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Tuesday, January 01, 2008

Happy New Year Folks and Let's Make 08' the Year of the Non-Victim



Well we are getting close to the end of a decade and we haven't seen any mass produced flying autos (yet) but we are seeing folks with blue skin a la The Smurfs or for the sci-fi buffs that visit Afronerd, the Andorians. Case in point, check out the video above as it pertains to Paul Karason, the blue-skinned man (and folks it's not makeup) in question who was compelled to leave Oregon because of racism. His story is a pretty interesting one, but the bottom line is that his condition appears to be self-inflicted/self-imposed due to the consistent ingestion of colloidal silver. Take a look at this excerpt from FoxNews.com:

Paul Karason puts a whole new spin on "feeling blue.” For more than a decade, the 57-year-old has been living with a blue face.

Fourteen years ago, Karason developed a bad case of dermatitis, which results in swollen, reddened and itchy skin. He started self-medicating, using a treatment called colloidal silver, which is made by extracting silver from metal.

Click here to hear the blue man tell his story (VIDEO)

Often touted by manufacturers as a cure-all, colloidal silver usually is found in a liquid form. Looking for relief, Karason drank the concoction and rubbed it on his skin — something the U.S. Food and Drug Administration does not recommend.

His skin slowly turned blue.

"The change was so gradual that I didn't perceive it and other people around me likewise," said Karason. "It wasn't until a friend I hadn't seen in several months came by my parent's place to see me and he asked me 'what did you do?.'"

The FDA does not consider colloidal silver safe or effective to treat any disease or condition. In fact, taking it could have serious side effects, such as:

— Argyria — which is an irreversible blue-gray discoloration of your skin, nails and gums

— Seizures and other neurological problems

— Kidney damage

— Indigestion

— Headaches

— Fatigue

— Skin irritation

Karason, who recently moved from Oregon to Madera, Calif., said it hasn't been easy living with blue skin.

"I do tend to avoid public places as much as I can," he said.

Karason made the move in hopes of fitting in a little better.

"I hope that they just accept me," he said, "And I think that will happen here. Where I was, I rather doubt it would have. This is different kind of community here."

Karason's girlfriend, Jackie Northrup, said she doesn't even notice his skin color any more.

"The only time now I really think about it or notice it is if we're out in public and people start staring," she said.

So far, Karason hasn't sought any medical attention for his condition. When he was asked if he's still drinking the colloidal silver, he said yes, but much less.


I will delve more into what I think needs to be done this year to combat the victimization paradigm that many people of color (blue-skinned folks, notwithstanding) rely on to explain their present condition in the next few entries. Meanwhile, let's take a look at the latest episode of The Stack, courtesy of the guys from Pulp Secret:

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