Still Not Convinced HIV Is Bogus?
by James Foye
by
James Foye
Previously by James Foye: Obama,
I Got Your Health Savings Right Here
"Scientists
may be in the business of laughing at their predecessors, but
owing to an array of human mental dispositions, few realize that
someone will laugh at their beliefs in the (disappointingly near)
future."
Nassim Nicholas
Taleb, The
Black Swan
Almost 30 years
ago, as a new decade dawned, Americans watched in morbid fascination
as a small group of gay men in San Francisco began dying of a mysterious
disease.
Did you catch
my disingenuous use of the word "mysterious" in that sentence?
There was nothing mysterious about these deaths, then or now. A
bleeding-edge lifestyle, the harmonic convergence of three cultural
revolutions, drug, sexual, and gay, took a heavy toll on its most
sublime practitioners. They engaged in anonymous sex on an almost
unheard of scale, self-administered antibiotics, thinking that this
would keep them healthy (useless against viruses but deadly effective
against friendly gut bacteria, vital to proper immune system function),
and ingested recreational drugs like candy, especially "poppers"
(carcinogenic nitrite inhalants, such as you might use to clean
your VCR). The drug use, repeated bouts of STDs and parasites, and
foreign antigens from thousands of other men floating around in
the bloodstream took the inevitable toll on the human body. They
literally blew out their own immune systems.
When Ronald
Reagan took office in 1981, he had a mandate to downsize government,
and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) was an
obvious target. The "War
on Cancer," declared by Nixon in 1971, had little to show
for all the money spent. The CDC had been terribly embarrassed in
1976 when it tried to turn five soldiers having the flu into a potential
national swine flu epidemic. A subchapter of this debacle was their
attempt to seize on the completely coincidental outbreak of pneumonia
among some old men at an American Legion convention in Philadelphia.
The CDC used this as an excuse to rush out a vaccine that killed
dozens of people, which is dozens more than did the flu itself.
(As for "Legionnaire's Disease," it later turned out to be
caused by a known microorganism commonly found in building air handlers,
and had nothing to do with swine flu. Thousands of people get infected
with it every year).
So it was most
fortuitous that in 1981, as potential budget cuts loomed on the
horizon, the CDC received a report about five young homosexuals
dying of immune deficiency disorders (coincidentally, this was exactly
the same count as the initial outbreak of swine flu, so the number
five seems to be the CDC’s definition of the beginning of an epidemic).
If a new deadly disease could be discovered, it would give the CDC
new life. The deadlier and the scarier the better; ideally something
with some more sticking power than the flu this time around.
The initial
name for the new disease, Gay Related Immune Deficiency (GRID),
was soon discarded, as besides being horribly politically incorrect,
it hardly sounded threatening to the general population. So it was
replaced with Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS). For the
cause, French scientist Luc Montagnier "discovered" the
Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), with failed American cancer
researcher Robert Gallo co-discovering it (if you can call finding
it a year later co-discovering; Gallo was later investigated
for misconduct on this matter). It is likely when the history
books are written that Gallo will be portrayed more like the fictional
doctor E. Henry
Thripshaw from Monty
Python's Flying Circus than Louis Pasteur or Jonas Salk.
So AIDS was
the disease, and HIV the cause. All it took was a press conference
at the CDC to make this story canonical. The CDC was saved, and
a new multi-billion dollar industry was born. God help us when a
bureaucrat is threatened with losing his job. Even one who has taken
the Hippocratic Oath.
In the years
since the CDC pronouncement every single person who has tried to
question the official story, rather than being lauded for taking
the scientific method seriously, has instead been attacked and dismissed
as a kook. Still, with nearly 30 years of history in the rear-view
mirror, it is becoming more and more apparent that there is something
very wrong with the official story.

Filmmaker Brent
Leung takes us on a journey through the whole sorry episode, from
the beginning to the present, in his riveting new documentary, House
of Numbers. Born in 1980, Leung has lived his entire life under
the shadow of the AIDS bogeyman. His generation, successors to Generation
X, became Generation HIV.
He hits all
the important way stations, though necessarily briefly at times,
due to the time constraints of a film (but hang on – there are over
300 hours of footage, and the producers are in talks with a cable
channel to do a series).
In what may
be a real eye opener for many viewers, Leung totally debunks HIV
testing. (Can you say "manufacturer’s criteria"?) But
who needs faulty HIV testing when the World Health Organization
(WHO) has given us the Bangui
definition for AIDS which provides a simple list of symptoms
to using for diagnosing AIDS without testing? Though
moderated nine years later with the admonition that testing should
really be done, it did a wonderful job of kick-starting the supposed
AIDS epidemic in Africa.
But even with
testing, it is quite easy to say that there is more HIV in one place
than another, as the tests are interpreted differently in different
countries. At one point Leung steps across the Canadian border and
cheekily comments, "No other disease behaves differently when
you cross the border."
Leung visits
South Africa to see the epidemic up close for himself. It’s hard
to say what’s more shocking about Leung’s visit to a poor township,
the ignorance and superstition that people have about AIDS ("if
I get thinner, I may have the disease"), or the flies that
travel directly from the open latrines to their lunch plates. Gee,
could it be the latter that is making some people sick?
Leung interviews
many scientists and doctors in the course of the film. They fall
into two groups. The skeptics include, among others, Kary Mullis,
who shared a 1993 Nobel Prize in chemistry, Joseph Sonnabend, a
physician who has been involved with AIDS research and treatment
since the very beginning, and James Chin, an epidemiologist at WHO
for five years, whose characterization of that agency’s statistics
on the AIDS epidemic in Africa gives the movie its name. And of
course Peter
Duesberg, who was a star cancer researcher until he was
ostracized for questioning the high priests on HIV.
Arguing for
the defense are, among others, Robert Gallo, Luc Montagnier (who
makes a stunning statement about HIV near the end of the film; but
I won’t spoil it for you), and Anthony Fauci. Doctor Fauci is probably
a familiar face to many Americans, as he gets a lot of media exposure
due to his position as director of The National Institute of Allergy
and Infectious Diseases (NIAID). In fact, several days after I saw
him interviewed in this film, I saw him again on the national news,
helpfully informing us that our children will need not one, but
two vaccinations this year against the swine flu. Plus two more
for the regular flu. How can we believe anything this guy says?
But we are expected to – because he works for the government.
I still remember
1976 when my father, who was an officer in the US Army at the time,
received the swine flu vaccine. My dad, who had never missed a day
of work in his life, spent the next three days in bed. Needless
to say, I will not be vaccinating my kids against swine flu.
But back to
the film…this group, speaking for the defense, range in attitude
during their interviews from detached to mildly irritated, as they
repeat their mantras: the virus exists, there are no co-factors,
HIV causes AIDS, everybody is at risk, and anybody questioning this
is (by implication) a fool. Occasionally, when pressed for details,
they admit to gaps in knowledge about how HIV (the most studied
virus ever) works, contradict each other, and in at least one case,
the interviewee contradicts himself. None of them can define AIDS
in a simple and permanent fashion (the CDC has expanded the definition
over the years from the original two defining diseases to over two
dozen), explain how HIV works, or will address head-on the problem
of so many deaths attributed to AIDS that in fact were caused by
the toxic drugs administered to cure it.
Leung (quite
correctly) avoids taking one side or the other, and positions himself
simply as the annoying gadfly that keeps asking questions. But the
answers are painfully obvious to any thinking viewer.
One scientist
in the film states bluntly Peter Duesberg’s ideas are killing people.
Meet Lindsey Nagel, and decide for yourself. Her story is told in
the film.
Born in Romania,
she was adopted as an infant by a couple from Minnesota, Steve and
Cheryl Nagel. As was standard procedure, she was tested for HIV
in Romania prior to the adoption being approved, and she tested
negative. Upon arrival in America Lindsey was tested again; and
this time, the result was positive. Did I mention that HIV tests
are completely unreliable?

Steve
and Cheryl Nagel with their daughter Lindsey, taken at the showing
of House
of Numbers
at the Austin Gay & Lesbian International Film Festival on September
13, 2009, in Austin, Texas. Lindsey would not be alive today if
her parents hadn’t taken her off AZT and refused to treat her any
more for her supposed HIV infection.
Not knowing
any better at first, the Nagels followed their pediatrician’s instructions
to administer anti-retroviral drugs, which at the time meant high
dosage AZT. For months the Nagels watched as their initially healthy
daughter deteriorated, getting sicker and sicker. Among other things,
her growth became stunted. Of course all symptoms were ascribed
to her supposed HIV infection, and not the drugs.
After nearly
two years of this, the Nagels were alerted to Peter Duesberg’s dissenting
view by a relative who read an article about him in National
Review. The Nagels became intrigued and wrote to Duesberg. He
responded immediately, telling them to take Lindsey off the antiretroviral
drugs, or they would kill her. They did, and for that reason Lindsey
is alive today.
As for the
pediatrician, in 2005 she received an award for her leadership in
treating HIV patients. In an interview
about the award, she laments
We started
on AZT (Retrovir) for a child who was adopted and the parents
said it was a poison and they called Peter Duesberg, the man who
wrote a book claiming that AIDS isn't caused by HIV and they pulled
the child from my care.
That child
is Lindsey Nagel, who is alive today precisely because of Peter
Duesberg’s intervention. Others were not so fortunate:
There
was nothing you could do years ago. Most children back then did
not live past seven to 12 years old. And it was hard; these were
children that you got attached to. It was really hard. All we
could do was provide some supportive care and treat their opportunistic
infections. We had many deaths, 10 to 12 in 1994.
The doctor
goes on to say that children do better now. But that’s only because
the dosage of retroviral drugs has been lowered. These drugs are
still nonspecific, toxic, and eventually kill those who take them.
And some of them don’t even take very long to kill. Wait until you
see the movie and learn about the pregnant woman who was administered
Nevarapine and lost her skin and her life in only 37 days.
Of course Lindsey
Nagel is not the only one who gets better after getting off antiretrovirals,
as I’ve written about before. Africans
get better, too.
The treatment
for HIV has always been non-specific, DNA destroying drugs. In a
supreme irony, the prophecy of a destructive epidemic became, on
a small scale, self-fulfilling, as tens of thousands died from the
very drugs that were supposed to cure them. Of course, they officially
died from the disease itself. All of the defenders of the HIV/AIDS
orthodoxy are paid, directly or indirectly, by government (i.e.,
they work for the government, or a university that is subsidized
by government, or a pharmaceutical company whose AIDS drug business
depends on people believing what the government says about AIDS,
and whose drugs are largely paid for by the government). Dissenters,
like Peter Duesberg, are shut out. And people die.
Ignore the
blistering attacks in the blogosphere on this movie by the establishment’s
designated attack dogs, some of whom even refuse to see the movie.
Also ignore incompetent reviews in the mainstream media, such as
this
one in the New York Times, in which the reviewer compares
Leung’s quest to questioning gravity. Consider instead the outstanding
work done by journalists such as Celia
Farber, Rian
Malan, and Liam
Scheff, all of whom are interviewed in this film, and none of
whom work for the New York Times.
See this film,
do some reading, and decide for yourself.
Note: House
Of Numbers is currently playing on the film festival circuit.
It should get a more general release in the coming months. Be sure
and check the film’s
website for updates.
October
2, 2009
James
Foye [send him mail] is
an independent software developer living in Austin, Texas.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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