Truth About RED CROSS
Sunday, 8 June 2014
Saturday, 16 July 2011
RED GOLD FOR SALE!
RED GOLD! IS BIG BUSINESS . . . ITS NOT FOR THE HEALTH OF YOU OR ME . . . ITS FREE & EASY MONEY. It is highly valued. This precious fluid, a crucial natural resource has been compared TO actual gold, but also to oil and coal!
People transfusing the blood, who are sincere and want to help the afflicted and believe that they are doing a good deed.In the United States , donors were once paid outright for their blood. But in 1971 British author Richard Titmuss charged that by thus luring the poor and sick to donate blood for the sake of a few dollars, the American system was unsafe. He also argued that it was immoral for people to profit from giving their blood to help others. His attack prompted an end to the paying of whole-blood donors in the United States (although the system still thrives in some lands). Yet, that did not make the blood market any less profitable. Why?
In the 1940’s, scientists began to separate blood into its components. The process, now called fractionation, makes blood an even more lucrative business. How? Well, consider: When dismantled and its parts sold, a late-model car may be worth up to five times its value when intact. Similarly, blood is worth much more when it is divided up and its components are sold separately.
Plasma, which makes up about half of the blood’s total volume, is an especially profitable blood component. Since plasma has none of the cellular blood parts—red cells, white cells, and platelets—it can be dried and stored. Furthermore, a donor is allowed to give whole blood only five times a year, but he can give plasma up to twice a week by undergoing plasmapheresis. In this process, whole blood is extracted, the plasma separated, and then the cellular components are reinfused into the donor.
Wednesday, 27 April 2011
Red Cross is like the Cigarette Company
What is the truth about the RED CROSS? Is it in some way a FRAUDULENT company like the big multi $$ cigarette company?? Find out . . . . . .
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