Devra Davis See book keywords and concepts | Either Flury was exempt from prosecution as a war criminal because he had no direct engagement in war crimes, or his research was judged too important to be lost to prosecution. The latter category of exemption from prosecution was one that many experts managed to fall into. Flury died in 1948, a few months after returning to the university laboratories. He was never prosecuted.
Kehoe's report to the field investigations unit on Flury relays information that may have been obtained through reading documents. |
Too Profitable to CureBrent Hoadley, Ph.D. See book keywords and concepts | | Eugenics and human experimentation on those with genetic and chronic disorders should be regarded with horror equaling that which followed the discoveries of Nazi war crimes.
Through a well-conceived corporate business plan, the greed that allows corporations to amass huge profits, will ultimately reveal a roadmap for total domination.
Initially, corporate money in the form of lobbying efforts and campaign contributions, are successfully "buying" our political system. | Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts | Nazi Germany and is nothing less than a series of war crimes being perpetrated against not just men from Middle Eastern nations, but also U.S. citizens.
The U.S. government is also the only government in the world to have ever dropped nuclear weapons on predominantly civilian populations (Japan, World War II), and today, the U.S. government is openly engaged in the widespread use of weapons of mass destruction against civilians in Iraq and Afghanistan through the use of depleted uranium shells. | Alex Steffen See book keywords and concepts | Thanks to the work of one dedicated organization, the use of forensic anthropology to document and validate war crimes and human rights violations is starting to go mainstream, even in countries where the carnage has only recently ended. Forensic experts are doing more than granting closure to traumatized families —they are creating lasting public records pertaining to some of the worst criminals in history, and the evidence is being used to prosecute those criminals whenever it's still possible to do so. | Mike Adams See book keywords and concepts | From "Arbeit macht frei" to "Codex Alimentarius"
Just fifteen years after they were convicted in the Nuremberg war crimes Tribunal, Bayer, BASF and Hoechst were again the architects of the next major human rights offences. In 1962, they established the Codex Alimentarius Commission. This dark period of German history is inextricably bound to one man, Fritz ter Meer:
He was a member of the Managing Board of IG Farben from its inception to its dissolution. As the Wartime Manager, he was responsible for IG Auschwitz. | James Trefil, Joseph F. Kett, and E. D. Hirsch See book keywords and concepts | In 1990, he became president of Poland. war crimes Acts committed by soldiers or government officials, either in the course of a war or in bringing on a war, that violate the customs of warfare. Examples of war crimes include atrocities committed against civilians (see My Lai massacre) and the mistreatment of prisoners of war. After World War ii, twenty-two Nazi leaders were tried at Nuremberg by the victorious Allies, and twelve were sentenced to death for war crimes. (See Nuremberg trials.)
Warsaw Pact A military alliance of communist nations in eastern Europe. | Alex Steffen See book keywords and concepts | At the end of March 2006, Charles Taylor was arrested on charges of murder, sexual slavery, rape, the exploitation of child soldiers, and other war crimes. He faces trial by the Sierra Leonean Special Court, under authorization of the UN Security Council, which will take place at the facilities of the International Criminal Court in The Hague. If he is convicted, the international community is expected to cooperate in finding prison facilities for his incarceration.
Taylor's trial stands to demonstrate the strength and effectiveness of universal jurisdiction. | | The EAAF has provided evidence to the United Nations war crimes Tribunals on the former Yugoslavia, and has made ongoing missions to South Africa to investigate apartheid-era disappearances in conjunction with that country's Truth and Reconciliation Commission [see Ending Violence, p. 470]. | | Opposite, right: Former Liberian president Charles Taylor arrives in Monrovia en route to his war crimes trial in Sierra Leone, 2006.
Demandina Human
Rights human rights and to promote rights abroad, we can get directly involved in efforts to watch over the watchdogs, as
Universal Jurisdiction
¦hh Change demands people who are willing to point out abuses of power, challenge authority, and hold wrongdoers accountable. The world needs courageous watchdogs, because it's their vigilance that creates and preserves the transparency that holds power in check. | Fred A. Baughman, Jr., M.D. and Craig Hovey See book keywords and concepts | In any setting, the failure to provide you, the parent or guardian, with all of the material information about the "condition" or "treatment" being suggested or encouraged is a violation of your informed consent rights, which were born of the World War Two war crimes trials at Nuremberg, and is tantamount to medical malpractice. As a result of Nuremberg, medical experimentation on prisoners of war was outlawed. | E. D. Hirsch See book keywords and concepts | Walesa won the Nobel Prize for peace in 1983. war crimes Acts committed by soldiers or government officials, either in the course of a war or in bringing on a war, that violate the customs of warfare. Examples of war crimes include atrocities committed against civilians (see My Lai massacre) and the mistreatment of prisoners of war. After World War ii, twenty-two Nazi leaders were tried at Nuremberg by the victorious Allies, and twelve were sentenced to death for war crimes. (See Nuremberg trials.)
Battle of Waterloo. The defeat of Napoleon. | James Trefil, Joseph F. Kett, and E. D. Hirsch See book keywords and concepts | Examples of war crimes include atrocities committed against civilians (see My Lai massacre) and the mistreatment of prisoners of war. After World War ii, twenty-two Nazi leaders were tried at Nuremberg by the victorious Allies, and twelve were sentenced to death for war crimes. (See Nuremberg trials.)
Warsaw Pact A military alliance of communist nations in eastern Europe. Organized in 1955 in answer to NATO, the Warsaw Pact included Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, Rumania, and the Soviet Union. | G. Edward Griffin See book keywords and concepts | If he does not, then he is no different from the Nazis who were hanged for war crimes.
In the present battle, we do not even have the passion of war to justify our behavior. Yet, in the last few years more people have died needlessly of cancer than all the casualties of all our wars put together.
How much suffering and death are the American people willing to take before they stand up to the bureaucracy? How many physicians must be put into prison before all physicians cry "enough!" to the increasing government control over their profession? | Leonard G. Horowitz, D.M.D., M.A., M.P.H. See book keywords and concepts | Nazi doctors before Nuremberg war crimes Tribunal; standing at right is Kurt Blome; to his right is Karl Gebhardt.
Source: Preston, Jr. W. The Real Treason. Covert'Action Information Bulletin (Winter) 1986;25:26. vice), itself a descendant of the Gehlen intelligence network [commonly referred to as the "Gehlen Org"] which in 1945 passed from the leadership of the Nazi SS to that of American intelligence, and eventually the CIA." Later it was determined that both Barbie and Schwend were on the U.S. payroll, and worked, after World War II, for U.S. Army Counter Intelligence. | E. D. Hirsch See book keywords and concepts | After World War ii, twenty-two Nazi leaders were tried at Nuremberg by the victorious Allies, and twelve were sentenced to death for war crimes. (See Nuremberg trials.)
Battle of Waterloo. The defeat of Napoleon.
Waterloo, Battle of A battle in Belgium in 1815 in which the British defeated the French under Napoleon Bonaparte. Napoleon abdicated as emperor a few days after this final defeat, and a few weeks later he was captured and sent into exile. | James Trefil, Joseph F. Kett, and E. D. Hirsch See book keywords and concepts | A court set up by the victorious Allies tried twenty-two former officials, including Hermann Goering, in Nuremberg, Germany, for war crimes. Goering and eleven others were sentenced to death. Many of the highest officials of Nazi Germany, including Adolf Hitler, Joseph Goebbels, and Heinrich Himmler, had committed suicide before they could be brought to trial, and Goering killed himself before he could be executed. fa Several of those accused at the Nuremberg trials offered the defense that they were merely carrying out the orders of their superiors. This defense was not accepted. | | Twenty-two of their leaders were convicted of war crimes at the Nuremberg trials.
A great number of symbols, images, and names are associated with the reign of the Nazis, including the swastika emblem; the stiff-armed salute; the greeting "heil Hitler"; soldiers marching in goose step; mass political rallies; concentration camps such as Auschwitz and Dachau; and Hitler's aides Adolf Eichmann, Joseph Goebbels, Hermann Goering, and Heinrich Himmler.
Nazism (naht-siz-uhm, nat-siz-uhm) The beliefs of the Nazis. | | After World War ii, twenty-two Nazi leaders were tried at Nuremberg by the victorious Allies, and twelve were sentenced to death for war crimes. (See Nuremberg trials.)
Warsaw Pact A military alliance of communist nations in eastern Europe. Organized in 1955 in answer to NATO, the Warsaw Pact included Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, Rumania, and the Soviet Union. It disintegrated in 1991, in the wake of the collapse of communism in eastern Europe and the Soviet Union. | E. D. Hirsch See book keywords and concepts | A court set up by the victorious Allies tried twentytwo former officials, including Hermann Goering, in Nuremberg, Germany, for war crimes. Goering and eleven others were sentenced to death. Many of the highest officials of Nazi Germany, including Adolf Hitler, Joseph Goebbels, and Heinrich Himmler, had committed suicide before they could be brought to trial, and Goering killed himself before he could be executed. fa Several of those accused at the Nuremberg trials offered the defense that they were merely carrying out the orders of their superiors. This defense was not accepted. | | Twenty-two of their leaders were convicted of war crimes at the Nuremberg trials.
A great number of symbols, images, and names are associated with the reign of the Nazis, including the swastika emblem; the stiff-armed salute; the greeting "heil Hitler"; soldiers marching in goose step; mass political rallies; concentration camps such as Auschwitz and Dachau; and Hitler's aides Adolf Eichmann, Joseph Goebbels, Hermann Goering, and Heinrich Himmler.
Nazism (NAHT-siz-uhm, NAT-siz-uhm) The beliefs of the Nazis. | Leonard G. Horowitz, D.M.D., M.A., M.P.H. See book keywords and concepts | They undoubtedly gave the Nazi researchers alias names and backgrounds so they couldn't be traced or tried for war crimes, I recalled.
The CIA and "The Mad Doctor" in Canada
Despite its proprietary appearance, The Rockefeller Commission was anything but thorough in investigating and reporting CIA improprieties. Had they been, they might have discussed Operation MKULTRA, the agency's most notorious and barbarous mind control experiments. |
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