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HIV - The Achilles Heel of AIDS

Heath Motley, D.C.

Abstract
The HIV-AIDS hypothesis remains to be just that an unproved hypothesis. For nearly two de ades the war on AIDS has been a olossal !ailure" with the latest AIDS statisti bein# $%"%%%"%%% ured.& 'u h li(e the war on an er" the war on AIDS has !ailed to save lives" the only test that really ounts.

Introduction
The number o! HIV positive Ameri ans has remained onstant sin e HIV be ame dete table in )*+, totalin# about one million people" or %.-. o! the population.) AIDS itsel! has not yet a!!e ted lar#e portions o! the population" at least not enou#h to be onsidered the epidemi that was presumed. AIDS has not yet in!e ted lar#e numbers o! women" nor has it entered into the heterose/ual population outside o! dru# addi ts. 0ine out o! every )% AIDS patients are still male" and more than *,. o! these !all into stri t ris( ate#ories o! homose/uals" heroin 1IV dru#2 users" and in a !ew ases" hemophilia s.3 In A!ri a" the si/ to ei#ht million people who were said to be in!e ted !or more than a de ade have translated into a mere 3,%"%%% AIDS vi tims" some three to !our per ent o! the HIV-positive people.4

Discussion
5e!ore we #et too !ar ahead" let6s #o over HIV and why it hasn6t been proven to ause AIDS or even (ill the ells it in!e ts. 7hen sear hin# !or one paper that proves HIV auses AIDS" one reali8es that this 5la ( 9la#ue o! the 3)st :entury is based on a hypothesis with ori#ins no one an re all. 7here are the re!eren es; 7ell" there aren6t any< 0o one has ever proven that HIV auses AIDS. In !a t there is a reward !or anyone who an produ e that pie e o! in!ormation. Today we (now more about HIV than any other virus studied. In the more than )%%"%%% papers written on HIV and AIDS sin e the mid )*+%6s" there isn6t one paper to prove this laim. The period o! resear h into the auses o! AIDS" in whi h both in!e tious and non-in!e tious a#ents were onsidered" lasted only three years. It started with the identi!i ation o! AIDS in )*+) and o!!i ially ended in April )*+- with the announ ement o! the $AIDS virus& at an international press on!eren e ondu ted by the Se retary o! Health and Human Servi es and the !ederal AIDS resear her =obert >allo" in 7ashin#ton D.:.- This announ ement was made prior to the publi ation o! any s ienti!i eviden e on!irmin# the virus theory. 7ith this unpre edented maneuver" >allo6s dis overy bypassed 1peer2 review by the s ienti!i ommunity and $s ien e by press on!eren e& was substituted in pla e o! the onventional pro ess o! s ienti!i validation based on publi ations in the pro!essional literature. The vast amount o! AIDS literature has proven HIV to be a retrovirus" also (nown as a passen#er virus. =etroviruses do not (ill ells but #row harmoniously with them.," ? HIV !ails to meet any o! the established standards to be onsidered an in!e tious a#ent. These standards are alled @o h 9ostulatesA

). @B:H6S FI=ST 9BSTCDATEA THE 'I:=B5E 'CST 5E 9=ESE0T I0 ADD :ASES BF DISEASE. In the ase o! AIDS" the a!!e ted tissues in lude the white blood ells o! the immune system" parti ularly the T- ells" as well as the s(in lesions o! @aposi6s sar oma and brain neurons in dementia. 5ut no viruses an be !ound in either @aposi6s sar oma or the neurons o! the :0S. Sin e retroviruses" in !a t" annot in!e t nondividin# ells li(e neurons" he absen e o! HIV is hardly surprisin#. However" be ause @aposi6s sar oma has lon# been synonymous with AIDS" the absen e o! the virus in this an er seriously undermines the HIV hypothesis. I! HIV was a tively in!e tin# - ells or other members o! the immune system" ell !ree virus parti les" (nown as Virions" should easily be !ound in the blood. This is the ase with all lassi al viral diseases. Thus" HIV behaves as a harmless passen#er mi robe" only omin# ba ( to li!e lon# a!ter the immune system has been destroyed by somethin# else and an no lon#er suppress the virus. Even those patients with some dete table virus never have more than one in every ten thousand T- ells a tively produ in# opies o! the virus. Bn avera#e" only one in every !ive hundred or more T- ells ontain even a dormant virus. he abundan e o! unin!e ted T- ells in all AIDS patients is the !atal" de!initive ar#ument a#ainst the many !alse laims !or hi#h viral $loads& or $burdens& in AIDS patients.F The absen e o! a tive" in!e tious viruses automati ally disGuali!ies HIV as a player in the syndrome. 'i robes an only ause serious dama#e when in!e tin# the host6s ells !aster than the body an repla e themH T- ells" the presumed tar#et o! HIV" are onstantly re#eneratin# at mu h" mu h hi#her rates than dormant HIV in the presen e o! anti-viral immunity.+ HIV is not" o! ourse" behavin# di!!erently !rom other viruses. Cpon in!e tin# a new host" a typi al virus invades its tar#et ells and be#ins repli atin# in lar#e numbers" produ in# new virus parti les that spill into the bloodstream and in!e t more ellsH this is the period in whi h hi#h levels o! virus an be isolated !rom the patient and the symptoms are the stron#est. HIV" li(e other retroviruses" an a hieve hi#h levels o! virus when !irst in!e tin# the body 1up to )%%"%%% parti les per millimeter o! blood2" but in most people the anti-bodies a tivated a#ainst it then permanently ina tivate HIV. Durin# this brie! period o! HIV a tivity" some newly in!e ted people have reported mild !lu-li(e symptoms at most" but no AIDS diseases. 5ut all o! these rare ases were male homose/uals !rom hi#h-ris( #roups" meanin# people who used re reational dru#s that an ause e/a tly those same symptoms. Butside this ris( #roup are the )F million HIV-positive healthy people identi!ied by the 7orld Health Br#ani8ation* who annot onne t any past disease with HIV in!e tion. They are either surprised or sho (ed to !ind out they are HIV-positive or are bliss!ully unaware o! it. The reason is that HIV is one o! the many harmless passen#er viruses that ause no lini al symptoms durin# the a ute in!e tion. 5y ontrast" most people have lastin# memories o! their mumps" measles" hepatitis" polio" hi (en po/" and !lus" a!ter whi h they be ome $antibody-positive& !or the respe tive virus. 0ot all AIDS patients arry even dormant HIV. Antibody-positive patients usually do have some latent virus le!t over !rom past in!e tion. HIV has never in!e ted many people dyin# o! AIDS-li(e onditions in the !irst pla e. A ordin# to the :D:6s own statisti s" at least 3,. o! all AIDS ases have never been tested !or HIV antibodies" many o! whom mi#ht be ne#ative. Further" the HIV test itsel! o!ten #enerates

!alse-positive results" parti ularly in members o! AIDS ris( #roups who have been in!e ted with lar#e numbers o! inter!erin# viruses.)% Thorou#h !ollow-up testin# ould reveal HIV-ne#ative ases in the o!!i ial AIDS tally. The s ienti!i literature des ribes some -"?3) on!irmed ases o! HIV-!ree people dyin# o! AIDS diseases" in ludin# homose/uals and heroin addi ts in the C.S." Europe and entral A!ri ans. 5ut be ause the :D: i#nores virtually all HIV-ne#ative patients" ountin# only those with the virus as AIDS ases" the total number o! su h ases may never be (nown. Even a $slow virus& hypothesis o! HIV annot e/plain how unin!e ted people would develop AIDS onditions. F=B' EVE=I A0>DE" HIV FAIDS @B:H6S FI=ST 9BSTCDATE. 3. @B:H6S SE:B0D 9BSTCDATEA THE 'I:=B5E 'CST 5E ISBDATED F=B' THE HBST A0D >=B70 I0 9C=E :CDTC=E. HIV has been isolated and is now #rown ontinuously in HIV resear h labs. This rule there!ore has been te hni ally !ul!illed" but only in some instan es. Sin e !ree virus is rarely !ound in AIDS vi tims" HIV an be retrieved only !rom the #reat majority o! them by rea tivatin# the latent !orm o! the virus. 'illions o! 75:6s must be ta(en !rom the patient and #rown in ulture dishes !or wee(s" durin# whi h time hemi al stimulants that sho ( ells into #rowin# or mutatin# are added to awa(en any dormant HIV !rom within the host ells. Iet even this power!ul method does not yield a tive virus !rom many AIDS ases that have on!irmed antibodies a#ainst HIV. This situation is a mirror ima#e o! biolo#i al virus isolation that happens every time an unin!e ted person ontra ts the virus !rom an in!e ted host. 0atural transmission by unprote ted se/ has been studied in $dis ordant& ouples" i.e.H HIV-!ree women married to HIV-positive hemophilia s or HIV-!ree homose/uals havin# HIV-!ree partners. These studies reveal a rarely mentioned !a tA A!ter neutrali8in# the virus with the immune response" an HIV-positive person reGuires an avera#e o! )"%%% unprote ted se/ual onta ts to pass the virus alon# just on e.)) A pre#nant mother is a di!!erent storyH in e!!e t" she provides her hild with a nine-month ontinuous e/posure to her blood and there!ore has at least a ,%. han e o! passin# HIV to the baby. This would e/plain why the numbers o! HIV-positive people" in Ameri a as well as A!ri a" have remained so onstantA HIV is transmitted !rom mother to hild just li(e a human #ene. HIV has been passed alon# !rom mother to hild !or many enturies 1not throu#h )"%%% heterose/ual onta ts as is ommonly assumed2.)3 In the industriali8ed world" HIV an only be readily transmitted amon# the most se/ually a tive homose/uals" amon# needle-sharin# addi ts" and throu#h blood trans!usions to hemophilia s J the routes that so easily transmit numerous other mi robes. In short" the very people with tremendous health ris(s to be#in with also more easily pass alon# HIV" ma(in# it a surro#ate mar(er !or the real ause o! AIDS. There!ore" a rou#h orrelation e/ists between HIV and AIDS diseases" but it is imper!e t and misleadin#<

The very ability o! retro viruses to survive as dormant #enes by atta hin# themselves to human hromosomes has been e/ploited !or the most sensitive HIV assay yet J the 9olymerase :hain =ea tion 19:=2. This in redibly sensitive te hniGue was invented in the mid )*+%6s by 5er(eley bio hemist @ary 'ullis" who was awarded the 0obel 9ri8e !or his dis overy in )**4. The 9:= is a te hnolo#y that ampli!ies even the tiniest amounts o! any D0A seGuen e" reatin# enou#h opies o! the desired seGuen e !or dete tion and analysis. This amounts to !indin# the proverbial needle o! dormant HIV in a haysta ( o! human D0A. 5ut ontrary to statements by some HIV s ientists" this is not an isolation o! the a tual virus and does not !ul!ill @o h6s Se ond 9ostulate. It is only the dete tion o! dormant D0A #enomes" le!t behind by in!e tions that o urred years earlier. 0evertheless" s ientists and journalists ali(e sometimes mislabel su h e/humations o! viral !ossils as $new" more sensitive te hniGues& )4 that somehow prove HIV an be !ound in an ever-#reater portion o! AIDS patients. 5e ause a !ew HIV mole ules are te hni ally invisible but millions o! HIV mole ules are visible" 'ullis6 9:= te hniGue has be ome the only pra ti al method to dete t viral mole ules in all those antibody-positive people in whi h no virus an be !ound. 4. @B:H6S THI=D 9BSTCDATEA THE 'I:=B5E 'CST =E9=BDC:E THE B=I>I0AD DISEASE 7HE0 I0T=BDC:ED TB A SCS:E9TI5DE HBST. The o!!i ial HIV-AIDS hypothesis de lares a ,%. to )%%. probability o! death !rom in!e tion. In pra ti e" s ientists and medi al do tors interpret antibodies a#ainst HIV as a sure si#n o! imminent doom. This notion" o! antibodies as a pro#nosis o! death" de!ies all lassi al e/perien e with viruses and ba teria. Virtually every mi robe auses disease in only a minority o! in!e ted individuals" sin e the majority is usually healthy enou#h to mount a rapid immune response. :ertainly no !atal viral disease is (nown to ause death in nearly all in!e ted people J e/ ept the parado/i al $AIDS& virus. Any mi robe (illin# all its hosts would soon destroy itsel!" even i! su h ould e/ist in the !irst pla e. Any #erm must be able to rea h new hosts be!ore the previous one dies" lest it #o down with a sin(in# ship. Any universally lethal parasite would be" by de!inition" a sui idal or#anism. Traditional in ubation periods" de!ined as the time between initial viral in!e tion and the onset o! disease symptoms" are measured in days or wee(s. Durin# this time the virus multiplies into on entrations hi#h enou#h to ause disease. This pro ess is e/ponentialH Ea h virus parti le in!e ts a sin#le ell" and ei#ht to !orty-ei#ht hours later" hundreds o! new virus parti les be#in to be produ ed" ea h ell destined to in!e t a new ell. Flu" ommon olds" and herpes simple/ in!e tions develop with short in ubations lastin# between a !ew days and wee(s. 'easles" hi (en po/" and rubella have lon#er in ubations o! ten to twenty days" while e/treme onditions su h as hepatitis an ta(e two to si/ wee(s. These always o ur be!ore the body has laun hed an immune response a#ainst the new virus. 5e ause these delays or latent periods are determined by the #eneration time o! the virus" and the #eneration time o! HIV is about !orty-ei#ht hours" we an al ulate how soon a!ter in!e tion AIDS should appear. 0atural in!e tion only introdu es a !ew viruses into the body. Kust one in!e ted ell produ es at least )%% o!!sprin# within two days. These in turn will produ e )%% times )%% in two days. Su h e/ponential or e/plosive #rowth will produ e )%% trillion

1)%)-2 viruses in just two wee(s J enou#h to in!e t every sin#le ell in the human body. There!ore" HIV should ause AIDS within a !ew wee(s o! in!e tion. 5ut" borrowin# !rom their an er resear h" virus hunters o!!i ially #ive HIV ten years between in!e tion and the onset o! AIDS J years a!ter antibodies have neutrali8ed the virus. Su h latent periods have been invented solely to ir umvent =obert @o h6s Third 9ostulate. 5ut any #erm not ausin# symptoms be!ore bein# leared by the immune system should be ruled out as ausin# disease. @o h6s 4rd 9ostulate insists on reprodu in# the disease in at least some ases by inje tin# the alle#edly dan#erous mi robe into a number o! unin!e ted or otherwise healthy hosts. This ondition an be tested in one o! three waysA in!e tion o! laboratory animals" a idental and natural in!e tions to humans 1deliberate in!e tion would be unethi al2" or by va ination e/periments. HIV !ails all three tests. 5lood !rom AIDS patients was inje ted into several himpan8ees in )*+4" be!ore the availability o! HIV tests. HIV" as later eviden ed by antibodies a#ainst the virus in!e ted the animals" but in ten years none has yet to develop any si (ness. =ou#hly ),% other lab himpan8ees" in!e ted with puri!ied HIV sin e )*+-" have proved that antibodies a#ainst the virus are #enerated within a month o! ino ulation just as in humans. 5ut a#ain" none has developed symptoms to this day.+ In short" no animal be omes si ( !rom HIV" althou#h mon(eys and other test animals do su!!er disease !rom human viruses ausin# polio" !lu" hepatitis" and other onditions. 5y the end o! )**3" the :D: had reported some thirty-three medi al wor(ers as most li(ely havin# re eived HIV a identally" o! whom seven were dia#nosed with AIDS symptoms. 0one o! these reports has been on!irmed with published medi al ase histories" althou#h in a )*+* issue o! the 0ew En#land Kournal o! 'edi ine" an in!ormal editorial entitled $7hen a House B!!i er >ets AIDS& was written by a do tor in!e ted by a patient. The arti le des ribes only minor wei#ht loss o! ten pounds and a $bit& o! !ati#ue as bein# the do tor6s AIDS $ ompli ations&.)- This hardly ounts as eviden e !or @o h6s 4rd 9ostulate. 0or has the :D: stated whether any o! these medi al wor(ers have ta(en the dan#erously to/i ALT" the o!!i ial AIDS treatment" whi h itsel! auses immune de!i ien y. Durin# the past de ade" more than !our hundred thousand AIDS patients have been treated and investi#ated by a system o! !ive million medi al wor(ers and AIDS resear hers" none o! whom have been va inated a#ainst HIV. Do tors who have treated AIDS patients were initially admired by their peers and the press !or their oura#e to !a e a !atal" onta#ious ondition !or whi h there was no ure" no dru#" and no va ine. 5ut ten years later" there is not even one ase in the s ienti!i literature o! a health are wor(er who ever ontra ted presumably in!e tious AIDS !rom a patient. Ima#ine what it would have been li(e i! holera" hepatitis" syphilis" in!luen8a" or rabies patients had been treated by health are wor(ers !or ten years without prote tion !rom va ines and anti-mi robial dru#s J thousands would have ontra ted these diseases. That is e/a tly why we onsider these diseases in!e tious. The omplete !ailure o! !our hundred thousand AIDS patients to transmit their diseases to even one o! their unva inated do tors in ten years an mean only one thin#A AIDS is not in!e tious< However" several thousand health are wor(ers have now been dia#nosed with AIDS. 5ut these individuals belon# to the same AIDS ris( #roup as *%. o! all AIDS ases J homose/uals and intravenous dru# users. And althou#h 4M- o! all health are wor(ers are !emale" more than *%. o! these AIDS patients are males" the e/a t ratio as with all other AIDS ases.+ In other words" medi al a idents are not produ in# the e/pe ted AIDS epidemi amon# unva inated personnel in that industry.

Aids Not Infectious


AIDS does not meet the lassi epidemiolo#i al riteria o! an in!e tious diseaseA 1. Infectious diseases do not discriminate bet een se!es. The !irst law o! viral and mi robial diseases holds that men and women are a!!e ted eGually. 5ut AIDS sele ts all o! its vi tims !rom a !ew" newly established AIDS ris( #roupsA lon#-term intravenous dru# usersMaddi ts and their babies" male homose/uals usin# re reational dru#s" and hemophilia s under lon#-term treatment with ommer ial lottin# Fa tor VIII. AIDS atta (s men ten times more than women in both Europe and in the Cnited States. ". #arr$s %a & Infectious diseases s'read e!'onentially. A new in!e tious disease rapidly e/plodes in a population" just as rapidly as mi robes are transmitted !rom person to person. HIV has !ailed to do this" and has remained onstant sin e )*+, J one million people.) Ameri an AIDS #radually spread !rom a !ew do8en ases annually in )*+)" to more than ei#hty thousand ases in )**-. It did not e/plode as the HIV orthodo/y predi tedH neither did it de line" as would be e/pe ted !rom antiviral immunity.* =eports !rom numerous labs and biote hnolo#y ompanies are onsistentA HIV #rows harmoniously with the ells it in!e ts. The !ailure to (ill T- ells" even under optimal onditions" is the A hilles6 Heel o! the supposed AIDS virus. =emember that HIV is a retrovirus" whi h have never been (nown to inhibit or (ill billions o! rapidly dividin# ells" and ould hardly be e/pe ted to a!!e t T- ells or destroy the immune system. All truly viral diseases !ul!ill @o h6s standards per!e tly J yellow !ever" measles" polio" hi (en po/" herpes" hepatitis A" 5 N :" and the !lu" amon# others. 0o matter how the HIV hypothesis is viewed" it is !lawed in both !a ts and in theory. AIDS is not" in itsel! a diseaseH instead it is a syndrome o! 4% (nown diseases and urrently #rowin#. It displays no uniGue ombination in a patient. :lini ally" it is identi!ied by the dia#nosis o! spe i!i diseases (nown to medi al s ien e !or de ades. The :D: has several times in reased" but never de reased" the o!!i ial list o! AIDS indi ation diseases. 'ost re ently" on Kanuary )" )**4. 1TA5DE )2 The list now in ludes brain dementia" hroni diarrhea" an ers su h as @aposi6s Sar oma" several lymphomas" opportunisti in!e tions as 9neumo ystis arinii pneumonia" ytome#alovirus in!e tion" herpes" andidiasis" and tuber ulosis. Even low T- ell ounts in the blood an now be alled $AIDS&" with or without any real lini al symptoms. 'ost re ently" ervi al an er has been added to the list" the !irst AIDS disease that an a!!e t only one #ender. The purpose is to in rease the number o! !emale AIDS patients" reatin# the illusion that the syndrome is $spreadin#& into the heterose/ual population.), A si#ni!i ant number o! these diseases are not produ ts o! wea(ened immune systems. Every time the :D: needs hi#her rates o! new AIDS ases" it e/pands the de!inition on e a#ain" and more diseases are re lassi!ied into the syndrome. 7ith the stro(e o! a pen" an illusion o! a #rowin# epidemi an be reated. The :D: has estimated that around one million Ameri ans are HIV positive" and this has not han#ed in the past de ade. B! these one million" only !our hundred had been dia#nosed with AIDS by the end

o! )**-. For ea h year that passes without the predi ted e/plosion in AIDS ases" appro/imately one more year is added to its in ubation time. So instead o! havin# si/ months to live" it is now ),O years. 7hen a disease an neither be treated nor ontrolled" nor its ourse even rou#hly predi ted" somethin# is terribly wron#. Inconsistencies bet een AIDS and Infectious Disease I! one loo(s losely at the AIDS dilemma" it is easy to see how diseases due to dru#s are blamed on a passen#er virus. Det6s loo( at ten !a ts that Ameri an and European AIDS patients have" and do not have" in ommonA ). AIDS is not onta#ious. 0ot even one health are wor(er has ontra ted AIDS !rom over +%%"%%% AIDS patients in the C.S. and in Europe. Sin e an established one million health are wor(ers are a identally stu ( by needles ontaminated by patients per year in the C.S." and thousands are ontra tin# hepatitis by this route annually.)? 3. AIDS is hi#hly non-random with re#ards to se/ 1+?. are male2" se/ual persuasion 1over ?%. are homose/ual2" and a#e 1+,. are 3,--* years old2. 4. The epidemi is !ra#mented into distin t sub-epidemi s with e/ lusive AIDS-de!inin# disease. For e/ample" only homose/ual males have @aposi6s Sar oma. -. Sin e its be#innin# in )*+%" the AIDS epidemi pro#ressed non-e/ponentially" meanin# that the so- alled AIDS pandemi did not happen. =emember the HIV rate has been a steady one million sin e )*+," with small downward adjustments sin e )**?.)F" )+" )*" 3%" 3)" 33 0ew HIV in!e tions have de lined !ive-!old !rom )*+, throu#h )**4H based on over ,% million blood donations olle ted at that time.34 5y ontrast" durin# the same time !rame" AIDS has in reased !rom a !ew do8en ases to over ,%"%%% ases annually. ,. 9atients do not have any one o! the 4%O AIDS de!inin# diseases" nor even immunode!i ien y in ommon. @aposi6s Sar oma" dementia" and wei#ht loss !or e/ample may o ur without immunode!i ien y. To date there is no AIDS-spe i!i disease.)+" 3?. AIDS patients have antibodies a#ainst HIV in ommon only by de!inition J not by natural oin iden e. AIDS-de!inin# disease o! HIV-!ree patients are alled by their old names. This means that any symptom you have an be alled AIDS as lon# as you are HIV positive. F. =e reational dru# use is a ommon denominator !or over *,. o! all Ameri an and European AIDS patients" in ludin# male homose/uals. +. Di!etime pres riptions o! inevitably to/i anti-HIV dru#s" su h as the D0A hain terminator ALT" is another ommon denominator o! AIDS patients. *. HIV proves to be an ideal mar(er !or re reational and anti-HIV dru# use. Sin e the virus is very rare 1less than %.4.2 in the CSMEuropean population and very hard to transmit se/ually. Bnly those who inje t street dru#s or have over )"%%% typi ally dru#-mediated se/ual onta ts are li(ely to be ome positive.

)%. The hu#e amount o! AIDS literature annot o!!er even one statisti ally si#ni!i ant #roup o! dru#-!ree AIDS patients !rom Ameri a and Europe.3," 3? Female prostitutes did not pi ( up AIDS !rom their lients" unless they were also re reational dru# users.3F" 3+ There was also no in rease in AIDS-de!inin# disease amon# trans!usion re ipients at the hei#ht o! the AIDS era.3* There is onsiderable eviden e whi h stron#ly supports a onne tion between nitrate use" other re reational dru#s" and AIDS. The leadin# andidates are nitrites" whi h are ommonly inhaled to intensi!y or#asm.4% The ar ino#eni and immunoto/i e!!e ts o! nitrate inhalants are well do umented.4) In )*+4" two do8en o! Ameri a6s leadin# AIDS investi#ators" in ludin# :D: wor(er Harold Ka!!e" later dire tor o! the :D:6s HIVMAIDS Division" had ondu ted e/tensive epidemiolo#i al studies whi h revealed overwhelmin# dru# use" in ludin# antibioti s" o aine and amphetamines by all homose/ual AIDS patients studied.43 >overnment statisti s and independent publi ations ontinue to on!irm that one-third o! the Ameri an" and over one-third o! the European AIDS patients are intravenous dru# users o! o aine" heroin and other dru#s.)+" 44" 4Virtually all o! the !emale and heterose/ual male AIDS patients are intravenous dru# users.3+" 4," 4? *+. o! nitrite inhalant users are homose/ual.4F" 4+ :o aine" amphetamines and heroin are indire tly to/i . All three !un tion as atalysts" ausin# neuroto/i rea tions.4* 7ei#ht loss" malnutrition" and insomnia are onseGuen es o! dru#-indu ed suppression o! appetite and !ati#ue.-%" -)" -3 'alnutrition is the world6s leadin# ause o! immune de!i ien y.-4 T- ell ounts stabili8e in dru# users a!ter they stop inje tin# intravenous dru#s.-A(T ) Aids *y +rescri'tion There are urrently over two hundred thousand HIV positive people" in ludin# many with AIDS" who are pres ribed ALT" ddi" dd " or some other D0A hain terminator" as well as other e/perimental anti-HIV dru#s. Sin e )*+? the AIDS establishment has spent billions o! dollars to brin# these dru#s into human bodies" but it has yet to !und the !irst study to test the health ha8ards o! these dru#s in animals. 0o animal tests J just human e/periments. ALT was shelved some thirty years a#o as a !ailed therapy !or an er. ALT blo (s D0A produ tion" not only in human T- ells or retroviruses" but also in any ba teria that mi#ht e/ist in the body. In this way it an a t as an indis riminate antibioti " (illin# opportunisti in!e tions while destroyin# the immune system tar#etin# bone marrow. A s(ull-and- rossbones symbol appears on the label o! ALT bottles ontainin# as small a dose as 3, milli#rams. These mar(ed bottles ontain a small !ra tion 1)M3% to )M,%2 o! a patient6s daily pres ribed dose. ALT (ills dividin# ells anywhere in the body J ausin# ul erations and hemorrha#in#" dama#e to hair !olli les and s(in" (illin# mito hondria 1the ener#y ells o! the body and brain2" wastin# away o! mus les" and the destru tion o! the immune system and other blood ells. The 0ational :an er Institute !irst reported in )*++ that ALT" at doses used !or AIDS therapy" in reases the annual lymphoma ris( !i!ty-!old ompared to untreated ontrols.-, Ama8in#ly" the 9hysi ians Des( =e!eren e states that it is di!!i ult to distin#uish adverse symptoms possibly asso iated with 8idovudine 1ALT2 !rom si#ns o! HIV disease.-? ALT-treated homose/uals su!!ered twi e as mu h dementia than those in untreated #roups. 0ew users o! ALT had hi#her T- ells ounts.-F Bbservational studies o!ten show that patients #iven ALT have a worse pro#nosis than those untreated.-+ In April o! )**," an Ameri an study !ound that ALT treatment doubled or Guadrupled the ris( !or HIV-positive male homose/uals to develop 9neumo ystis pneumonia.-F ALT an temporarily raise T- ell ounts" but so an other poisons and even severe bleedin#" a!ter a lon# period o! time. 7hen some tissue is atta (ed by a to/in" or lar#e loss o! blood" the body tends to over- ompensate !or the loss by produ in#

too many repla ements J as lon# as it an.4 9re#nant women are now bein# #iven ALT who are presumed HIV positive. A report in )**reported on )%- pre#nant women treated with ALTH ei#ht aborted spontaneously" ei#ht were aborted $therapeuti ally"& and another ei#ht delivered babies with serious birth de!e ts" in ludin# avities in the hest" abnormal indentations at the base o! the spine" mispla ed ears" trian#ular !a es" heart de!e ts" e/tra di#its" and albinism.-* The AIDS ris( o! hemophilia s on ALT was -., times hi#her" and their mortality rate was 3.F times #reater than untreated ontrols.,% ALT is literally AIDS by pres ription" and is ausin# untold dama#e to otherwise healthy people. Is the ,AIDS test- Accurate. The test popularly re!erred to as $the AIDS test& does not identi!y or dia#nose AIDS and annot dete t HIV" the virus laimed to ause AIDS. The two most widely used tests" the EDISA and 7estern 5lot tests" only dete t intera tion between proteins and antibodies thou#ht to be spe i!i to HIV. Cp to now" HIV has never been isolated in its pure !orm !rom any patient who has tested HIV antibody positive. 7ithout the isolation and puri!i ation o! HIV" there an be no #old standard !or HIV tests. A patient an be HIV positive and ne#ative !rom the same blood draw" dependin# on what lab is used. There is absolutely no standardi8ation. A review o! the s ienti!i literature shows that there are over F% diseases or biolo#i al onditions that may #ive !alse-positive HIV antibody test results. A !ew e/amples are the !lu" hepatitis" blood trans!usions" Herpes Simple/ I and II" tuber ulosis" rheumatoid arthritis" Epstein-5arr virus and even normal human ribonu leoproteins" and a lar#e list o! others.,)" ,3" ,4" ,- 'any o! these" !or e/ample tuber ulosis and malaria" are endemi in A!ri a. 7hat the EDISA and 7estern 5lot tests are testin# !or is HDA antibodies. Ea h test (it is di!!erent. It depends on what antibodies an individual arries" as well as the hara teristi s o! ea h parti ular test (it. For e/ample" some" but not all people who have had blood trans!usions" prior pre#nan ies or an or#an transplant will ma(e HDA antibodies. And some" but not all test (its 1both EDISA and 7estern 5lot2 will be ontaminated with HDA anti#ens to whi h these antibodies an rea t. So even people with little or no ris( may be !alse-positive !or poorly understood reasons and improper edu ation !rom the AIDS establishment.,,

Conclusion
7hat needs to be done; 5ein# a primary health are provider means edu atin# our patients and ollea#ues" and espe ially anyone who is presumed to be HIV positive or ta(in# any one o! the to/i dru#s #iven to these patients. HIV must be loo(ed at honestly with open eyes" and peoples6 lives should be re-evaluated in respe t to their health needs. This does not mean that health edu ation about the transmission or treatment o! se/ually transmitted diseases should be ne#le ted. Diseases su h as syphilis and #onorrhea an ause death and serious disability and should be treated appropriately. 0eedless to say" there will be mu h debate amon# pro!essionals" and surely patients" on this subje t. Kust remember the truth was never hurt by honest debate. Hundreds o! thousands o! lives are ridin# on it.

You teach, you teach, you teach. last words o! 7eston A. 9ri e

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For Further Information (websites)


www.rethin(in#aids. om www.aliveandwell.or# www.virusmyth. om www.duesber#. om www.aidsmyth. om www.heals!.or#

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