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Læs mere om videnskabsmændene:
Kary
Mullis >>  (Nobeprismodtager)
Stefan
Lanka >> 
Heinrich
Kremer >> 
og
Peter Duesberg >>
der alle har en kristisk
indfaldsvinkel til den såkaldte AIDS-epidemi...

Derfor
mener Duesbeg, der ikke er tale om nogen epidemi i Afrika: Kilde: Artiklen Ny
og smitsom - eller - gammel med nyt navn >>
...Mellem 1991
and 1999 steg antal ad AIDS-dødsfald fra 60,000 til 90,000 AIDS - i
gennemsnit omkring 75,000 (Kilde: WHO's Weekly Epidemiological Records since 1991).
Med en afrikansk befolkning på 616 millioner (Kilde: United Nations
Environment Programme, June 15, 2000), og et gennemsnitlig antal AIDS-dødsfald
på 75.000 om året, døde 0.012% af den afrikanske befolkning
i denne årerække af AIDS....
...Med en gennemsnitlig levealder
omkring de 50 år (Kilde: US Agency for International Development, "HIV/AIDS
in the developing World", May 1999), vil den årlige dødlighed i en
befolkning på 616 millioner være på 12,3 millioner personer.
0,6% døde altså af AIDS....
Set i lyset af denne lille
andel (0,6%) ud af den totale dødelighed i Afrika opstår spørgsmålet,
at den såkaldte AIDS-dødelighed er er "ny" form for dødelighed,
der kan adskilles fra den normale dødelighed, eller blot konventionel dødelighed
med et nyt navn....
I midten af 1990´erne blev der brugt flere
end 7 milliarder dollars på AIDS-forskning - mere end til al kræftforskning.... | KILDE:
http://www.investorsinsight.com/wwnk_archives.aspx
Virus Myth
One moonlit night
in 1983, a biochemist named Kary Mullis was driving along a California
mountain road when he had an aha! experience akin to Newton's with the apple and
Archimedes' in the bathtub. Mullis immediately pulled off the road, awakened
his sleeping girlfriend, and told her that he suddenly knew how to replicate DNA.
It was a problem that had been vexing scientists and, as it turned out, Mullis
was right. His insight into the polymerase chain reaction won him the 1993
Nobel Prize for Chemistry and led to the invention of DNA-replicating machines
and the tests they make possible, including the one for HIV antibodies.
This
is simply by way of establishing the impeccable scientific credentials of Dr.
Kary Mullis. Because when someone of his stature questions whether the HIV
virus causes AIDS, we should probably listen.
Huh?
Of course HIV
causes AIDS, we all know that, don't we?
The CDC tells us so, the media
tell us so, our doctors tell us so.
End of story.
Well, actually
not.
There is a sizeable, and growing, chorus of dissenting voices. And
unlike many groups that challenge an entrenched mainstream belief, this one does
not consist of loudmouths with fringe credentials.
It is made up of pre-eminent
scientists with rock-solid reputations. Among dozens of others, in addition
to Kary Mullis, we find Dr. Peter Duesberg of UC Berkeley, one of the world's
leading molecular biologists; Dr. Heinz Ludwig Sänger, emeritus professor of molecular
biology and virology at the Max-Planck-Institute in Munich, Germany; Dr. Eleni
Papadopulos-Eleopulos, professor of medical physics at Australia's Royal Perth
Hospital; Dr. Walter Gilbert, 1980 Nobel prize winner for his work on DNA sequencing;
and Dr. Gordon Stewart, professor emeritus of public health at Glasgow University
and a former AIDS adviser to the World Health Organization. Impressive, and that's
just the short list.
So, what are these men and women saying?
Kary
Mullis: "If there is evidence that HIV causes AIDS, there should be scientific
documents which either singly or collectively demonstrate that fact, at least
with a high probability. There is no such document."
A few quick reminders:
AIDS is not a disease, it's "Acquired Immuno-Deficiency Syndrome," a catch-all
applied to those whose natural bodily defense systems have been so compromised
that they no longer protect the individual from any number of life-threatening
diseases.
AIDS vaulted into public awareness when large numbers of gay
men in San Francisco started exhibiting horribly devastated immune systems in
the early '80s, and began to die of previously rare or normally benign diseases
such as Kaposi's Sarcoma and Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia.
A crash program
attempting to isolate the source of this epidemic yielded the discovery of the
HIV retrovirus by Robert Gallo and Luc Montagnier and its designation as the "cause"
of AIDS. Montagnier has since backed off and now considers HIV as merely a "co-factor"
in AIDS cases; Gallo still vigorously defends the premise that HIV is the cause.
(Full disclosure: Gallo patented the first "AIDS test kit" in 1984.)
There
are many problems associated with the HIV/AIDS theory.
Take the AIDS
test, for example.
It establishes the presence of HIV antibodies,
not of the virus itself. Why? Because the virus is present in such minute quantities
that it's too hard to find.
How can such a tiny amount of virus do such
awful systemic damage?
Good question.
Defenders of the status
quo have been forced to claim that the virus somehow does its dirty work, then
essentially disappears, only to have its effects show up later, often years later.
That's a pretty unique kind of infection.
Then, too, aren't antibodies
evidence that the immune system is doing its work? Yes. HIV/AIDS proponents claim
that the virus is killing T-cells [one of the key components of the immune system],
Peter Duesberg says.
Yet, "At the same time, all they ever found in patients
was antibodies against the virus.
And I said those two things don't make
any sense at all. A retrovirus isn't killing cells.
That's the one thing
we always knew and agreed on about retroviruses--that they do not kill cells.
The second thing is viruses only cause disease when they are bonded, not when
they are neutralized by antibodies.
That's what you call a vaccine, when
a virus is neutralized by an antibody.
" There are reliability difficulties
as well. An Australian research team, writing in Bio/Technology in 1993, concluded
that no test procedure met the "gold standard," the "quintessential element for
the authentication of any diagnostic test," wherein positive tests consistently
lead to finding the virus, negative tests to not finding it.
Or, in other
words, a positive antibody test may mean the virus is there, but it may not.
Additionally,
Mullis writes, "[Those] tests are based on a lot of assumptions that are not very
easy to prove, because they've never isolated the organism completely by itself.
There's not a tube of HIV in the country that's pure.
There are
cultures that have by mass something like one out of 100,000 is HIV.
That's
all. That's the best we've got."
Furthermore, treatment of HIV infection
often involves immune-suppressive drugs that will, on their own, kill you as readily
as any ailment, often closely mimicking the syndrome they're meant to cure.
This
Duesberg calls "AIDS by prescription."
Finally, there is the classification
loop by which the CDC links HIV, AIDS, and disease.
A person is said
to have AIDS if he or she suffers from one or more of 31 different diseases--all
of which existed long before the AIDS epidemic--and if he or she also has HIV
antibodies.
Someone who succumbs to tuberculosis and has the antibody
thus has "died of AIDS."
Minus the antibody, it's just plain old TB.
Likewise, "AIDS" is the diagnosis in Africa for anything involving
cough, fever, persistent diarrhea and substantial weight loss, a symptom grouping
that, probably not coincidentally, also defines malnutrition.
In short,
the problems are many and the case against the HIV/AIDS hypothesis is complex.
Space limitations mean that we have only hinted at a few basic aspects of it here.
But there is a wealth of information on the Internet. www.virusmyth.net
is a good starting place for interested readers.
It archives papers by
Mullis, Duesberg, and many others.
We encourage our readers to inform
themselves about this ongoing scientific debate, with minds open to the possibility
that everything they think they know about AIDS may be wrong.
A stubborn
clinging to unproven dogma is one of the worst enemies of the quest for truth.
While we're not scientifically qualified to say with any certainty who is right
in this controversy, we are sympathetic to Kary Mullis' complaint that "so many
scientists have absolutely refused to examine the available evidence in a neutral,
dispassionate way.
Several respected scientific journals have [rejected]
a statement issued by the Group for the Scientific Reappraisal of the H.I.V./AIDS
Hypothesis simply requesting 'a thorough reappraisal of the existing evidence
for and against this hypothesis'.
" That kind of peer review seems like
a minimum effort that can, and should, be made. Our final question is, of course:
If HIV doesn't cause AIDS, what does, then? There is no one answer. Most
likely, the dissenters say, different diseases have different etiologies.
Problem
is, no research is being done on alternative theories because the HIV people get
all the grant money. | TEORIEREdward
Hooper udgav i 1999 bogen "The River", hvor han forsøger
at dokumentere, at HIV er resultat af eksperimenter med poliovaccine i Afrika
i 1950´erne. Artikel
fra The Guardian >>

BOGEN The
River: A Journey Back to the Source of HIV and Aids  EDWARD
HOOPER >> DUESBERG teori
om AIDS: Det, vi kalder AIDS, er ikke forårsaget af en
virus og HIV har en marginal rolle. I den vestlige verden er AIDS
en sygdom forårsaget af misbrug af narkotika og visse typer afrodisiako. I
Afrika er AIDS et nyt navn for velkendte sygdomme forårsaget
af fejlernæring og manglen på rent vand.
|