Caribbeans, East Indians, Latin Americans, Chinese, East Europeans and those in the US who are victims of the HIV/Aids problem should work to create medicines and ways of making HIV/Aids ineffective.

Medicines, vaccinations, drugs, prostitutes and sellers of sex from foreign nations should be tested, retested and controlled. It is possible that foreign people visiting Africa or the tropics may be carrying dormant viruses (which they may have gotten through vaccination). It is very possible that a person from another nation who was freshly vaccinated for small pox and whose arm is still sore and infected can pass the infection to a local tropical person, thus spreading the disease. As for foreign medicines, vaccination programmes, and trials should all be closely scrutinised, tested or rejected if they are likely to be harmful.

All communities, whether in the US, Africa, Latin America, Eastern Europe, Asia, the Caribbean.... all must develop strong leadership, strong institutions and develop the basics of each region or nation. These basics are a good system of agriculture, food production; a good water supply system; large, strong, united families who are not afraid of or fooled into having a lot of children; a good system of education, technical and other training; the teaching of traditional values, history and culture; a just society where all are treated equally; having no wars, civil strife, conflicts; the respect and equal treatment of men and women. These are some of the conditions that help prevent wars, violence, immorality, conflicts, lack of respect and habits that contribute to passing diseases like HIV/Aids and others.

In retrospect, the solution to preventing the HIV/Aids virus from rapidly depopulating the earth is thinking of ways to rapidly populate and replace those who are victims. This is done by making sure that habits that spread HIV/Aids are made illegal, controlled and stopped by any means necessary. While wearing condoms may work, calling for abstinence may also work, yet, we have to also realise that if no one is having sexual relations, no children would be born to add to the next generations and to replace those who are being wiped out by the scourge.

The way to blunt this double-edged sword is for communities to take strict measures to stop all habits that have proven to be spreading HIV/Aids. That is if habits and behaviour is the culprit behind the origin and spread of HIV/Aids. History clearly shows that in some cases humans spread diseases.

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作者:admin@医学,生命科学    2011-03-09 13:21
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