Jw's and prostitutes refuse anti malaria spray in rwanda

by candidlynuts 32 Replies latest watchtower scandals

  • eclipse
    eclipse

    Did the article mention why prostitutes were against them spraying?

    (does it interfere with business???)

  • nvrgnbk
    nvrgnbk

    Did the article mention why prostitutes were against them spraying?

    I thought they'd be used to that.

  • AlphaOmega
    AlphaOmega

    Eclipse...

    The prostitutes wanted them to do it during the evening - maybe it was a quiet time or maybe they are "out and about" in the evening.

    NVR...

    You are a sick man

  • eclipse
    eclipse

    Thanks AO (I must of been speed reading),

    Nvr, You can turn any innocent comment into something dirty

  • Cindi_67
    Cindi_67

    There is a lot of controversy around DDT, the pesticide used to kill Malaria.

    DDT use against malaria

    Malaria afflicts between 300 million and 500 million people every year. The World Health Organization estimates that around 1 million people die of malaria and malaria-related illness every year, [51] with about 90% of these deaths occur in Africa, mostly to children under the age of 5.

    Most prior use of DDT was in agriculture, but the controlled use of DDT continues to this day for the purposes of public health. Current use for disease control requires only a small fraction of the amounts previously used in agriculture, and at these levels the pesticide is much less likely to cause environmental problems. Residual house spraying involves the treatment of all interior walls and ceilings with insecticide, and is particularly effective against mosquitoes, which favour indoor resting before or after feeding. Advocated as the mainstay of malaria eradication programmes in the late 1950s and 1960s, DDT remains a major component of control programmes in southern African states, though many countries have abandoned or curtailed their spraying activities. South Africa, Swaziland, Mozambique and Ecuador are examples of countries that have very successfully reduced malaria infestations with DDT.

    Indeed, the problems facing health officials in their fight against malaria neither begin nor end with DDT. Experts tie the spread of malaria to numerous factors, including the resistance of the malaria microbe itself to the drugs traditionally used to treat the illness [52] and a chronic lack of funds in the countries worst hit by malaria.

    The growth of resistance to DDT and the fear that DDT may be harmful both to humans and the environment led the U.N., donor countries, and various national governments to restrict or curtail the use of DDT in vector control. At the same time, use of DDT as an agricultural insecticide was often unrestricted, and restrictions were often evaded, especially in developing countries where malaria is rife, so that resistance continued to grow. [9]

    A commentary on the current state of global malaria control was published in the May 2007 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. The authors identify "3 critical factors that are currently absent or in too short supply" for making progress in the fight against malaria: "leadership, management, and money," while making no mention of restrictions limiting the use of DDT. They also single out resistance of the malaria parasite to chloroquine as the cause of increasing malaria mortality in sub-Saharan Africa, not restrictions on DDT. [53]

    Today there is debate among professionals working on malaria control concerning the appropriate role of DDT. The range of disagreement is relatively narrow: Few believe either that large scale spraying should be resumed or that the use of DDT should be abandoned altogether. The debate focuses on the relative merits of DDT and alternative pesticides as well as complementary use of interior wall spraying, insecticide-treated bed-nets, and other mosquito control techniques.

    Since the appointment of Arata Kochi as head of its anti-malaria division, the WHO has shifted its position in this controversy, from primary reliance on bed-nets to a policy more favorable to DDT. Until an announcement made on 16 September2006, the policy had recommended indoor spraying of insecticides in areas of seasonal or episodic transmission of malaria, but a new policy also advocates it where continuous, intense transmission of the disease causes the most deaths. [54] In 2007, the WHO clarified its position, saying it is "very much concerned with health consequences from use of DDT" and reaffirmed its commitment to phasing out the use of DDT. [55]

    TAKEN FROM WIKIPEDIA. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DDT#Recent_changes

    I just don't see the relevance in being "against God's guidelines" and the fact that the use of the pesiticide comes with a lot of other problems, like cancer, low sperm count, deformed babies, etc. By the way the use of this pesticide is banned in the US. Long exposure can cause an array of problems.

  • undercover
    undercover
    ...remember, too, that "Jehovah's people" once rejected vaccinations of all kinds.

    Good point.

    Not that this news item will make it in most daily papers, but in the off-chance that it gets mentioned amongst our JW family or associates, it could be a good point to bring out after they try to distance themselves from the controversy by claiming that the news account was in error or it wasn't the real JWs.

    Even if the story is in error or it is a splinter group, the real JWs have done things just as controversial, if not more so, than this.

  • dmouse
    dmouse

    What about the prohibition on hunting? Killing all those bugs for fun and not eating 'em...

    Besides, lots fewer people dying of disease might delay Harm-aggeding

  • Rabbit
    Rabbit

    What about the prohibition on hunting? Killing all those bugs for fun and not eating 'em...

    Besides, lots fewer people dying of disease might delay Harm-aggeding

    Poisoning the little buggers means you can't properly bleed them...like smushing them can.

  • candidlynuts
    candidlynuts

    they were mentioned again in todays news..

    http://allafrica.com/stories/200709130391.html

    This sad problem some of us have was highlighted recently when peoples belonging to a certain religious affiliation refused anti-malarial spraying in their homes because it went against their religion.

    This is a country close to God and tolerant of many ways of life. There cannot be tolerance, though, for illogical claims. No matter which direction you pray towards, daily health and safety must be a top priority.

    Yet this is not what we see today. Besides the refusal by the Jehovah's Witnesses, there is another religious group, commonly called Abadaaki, which does not believe in any type of medication, be it modern or traditional.

  • Cindi_67
    Cindi_67

    they were mentioned again in todays news..

    http://allafrica.com/stories/200709130391.html

    This sad problem some of us have was highlighted recently when peoples belonging to a certain religious affiliation refused anti-malarial spraying in their homes because it went against their religion.

    This is a country close to God and tolerant of many ways of life. There cannot be tolerance, though, for illogical claims. No matter which direction you pray towards, daily health and safety must be a top priority.

    Yet this is not what we see today. Besides the refusal by the Jehovah's Witnesses , there is another religious group, commonly called Abadaaki, which does not believe in any type of medication, be it modern or traditional.

    Here they are mentioned as Jehovah's Witnesses and not of God. I also Googled it, and nothing came up under Jehovah's Witnesses of god. This is clearly "us" JW's. I cannot understand why they are refusing this. This is crazy.

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