25.09.2006, 11:39:06
Versprochen ist versprochen, deshalb hier der Link zu einer Rede von Dr George Haritakis zum Thema Vivisektion http://www.dlrm.org/speeches/sp11.htm, in der er unter anderem ausführt:
"A case was recently brought before the authorities concerning a massacre of dogs carried out in the name of scientific progress. Their howls, coming from the terrace of Ippokratio Hospital in Athens, were heard by the whole neighbourhood. Members of the Greek Anti-Hunting Initiative succeeded in taking photographs of a primitive "surgery" for animal experiments and of some of the dogs themselves that had been shut up in a toilet and had survived the slaughter. The director of Ippokratio declared that he knew nothing about all this, and the person responsible, Professor Golematis, disappeared for some time. The members of his team refused to reveal their names until the police forced them to do so. They did not have any permission to perform animal experiments; the dogs had been stolen; the "surgery" was nothing more than a dirty hut. Nevertheless, the police did nothing, and only certain newspapers made a fuss about the episode. The surviving dogs could not be saved, and the team members were not harried any longer by the Law. But it is these people who will be the "paper doctors" of tomorrow, and it is they who, together with their research, will cooperate for the "welfare" of Greek hospitals ......."
"A case was recently brought before the authorities concerning a massacre of dogs carried out in the name of scientific progress. Their howls, coming from the terrace of Ippokratio Hospital in Athens, were heard by the whole neighbourhood. Members of the Greek Anti-Hunting Initiative succeeded in taking photographs of a primitive "surgery" for animal experiments and of some of the dogs themselves that had been shut up in a toilet and had survived the slaughter. The director of Ippokratio declared that he knew nothing about all this, and the person responsible, Professor Golematis, disappeared for some time. The members of his team refused to reveal their names until the police forced them to do so. They did not have any permission to perform animal experiments; the dogs had been stolen; the "surgery" was nothing more than a dirty hut. Nevertheless, the police did nothing, and only certain newspapers made a fuss about the episode. The surviving dogs could not be saved, and the team members were not harried any longer by the Law. But it is these people who will be the "paper doctors" of tomorrow, and it is they who, together with their research, will cooperate for the "welfare" of Greek hospitals ......."