AIDS and The History of Depopulation Policies
Rolf. A. F. Witzsche
page 08
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The challenges that we face in our modern world, in regards to AIDS, are tremendous, therefore. The biological challenge, such as developing a cure for AIDS, or to protect people for becoming murdered by it, may be the smallest of them all. The larger challenge may prove to be the challenge that we face in overcoming the social isolation that the fear of AIDS appears to have caused. Indeed, this larger challenge appears to be also the most urgent one to be faced, because this challenge is deeply linked with the most destructive social pursuit that has ever been experienced in humanity's history. Already, the financial disintegration within the system has gone beyond the point of no return. The presently outstanding financial aggregates exceed to gross domestic product of the entire world ten-fold. Nor does the world economy produce any real profits anymore that could used to satisfy the huge mountain of outstanding financial claims. The world economy can't even keeps itself alive, but contracts progressively. We face a challenge such as has never been faced before, to deal with a situation at which the illusion of the world's accumulated wealth ends, when a perception dawns that becomes correlated to the prevailing reality.
This challenge would be hard to master in normal
times, but in a world in which people are isolated from each other, prone
to violence, and self-centered demands, a rational outcome appears not
achievable. It appears almost certain that under present conditions the
impending challenge cannot be met without unimaginable consequences. All
these considerations point to a great and urgent need, which is for
humanity to rebuild itself socially on a platform of expanding unity
instead of expanding isolation.
If society achieves these objectives its survival will be
assured; if it fails, the current progression of self-isolation, violence,
and insane demands will make World War III surely unavoidable, which is
presently staged to be a nuclear war with the predictable consequences.
AIDS stands poised in the midst of all this as one of the most crucial
elements that must be dealt with in order that the presently inevitable
may be prevented. How everyone reacts individually to this challenge may
be of the most crucial importance. It may not only determine if we
ourselves live on or die, individually, but whether our world and our
civilization lives on or dies with us. The End
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