Throughout history, unethical human experiments have been conducted by various nations and institutions, including Herophilus and Erasistrus's vivisections in ancient Alexandria, the US radiation experiments on Marshallese residents after Castle Bravo, the Soviet Kamada poison laboratory's tests on Gulag prisoners, the Guatemalan syphilis experiment where 5,500 people were intentionally infected, and Unit 731's horrific biological warfare experiments on Chinese prisoners during WWII. These experiments, conducted without consent and often resulting in severe suffering or death, demonstrate the critical importance of ethical oversight in medical and scientific research.
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Truly EVIL Human Experiments That Actually Happened Chat History Reaction追加:
Hello. Hello everybody. It's your boy Prof and we're back with a new chat history reaction. This is the truly evil human experiments that actually happened.
>> I added a D there for some reason. I don't know why I did it.
>> All right, fellas. Let's start things off a little easy.
>> Back in the 4th century BC, Greek civilization was reaching new heights.
People were getting more and more curious about the world around us and began asking really important questions.
Like what does that do? How does that work? Should I do the other mag?
>> Should I put the finger in the butthole?
>> Is this real life?
>> Would she be mad?
>> Or not? All pretty valid questions for people just wishing to learn the workings of the natural world. While many focus on the mechanics of the universe, chose to focus on the inner workings of humans themselves and not only from a philosophical standpoint, sometimes you just know what makes us tick. Hey yo, >> that's what Greek physician Herophilus wanted to find out and document in detail.
>> His education at the Hypocratian medical school in Greece. Herophilus turned his bulging eyes towards the city of Alexandria.
>> Bulging big throbbing library chock full of scrolls just begging to be read. Time to go to >> Wait, didn't that thing button?
>> Egypt, he said. And so he did. After getting himself established and taking on a student, a young physician named Aracistrus, they got together, the two men would begin to carve out a new branch of science, anatomy.
>> But in order to >> Oh, boy. Who are they digging into?
Whose guts are they digging into? Hey yo, >> to do so, you need some bodies to cut open to start slopping their guts around. And what better way to obtain fresh?
>> No, no, no, no. Don't. No, please >> to use condemned criminals by the Alexandrian rulers. Little hero and era were like kids in a candy store with a glimmer in their eyes, excited to begin their wondrous experiments.
>> But surely the criminals put under the knife were already past their expiration date, right?
>> Were they?
>> Nope. Instead, Hero and Era performed live human dissections called vivisections to broaden their understanding of the human body.
>> They even went as far as to perform these surgeries in full view of the public for anyone who thought it would be cool and interesting. Wow, that's both cool and interesting. That's what I'm saying. Herophilus document.
>> Why does it look like he's on a sandwich? The I don't know what the blue would be, but like >> that's both cool and interesting. That's what I'm saying.
>> Something else documented their findings in extreme detail.
>> Wait, they do discoveries of the human anatomy.
>> Seems fine.
>> Doing so, he inflicted unimaginable suffering to his subjects. Since anesthetics weren't really a thing back then, the victims felt every cut and slice, at least until they passed out from the pain or died of blood loss.
Dissecting and testing.
>> Okay. Why didn't they just preemptively end them reproductive organs, eyes purposefully damaging the motor nerves to inflict paralysis? It was basically a big game of what does this button do?
>> Oh my god. [laughter] >> Hey yo, >> in the end, Hero and Aerys findings over 40 years of viv sections were revolutionary.
>> 40. How many people can we do? We have a count of how many got collapsed >> for the medical world, especially since human dissection would be outlawed shortly after their work was completed.
It wouldn't be until 1,800 years later that performing human dissections would be a medically acceptable practice again. But like you know on dead people their work was stored in the >> we uh when I was in a I studied in a like biology chemistry high school and we used to go to like they showed us dead bodies for like medical cuz we had like a medical school nearby >> now Alexandria but it smells awful the great fire a few hundred years later.
Ah, this is the fire I remember. Project 1 4.1.
>> Project 4.1 was actually a side project immediately after the deployment of Castle Bravo, a high thermonuclear bomb that was dropped in 1954 by the United States. Bravo was part of operation castle a bravo nectar romeo >> high yield nuclear tests with the goal of establishing superior the Soviet Union the Marshall Islands a remote Pacific group of islands served as ground zero for the detonation of the nuclear weap bravo was the strongest detonation and surprisingly produced two and a half times the expected explosive yield resulting in an explosive force Wait, wait. They were they were surprised by how big the boom of the boom boom is.
>> 15 of TNT. To put that into perspective, that is 1,000 times the explosive force of the nuclear bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan in the final days of World War II. Like, god damn.
Damn, that's a lot of freedom.
>> Were occupied with citizens. So, US officials were kind of like, "Uh, sir, shouldn't we get those people out of the Bless you?"
>> Thanks, sir. Allergies have a bother now. You're going to bless them radiation, right? No, but seriously, are we going to get those people out of the out of the radiation zone?
>> Yeah, you know, that wasn't my to-do list.
>> Okay. Wait, I want to see the list.
Yeah, you know what's on my to-do list.
>> Eat breakfast, wake up, work out their ceilings, get natives off island, detonate, [laughter and clears throat] stay a lot. Subscribe. I'm subscribe and like.
>> Operation Castle was quickly amended with the addition of project 4.1. This new section aimed to study the human response to significant radiation exposure. Oh, so they were like, "Hey, we already bombed them, so might as well, right?" Definitely not planned.
>> As if tens of thousands of victims in Hiroshima and Nagasaki weren't evidence enough. Commander of the US Naval Medical was in charge of the project and swore everyone involved to absolute secrecy because he thought the public >> Well, that didn't work out, did it?
>> Keen on the whole test nuclear radiation on non-consenting people thing. Overall, 239 Marshalles residents were exposed to significant levels of radiation and began showing signs of radiation poisoning a few days later. A few days had significant skin damage with weeping wounds, although the wounds did heal rather quickly.
>> Oh, wait. Like quicker than normal or >> Immediate observations ceased after 75 days with the conclusion that no long-term effects were likely. But just out of curiosity, regular checkups were performed on the residents for years after.
>> Okay.
>> Women saw increases in miscarriages and still births. And newborns that survived experience developmental difficulties, impaired growth, and a disproportionate development of thyroid cancer.
>> Well, that's a lot of freedom. Good job.
>> In addition, about onethird of those exposed had developed significant tumors by 1974, 20 years after Operation Castle commenced. Well, they were they lived in the same place. I imagine that the radiation just doesn't go like boom boom bomb radiation go off. It stays for a long time spoke out against the United States with accusations that the scope of the experiment was premeditated and intentional. To which the US officials responded, [clears throat] "Nuh-uh."
Camera. Okay. This is definitely Eastern European because the K >> this how we Soviet Union. It wouldn't be uncommon for political opponents ill with a strong case of the death at the hands of poison. In fact, it was quite an effective and >> they hadn't invented windows by that point. Nowadays, it's a little different >> way to silence any and all opposition without causing too much of a stir.
Well, besides the public reacting to mysterious deaths. And that is why we must rise up against Oh, look at that.
They got another one. So, how [laughter] were the Soviets so good at developing successful poisons? Well, you've got to run preliminary trials on living subjects, of course. Oh, boy.
>> So, in 1921, a year before the Soviet Union officially formed, the comed was established. This was the Soviet secret services poison laboratory. Here, new deadly poisons were developed and tested on human subjects. those tests prisoners from the goologs, various labor camps built around the country for anyone that even had a fleeting thought.
>> Yeah, I was going to say this is sounds better, but considering who they imprisoned at that point, it was kind of like, eh, you I don't like your left eye twitching in the morning at between 6:00 and 7:00 p.m. So, >> that wasn't approved by the Soviet Union.
>> 8 a.m.
>> [ __ ] Carry on. The ultimate goal of the Kamra was to devise a poison that was not only lethal but undetectable. It would be colorless, tasteless, odorless, and untraceable in an autopsy.
>> Would be unknowingly administered various test poisons disguised as medication. But it's green. Orange Flintstone vitamin. I don't trust it.
The various poisons tested included Ryson, which causes severe internal distress and suffering. Cyanide, which can cause v and heart attacks and kari aent that makes you painfully choke to death.
In the end, the tests were pretty successful for the Soviet Union, not for the prisoners. Research led to innovative ways to discreetly dismatch a target. from deploying a cyanide mist to making an assassination heart attack.
>> But the blue ribbon winner was the concoction known as poison carbolamine choline chloride, which was basically a liquid depression. Exposure to this sucker sparked a very curious reaction.
Instead of a violent telltale I've been poisoned type death, the [laughter] victim would simply become weak with a rapid decline in health, all while maintaining a calm, silent demeanor.
Death occurred within 15 minutes. Since the 15 minutes union in 1991, Russian officials have claimed that the comed has been disestablished and abandoned.
Yeah, sure.
>> Sure, buddy.
Guatemalan syphilis.
Oh boy.
>> Now, you may have heard about the Tuskiggee syphilis study, which was an unethical medical study funded by the United States Public Health Service in 1932.
It involved the study of nearly 400 African-Amean men who had naturally contracted syphilis. Oh, they naturally contracted the effects of the disease when left in African-American males.
Even though penic >> could they treat them, >> but they cuz that would be [ __ ] up.
>> Antibiotic cure for syphilis eventually became widely available to the public.
The afflicted men were intentionally never cured. [ __ ] >> well. The US decided to outdo themselves with the Guatemalan syphilis experiment.
In 1946 to 1948, 5,500 Guatemalan natives, including children, were involved in the experiment against their will with the Guatemalan government granting access to the unwilling patients in hospital, >> mental institutions, and even orphanages. Around 1300 relatively healthy individuals ages 10 to 72 were intentionally infected with syphilis and even gorrhea. Transmission was either done by direct bacterial contact into wounds or by sexual transmission with infected native sex workers which were funded by the US government by the way.
>> The latter of which proved to be a very effective method of infection. The guy in charge of these experiments was Dr. John. Yeah, he does look a little serial serial killer killerish and evil.
>> Cutler, >> he has that look.
>> Dr. Dickass often failed to keep accurate medical records of his experiments. Instead, would only provide anecdotal evidence in his findings, probably because he knew what he was doing was unethical. Very much. Listen, if you're going to do something unethical where people suffer or at least documented so it can be used for good, right? Am I wrong?
>> Only a dick ass would do. But all joking aside, the experiments conducted on these people were gruesome. Perhaps one of the most notable documents >> I've never heard of this people experienced was about a female patient named Burda. The following is an excerpt from that document. Burda was a female patient in the psychiatric hospital. In February 1948, Burda was injected in her left arm with syphilis. A month later, she developed scabies. Several weeks later, Dr. Cutler noted that she had also developed red injected her arm, lesions on her arms and legs, and her skin was beginning to waste away from her body. Bera was not treated for syphilis until 3 months after her injection. Wait, syphilis is, bro. I'm going to be honest with you. You infect me with syphilis.
Doctor cutter comes into my room, I'm biting. I am biting. Every body part, I am biting everybody. August 23rd.
>> I'mma bleed on you. I'mma [ __ ] on you.
I'mma piss on you.
>> As if she was going to die, but he did not specify why. That same day, he put gonarrheal pus from another male subject into both of Burda's eyes as well as her private areas. He also reinfected her with syphilis. Several days later, Burda's eyes were filled with pus from the gorrhea and she was bleeding from her private area. 3 days later, on August 27th, Bura died. Told you he was a dick ass. The overall goal of the study, >> that guy deserves to go in hell if there is such a thing. I hope for him there is >> was to determine the effectiveness of penicellin in preventing the STDs. Dr. Cutler had allegedly finalized his reports in 1955, but no evidence was ever found proving that the reports were submitted for peer review and published.
>> So, how did he get this responsibility to do this?
>> That suffering nothing of medical value WAS PRODUCED.
>> WOW. I WILL SAY IN SOME glimmer of fairness, a treatment program was established by the United States and made available to the affected Guatemalan population, but only half were reported to actually have received treatments with a questionable quality of care. United States President Barack Obama formally apologized to the Guatemalan government in 2010, 62 years after the study was performed.
>> Wow. They just they apologized.
Whoa. Big whoop. Unit 731.
>> Yeah, that last one was quite the doozy, huh? Well, buckle up cuz it's about to get >> See this right here? This is unit 731.
It was home to some of the most notorious and truly evil war crimes committed by the Japanese in World War II.
>> Okay, you could have stopped there. Oh boy. Don't worry, guys. They later invented anyway, so it's okay. which are definitely up there with some of the worst in the history of mankind. Unit 731 served as a lethal human experimentation and biological weapons laboratory during the second SinoJapanese war between China and Japan, which ran concurrent to most of the events of World War II. This nightmare facility was established in 1935 in the subprovincial Chinese city of Harbin, 4 years after Japanese forces invaded the Chinese region of Manuria.
Inside, hundreds of thousands of Chinese and even some Russian prisoners of war were subjected to some of the most egregious and horrifying human experimentations known to man.
Experiments performed on men, women, and children, which is everyone. Those chosen for >> Yeah, that's pretty much everyone.
>> Experimentation were dehumanized and referred to as Maruta or logs rather than as people because the coverup story for unit 731 was that it was a lumber mill. It should be noted that the vast majority of the experiments in the facility were carried out to fulfill morbid curiosity with those performing or overseeing the studies described as merely playing >> from a Japanese professor who witnessed the studies was quoted saying that some of the experiments had nothing to do with advancing the capability of germ warfare.
>> Germ warfare medicine.
>> There is such a thing as professional curiosity. What would happen if we did such and such? Bro, >> medical purpose was served by performing and studying beheadings. None at all.
That was just playing around people.
>> Let the kids play. No.
>> What do you mean?
>> So basically experiments were like, "Huh, I wonder what would happen if we just hucked a grenade at a guy."
>> Bang.
>> Oh, look. He He exploded. Hey, can I go home now? Gee, I wonder if this large heavy eye crush this guy.
>> Yep. Will this guy freeze to death him to death?
[laughter] >> I wonder if I if I impose death upon him, does he die?
>> You would have guessed. A lot of these experiments were designed to test the absolute limits of the human body. Tests included depriving victims of food or water to see how long they could survive. Placing victims in low pressure chambers until their eyes popped from their skulls, injecting victims with animal blood, hanging victim.
>> What happened if you inject somebody with animal blood?
>> Upside down until death. Even draining victims of blood just to study blood loss limits. Some victims were even dehydrated in front of large hot fans to the point of mummification. At the time, they only weighed 20% of their initial body weight. Perhaps one of the worst examples I've read was the forced pregnancy of female victims. The mothers were injected with various diseases and drugs just to see how they affected the unborn child. Sometimes performing a vivisection, cutting the fetus out of the mother, for example.
to look I'm good like legit really bad.
So >> yeah, I'm I think I'm good, bro.
>> By the end of the war, as Soviet forces were closing in, Japanese officials had all remaining prisoners executed and the entirety of Unit 731 hastily demolished to destroy any remaining evidence of the program's existence. Yeah, obviously failed.
>> Had discovered trace evidence and pressured Japanese officials into spilling the under threat that they would be handed over to Soviet officials for trial and punishment if they did not cooperate. Once the US learned the horrors of Unit 731, all those involved were swiftly brought to trial and executed for crimes.
>> Except no, they actually >> What do you mean no? This is the one time they Yeah, maybe give them to the Soviets.
>> In reality, the United States claimed that the data collected from the Indian atrocities was actually pretty valuable since it is otherwise ethically unobtainable through conventional means.
As such, many of those involved were granted immunity and freedom in exchange for the data. The deal was struck and the United States kept everything under lock and key. The Soviet Union however pursued trials against the top military leaders of >> carbos scientists from unit 731. In the end only 12 individuals were tried and sentenced to several years in labor camps.
>> Several years >> states repeatedly denied that unit 731 ever existed.
>> Oh, that was a bummer. Here's something to cheer you.
>> This will cheer me on even more. Okay, bro. really bro here's something to cheer you up by kicking the balls right in the ass. I mean that might not be okay. Um yeah. Did you know about any of these?
Let me know in the comments. And good job America.
Were you the best
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