To: restornu
Gotta love Sledghammer's smackdown of the Dems.
It's hysterical, especially with how wroth they are to the point of frothing aphasia over it.
"The aim of the exhibition is to inform visitors and to open up the opportunity particularly to medical laymen to better understand their body and its functions," the company says on its website.
Body worlds, ahh yes, I remember these guys.
Wonder if the guys one, err... better understanding of the body by posing two dead corpses in coitus adds to medical knowledge or promotes moral decay and outrage instead?
994 posted on
11/27/2003 3:33:27 PM PST by
Darksheare
(Even as we speak, my 100,000 killer wombat army marches forth)
To: Darksheare
NOV 28, 2003
Corpse factory
Little-known processing plant in Dalian churns out Body Worlds human exhibits
BEIJING - You may have seen the body parts and human bodies at the Body Worlds exhibition at the Singapore Expo, but do you know where they were processed?
Some could be from a factory in the north-eastern Dalian city, which imports more than 100 corpses from abroad every year, according to the Chinese media.
Body Worlds, founded by German Professor Gunther von Hagens, has created a stir worldwide with his exhibitions featuring corpses in a variety of poses, the Beijing Morning Post reported.
So far, the exhibition has travelled to Vienna, Berlin, London and a number of Asian cities.
But few people are aware of the existence of the Dalian plant owned by Prof von Hagens, who invented the plastination technique of preserving human bodies in 1977, said the newspaper.
Located in a remote corner of a technology park, it did not even have a signboard. There, workers would skin the bodies before draining the fats and water from the human tissues, which are then filled with plastic.
The Post reported that the workers are mostly from medical schools and they are paid 1,500 yuan (S$315) each a month - higher than the average salary of 1,000 yuan in the region.
In an interview with magazine Liaowang Dongfang, Prof von Hagens said the plant is the world's largest production base for human specimens, churning out more than 40 plastinated full bodies each year.
The factory, set up at a cost of US$15 million (S$26 million) in 1999, accounts for 70 to 80 per cent of his company's annual profits of about US$10 million.
It costs between US$30,000 and US$50,000 to plastinate a full body in a process that can last up to a year.
Prof von Hagen told the magazine he planned to pump in another US$20 million over the next five years to build two research offices and two more processing workshops. He has two other processing factories - one in Germany and the other in Kyrghyz Republic, Central Asia.
Medical expert Chen Tianmin has criticised the idea of exhibiting dead bodies and told the Post they should be used for research purposes.
But the company says on its website: 'The aim of the exhibition is to inform visitors and to open up the opportunity particularly to medical laymen to better understand their body and its functions.'
996 posted on
11/27/2003 3:39:46 PM PST by
restornu
("Hard work, Some turn up their sleeves, some turn up their noses, and some don't turn up at all.")
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson