Posted on 07/23/2021 9:42:56 PM PDT by RandFan
There was a moment during The X-Files season ten premiere that made me sit up and cheer. It wasn’t seeing Mulder or Scully’s face again after all these years. It wasn’t about seeing an alien space ship crash, or an alien autopsy. The moment didn’t include explosions or romantic tension between our beloved protagonists. It was a moment that involved a single name:
Henrietta Lacks.
Born Loretta Pleasant in Roanoke, Virginia, Lacks was a woman—a mother, a wife, a sister, a farmer, a human being—but for the longest time and long after cervical cancer took her life in 1951, she’d literally been reduced to her parts: the first two letters of her first and last name, stuck on the side of the petri dishes and test tubes that contained her immortal cells. As patient at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, the only nearby hospital that treated Black people, samples of Lacks’ cells—both healthy and cancerous—were taken without her consent, or perhaps even her understanding, and passed on to Dr. George Otto Gey, who discovered their unique properties. Unlike other cell cultures, Lacks’ cells continued to live and grow. In biomedical terms, this was the jackpot. In 1955, the cells were successfully cloned, and the HeLa immortal cell line has gone on to be used in all kinds of research and experimentation, and was a key factor in the creation of the polio vaccine. Scientists have grown over 20 tonnes of Lacks’ cells and there are over 11,000 patents in place.
Her cells have taken on a new life of their own, having mutated to the point where some scientists question if they can even be considered human anymore. But the source of those cells is and always will be a human being. Her name is Henrietta Lacks. And she has a family that, until the last few decades, had no idea all of this was going on and received no compensation for the cells harvested from Lacks without her knowledge, much less her consent.
“Truth be told, I can’t get mad at science, because it help people live, and I’d be a mess without it. I’m a walking drugstore! I can’t say nuthin bad about science, but I won’t lie, I would like some health insurance so I don’t got to pay all that money every month for drugs my mother cells probably helped make.”
Deborah Lacks from The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot
Finally, Henrietta Lacks’ story is being told and she is getting the credit she deserves. There have been celebrations in her honour, HBO, Oprah Winfrey and Alan Ball have plans for a film based on Skloot’s book, Lacks is recognized by Smithsonian Institute and The National Foundation for Cancer Research, and now Fox Mulder has made her name part of pop culture.
The X-Files remains a science fiction television show meant to entertain, but with the mere mention of her name, along with the 40 year long Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male, the new season has firmly grounded itself in reality. “I was wrong,” Mulder explains emphatically to Scully, in that heated way fans have come to know so well. The X-Files aren’t about alien abductions and what the aliens have been doing to humans, but what humans—the government—is doing to humans. The world will never forget the atrocities performed on human beings in Nazi concentration camps, but much like the German residents who had no idea such things were occurring near their own villages and towns, far too many people remain ignorant of the violations against human bodies—and, in the case of Henrietta Lacks and the men of the Tuskegee Study and so many others, against black human bodies—that have gone on right in North America. All in the name of science.
What path The X-Files takes in this six-part tenth season has yet to be seen, but now, it too has built its story upon Henrietta Lacks. There is no denying the truth in her existence or the unethical practices of human experimentation without consent. HeLa cells have proven their immortality. Let’s make sure that the memory of Henrietta Lacks’ remains immortal too.
VIDEO: Covid-19 Vaccine Program Director Admits Injection Destroys Immune System
"I'm not gonna' pretend I know eactly what they're doin' but it's world ending, baby. They're putting Henrietta Lacks cells in you."
So I searched and found the above article which is interesting and provides a brief overview about her and references a book on this lady who was eaten by cancer in one week in the 1950's and who possessed immortal cell lines which they admit are alien.
If you don't believe me or think this is far fetched do your own research...
Here's her Wikipedia entry and a good starting point
It's so interesting I will probably buy the book about her!
This has been some leftist social justice campaign for a while now.
I understand why that may be the case but I’d never heard of her until Alex mentioned her the other day.
Fascinating stuff I’m sure you’ll agree..
What do you mean by your assertion that ‘they’ admit that her cells are ‘alien’?
I loved books and articles about medical research when I was a pre-teen. I remember reading about HeLa cells, and their deceased human source. But I distinctly remember the name of the woman being given as “Helen Lane.” Only in recent years has her real name been released.
I was confronted early in life about the dark side of human behavior. They say that “ignorance is bliss”... Hell, maybe they’re right.
Alex Jones said they cloned this lady and spliced her with mice in the 1960’s.
I thought such practice was banned but I don’t know...
Thanks for posting.
Well, at least it was not Helen Burne.
Finally, liberals realize that a mass of cells can be human!
The wording in the article above makes it sound as though Dr. Gey is some sort of evil, racist scientist who clandestinely robbed Henrietta Lacks of her cells.
If one reads the book cited in this article, one finds that Ms. Lacks sought medical help for cervical cancer, and that these cells actually came from the surgery performed on her behalf.
Those surgically-removed cells were scientifically studied in a laudable attempt to learn something about cancer, with no expectation that they would prove useful in any other way.
Certainly we do well to remember Ms. Lacks for her contribution to scientific research, even though neither she nor anyone else at the time could have predicted it.
But there are no grounds to turn this serendipitous discovery into a case of racial exploitation.
Read the book!
I’ve read the book and recommended it many times to family and friends. The writer has a gift for telling an engaging story. I found the discussion of the ethics of using Henrietta’s cells particularly interesting. I sincerely hope they aren’t being used in the vax.
Alex said he did 7 hours research and it tied all together. I dont have the time to do that much research so I have to go by what he’s saying.
Have you seen the video? It’s not very long
I read a book about her a few years ago. Very interesting. Can’t remember the name of the book.
On another topic -
the German residents who had no idea such things were occurring near their own villages and towns
Sure, sure they didn't. Sure they had no idea. Uh huh. The Americans made sure they saw it after the camps were liberated, though.
Yes, that’s the book I read.
Half the country would agree with you
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