Following the Fuhrer's Footsteps

The news that Austrian authorities are willing to compensate former wards of foster care for having being injected with malaria in the 1960s is quite disturbing. Although, at the time, there was some scientific basis that this was an acceptable medical treatment, it's also true that this inoculation was used as experimental therapy for people with psychological problems. The two cases -- pending others that may come forward -- that have been revealed are precisely of that kind: unruly boys in foster care.

This points to a bigger problem: taking advantage of vulnerable people who are unaware of what's being done to them and have no recourse to stop it. The U.S., for example, has a dismal record of experimenting on its own citizens, as well as on people overseas, like us Puerto Ricans or Guatemalans. In a very real way, these are Nazi-type practices, based on the notion that the State has the right to play around with the life of those it deems inferior due to race or some birth defect.

But, then again, Hitler was Austrian, right?

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