
Can AIDS Now Be
Cured?
Vernon Coleman
The revelation that a
man who had been tested HIV positive has now been tested negative has set the
massive AIDS industry aquiver.
(Not that it takes much to get the AIDS
industry excited.)
Does this mean that there may now be a cure for
AIDS?
I suspect not.
Largely, I confess, because I'm still not
convinced that there is any such specific disease as AIDS.
It would be
nice, for a start, if the multi billion pound AIDS industry could actually
produce the virus which is said to be responsible for this disease.
I
lost faith in the AIDS industry when I learned that in Africa patients with
tuberculosis were being listed as AIDS `victims'. In many years of criticising
medical methodology I don't think I have ever come across an area of medicine
where there are more myths and more sloppy thinking than there are in the world
of the AIDS industry.
I have written many times before about the
dishonest way in which the existence and threat of AIDS has been promoted. I
have also written extensively about the scientific evidence which I believe
rather destroys many of the arguments favoured by the people who are involved
professionally in the AIDS industry.
But this time I would just like to
make two points:
First, I have long suspected that patients who are
described as being HIV positive are suffering from extremely weak immune
systems. And I have, for many years, asked whether such patients might not
benefit if they boosted their immune systems.
Second, I rather suspect
that if all the people who have tested HIV positive were re-tested there would
be countless thousands of apparent `miracle cures'. Would these, I wonder, be
patients who had taken the time and effort to boost their immune
systems?
November 16th 2005
Copyright Vernon Coleman 2005
Home