| OCR Text |
Show VICO E. ENRIQUES th direct genetic product, but it is the genetic product of th mit 1 r linked. It's not any of the things that you would normally think y u d nt .... Or'DI·C'C' sex link, or whatever. But if this thing gets-this particular gene ends up in th mit ch n ri 1 DNA then you're going to get it. And it's a wasting disease and it s a terrible thing. And ic 1 Cell is primarily Black; not solely, but primarily Black. And, so, we designed this experiment. We got the county health people to go out in their counties. They knew what the populations were. They put some promotional material out. We had about a 92% percent response saying, yes we will participate and give you a data on our family, and on our ancestors, and da, da, da ... And the ACLU killed it because it was an invasion of privacy. And that gave me real pause to think about-well, you know, yeah, you want privacy, but if it's for the total good of a group that wants to have it done to them, can't they choose to do it? No, they can't. The court said, no absolutely not. DAN: The court said no. VIC: The New York Supreme Court said no, you can't do that. There were several things like that. I, and a bunch of contractors, had a criminal justice support system designed that would allow all of the records to be integrated-arrest records, trial records, prison records, juvies. We called them YO's up there, youthful offenders. And they were sealed, and the only people that could see them were judges. But the judges would have access to this, all of the law enforcement people, and the all of the penal people would have access to their part; only to their part. They couldn't look at somebody else's part unless there was a court order to do it. But it would be integrated to the point that if you had aliases and, you know, positive 65 |