Gulf War Syndrome and ALS
In the first hour of Monday's show, Epidemiologist
Dr. Robert W. Haley (
website) explained the origin of Gulf War Syndrome and its expression as
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), commonly called Lou Gehrig's disease. Of the approximately 700,000 soldiers sent to the Persian
Gulf, 100,000 came back suffering from a mysterious illness. Dr. Haley's research has led him to the conclusion that "Gulf War Syndrome
appears to be a brain cell injury caused by low-level sarin [gas exposure]."
Gulf War veterans who suffer from ALS were likely exposed to sarin and lacked the genetic enzyme to rid their bodies of the gas. This exposure accelerated the development of ALS, a disease many of these soldiers would have developed much later in life.
For more information about Gulf War Syndrome and ALS or to participate in research, call (214) 648-3075.
Recap
Human Devolution
Controversial author and lecturer,
Michael Cremo (
humandevolution.com), the main guest on Monday night, shared his alternative to the Darwinian Theory of Evolution called Human Devolution. Based on the Vedic philosophy of ancient India, Cremo proposes that "humans of our type [have] existed" on earth for millions of years. He cites as evidence the fact that anatomically modern human skeletons have been found embedded in rock dated several hundred million years old.
Further, in his theory of Human Devolution, Cremo teaches "We are composed of three things: matter, mind, and consciousness. We start our existence on a level of pure consciousness." Our origins then, unlike Darwinian Evolution, did not begin by evolving up from matter, but rather devolving down from spirit.
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ALS in Gulf War Vets
Tonight's first hour guest, Epidemiologist Dr. Robert W. Haley, has been studying the connection between Gulf War Syndrome and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) for the last decade. ALS, sometimes called Lou Gehrig's disease, is a rapidly progressive
neurological disease that results in paralysis and eventually death. For those afflicted, there is no hope of cure for the disease.
A recently published study in this month's issue of
Neurology shows the rate of ALS in Gulf War
veterans younger than 45 years of age was as much as three times more than the rate expected in the general population.
Dr. Halely notes, "ALS is extremely rare in young age groups. Our findings suggest that some environmental exposure that these veterans had in the Gulf War greatly accelerated the ALS process so that it occurred at a much younger age."
Despite mounting evidence, not everyone is convinced of the relationship between Gulf War service and ALS. Dr. Michael Rose of King's College Hospital in London believes the recent study to have "a number of potential flaws," but that "accumulation of further evidence [will allow] a firmer conclusion."
--S.L.