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Mothering
Magazine
September/October 2001
Special Report:
HIV, Families & Medical Justice.
Molecular
Miscarriage
Is the HIV Theory a Tragic Mistake?
By Neville
Hodgkinson
Recently
I spent an evening with my new grandson. Otto had been born the day
before, after a long and difficult labor, and was bawling in protest
at having just been bathed when I arrived to see him. Minutes later
he was placed in my arms, where he stayed contentedly for the next three
hours. Although he was asleep for most of that time, I felt as if something
like a current was passing through me that would help soothe and nourish
him. Admiring the beauty of his jawline, the fineness of his limbs,
the miracle of nature that a baby represents, I felt nourished, too.
Love for a baby seems such sweet, pure, uncomplicated truth. Somehow,
it is redeeming.
The impulse
to help new life get off to the best possible start is present in all
of us. It has taken a tragic twist, however, for the HIV-positive mothers
whose struggles are described by Susan Gerhard in this issue of Mothering.
Health officials, in the sincere belief that they are furthering the
fight against AIDS, are coercing pregnant mothers into being tested
for HIV. If a mother tests positive, she is required to take AZT (a
drug so dangerous that experimental handlers are urged to wear protective
clothing) and is told not to breastfeed. The newborn baby also must
be tested and is treated with AZT or a similar antiviral drug if this
is thought necessary, regardless of the parents' wishes. Failure to
comply can result in the child being taken away by the authorities.
These are
draconian measures. To be told that you have tested positive for a
virus equated by most people with the collapse of the immune system
and,
ultimately, death is a terrible assault on one's mental and emotional
stability. We know from mind-body studies that such stress in itself
damages immunity. The impact goes beyond mother and baby; if the bond
of love created at the time of a new arrival is destroyed by trauma,
it can take years to overcome the resulting suffering and social dysfunction.
(Not all women are as resilient as those Gerhard describes.) Add to
the stress of the diagnosis the loss of breastfeeding, the administration
of a poisonous drug with cancer-causing potential, and the sometimes
violent enforcement of medical will, and it becomes clear the Hippocratic
principle of "first do no harm" is being breached many times
over. Medical practice often involves balancing benefits against risks;
in the case of these mothers, the question is not one of risk but of
immediate, unquestionable harm.
To justify such actions, the benefits would need to be huge and clear-cut,
and such indeed is the view of health authorities who think they are
reducing the spread of a lethal virus. In this article, I set out some
rarely reported facts and perspectives that challenge that view and
suggest that the mothers who have clashed with those authorities deserve
to be treated with much more compassion, humility, and respect.
From the
beginning, AIDS has been a tough issue for the medical establishment.
It brings together so many sensitivities. When first identified among
gay men in San Francisco and New York in the early 1980s, it was labeled
a "gay plague" and suffered political neglect. This soon backfired,
however. Gay leaders, fearful that their hard-won gains in public acceptance
of homosexuality were under threat, became angry and vociferous. Pressure
on politicians to come up with an answer was intense.
In April
1984, US government scientists, led by Robert Gallo, offered the proposition
that a new, lethal, sexually transmitted virus, probably imported from
Africa, was the sole cause. A blood test said to detect the virus was
marketed, and screening surveys gave rise to the idea that HIV was starting
to spread rapidly via sexual intercourse, blood transfusions, mother-to-baby
transmission, and needles shared by drug addicts. AZT soon followed,
also essentially marketed by government scientists, although with a
drug company, Burroughs Wellcome (now Glaxo Wellcome), reaping the rewards.
The world was assured that a vaccine would not be far behind.
Between
1984 and 1987 three propositions became established as a firm belief
system, essentially unchanged to this day. These hold that:
1.
HIV is a lethal viral infection that leads inexorably to the collapse
of
the immune system seen in AIDS.
2.
The virus's presence can be reliably detected with the HIV test.
3.
AZT and similar drugs can save lives by quelling the virus, blocking
its
growth and transmission.
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It therefore
followed that testing pregnant women and their babies for HIV, and administering
AZT when necessary, would play a vital part in the fight against AIDS
by preventing the virus from being passed from mother to child or from
becoming established in the child who has tested positive.
But what
if these propositions are wholly or even partly mistaken? In that case,
what's being done to HIV-positive mothers and babies might bring more
loss than gain. If there were any doubts about the validity of the conventional
theory, such coercion would be surely unethical. In fact, there are
serious questions surrounding all these propositions. We will examine
each of them in turn.
*
* *
How Does HIV Cause AIDS?
Although
HIV is the most intensely investigated microbe in history (to date,
US taxpayers have spent $93 billion on federal government research,
treatment, and other programs), scientists do not know how or why it
causes AIDS. There is widespread acceptance of the lethal virus theory,
but no agreement on how HIV does the damage attributed to it. At one
time it was thought AIDS resulted from the virus running over the immune
system like a truck, destroying a particular class of cell (known for
short as T4 cells) crucial in coordinating the body's responses to unwanted
invaders. That theory hasn't stood up. Today, according to a review
published in the science journal Nature, "much remains left to
the imagination" as to how HIV causes immune deficiency.(1)
This gap
in the story was identified as far back as 1987 by Peter Duesberg, a
distinguished molecular biologist at the University of California at
Berkeley, who demonstrated that there was so little active virus in
patients, even those with full-blown AIDS, that it could not be causing
AIDS by destroying T4 cells directly. At first Duesberg's arguments
were ignored. When he persisted in challenging the HIV theory, he was
derided by most of his fellow scientists and refused renewal of a $350,000
"outstanding investigator" award from the National Institutes
of Health.(2) Internationally,
however, his ideas have attracted a considerable following. Over the
past ten years, hundreds of scientists and other AIDS analysts have
been pressing for a reappraisal of the HIV theory.(3)
Traditionally,
in determining whether a virus is the specific cause of an illness,
scientists are required to first purify it from a patient with the disease
so that they know what it looks like under the electron microscope and
precisely what they are working with. They then grow the virus in the
laboratory; show that it is present in all cases of the disease, that
there is lots of it, and that it is active in the body in a way that
accounts for the disease; and demonstrate that it reproduces the original
disease when introduced into a susceptible animal. In the case of HIV,
none of these requirements has been met in a straightforward way.
There are
even doubts over whether HIV exists as a genuine viral entity. The
problem is that unlike most disease-causing microbes, HIV cannot be
purified
from fresh patient tissues -- there just isn't enough of if there.(4)
It only appears after laborious laboratory procedures, in which millions
of the patient's immune cells are mixed with cells taken from a patient
with leukemia (cancer cells useful to researchers because they don't
easily die) or from fetal cord, and subjected to chemical stimulants.
Weeks later, a particle containing active genetic material is released
by one of the cells and starts stimulating other cells into doing the
same. This material can be passed from one cell to another, and its
genetic makeup can be determined. But that doesn't mean it is an infectious,
disease-inducing virus. It might simply be an endogenous (coming from
within) product of the heavily-stimulated immune cells.
Inside
the cells that comprise our bodies are lengths of DNA, a complex chemical
that makes up our genes. As well as determining inherited characteristics
such as eye color, genes can become active in helping the body respond
to changing circumstances. They can multiply themselves within the cell
(a phenomenon known as "jumping genes" or, more technically,
transposons), and they can also form particles, budding out of the cell
in a protein envelope to carry stretches of genetic information elsewhere.Some
of these particles make use of an enzyme called reverse transcriptase
to transcribe their genetic information back into other cells. Molecular
biologists have named such particles human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs),
though the term virus is misleading; some may be no more than harmless
cell products, while others may even have a useful role.(5)
Cells of the immune system, which defend us against invaders like germs,
pollutants and other hazards, are particularly active genetically. The
particles they produce may
boost or coordinate protective immune responses. They may also be responsible
for passing on an acquired capacity for such responses from mother to
child during pregnancy, according to immunologist Ted Steele, formerly
of the University of Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia.(6)
This is
where some scientists think confusion may have arisen when researchers
decided they had found a new virus in AIDS patients and those at risk
of AIDS. HERVs have been demonstrated to come out of the genome under
the very circumstances in which "HIV/AIDS" is commonly diagnosed
-- conditions of stress including infection, malnutrition, and pregnancy.(7)
In most cases, "people produce antibodies against their HERVs,
and not surprisingly, they test positive for HIV," says Rudolf
Werner, professor of molecular biology at the University of Miami Medical
School.(8) "All
retroviruses are similar, and our genome is full of dormant retroviruses
-- over 2 percent of the genome is retroviral. Thus I have come to suspect
that retroviruses are found in sick people but are not the cause of
sickness. Their release into the bloodstream is a consequence of the
sickness. People who are under stress often test positive for HIV even
though they have never been 'infected.'" Ted Steele confirms that
"when cells that make antibodies
are put under stress, they certainly make large quantities of endogenos
retroviruses." (9)
At first,
even HIV's "discoverers" had their doubts about what they
were working with. When a group that was led by France's Luc Montagnier
described the procedures and observations that made them believe they
might have cultured an AIDS virus, Robert Gallo did not believe them.(10)
Nor did Nature, which turned their paper down. Nor did the British virus
expert Robin Weiss, who in a 1986 patent application referred to Montagnier's
HIV strain as a "so-called AIDS virus isolate."
It turned
out that the first blood tests for "HIV" marketed by both
Gallo and Weiss were based on the "so-called isolate" from
France, sent to Gallo's laboratory by Montagnier for further investigation.
A big fight followed over who had found the virus first. Eventually
the French and US governments agreed on a deal that split the credit
-- and the profits. Gallo's use of cancer cells to get "HIV"
to multiply allowed him to obtain enough of it to work with, and he
forgot about his criticisms. Essentially, however, the objections stood,
as they do to this day.
Gallo,
Montagnier, and Weiss, the three most famous AIDS virus investigators
in the world, were all in the same boat, working with a single "so-called
isolate," which none of them had purified but which was characterized
as the cause of AIDS.(11)
Nor in all the studies since has the strip of genetic material now ascribed
by convention to HIV been shown to have the properties of a unique,
infectious entity. Every time molecular biologists look for it, it changes
its appearance, even within the same individual: in any one patient
there are more than 100 million genetically distinct variants, according
to one estimate.(12)
The variations led one researcher to conclude, "The data imply
that there is no such thing as an [AIDS virus] isolate."(13)
These observations are consistent with the idea that we are
looking at a phenomenon of activated genes, rather than a virus. Furthermore,
none of 150 chimpanzees inoculated with "HIV" has developed
AIDS. It's believed that the virus crossed into humans from chimpanzees
and sooty mangabeys, but these animals do not get AIDS naturally, despite
carrying "essentially the same virus."(14)
AIDS researchers
have shown in laboratory work that the particles they chose
to call HIV have an affinity for T4 cells, and that they can replicate
within these cells. It is also clear that T4 cells are crucial in coordinating
the immune system's response to microbes and other pathogens, and that
the number of T4 cells circulating in the blood goes down in patients
with AIDS. However, this reduction does not mean that T4 cells are being
killed off by HIV, as originally thought. Rather, it reflects a response
to activation of the immune system. The T4 cells move out of the blood
and concentrate in lymph nodes, which filter out microbes and other
foreign particles.(15)
Perhaps "HIV" particles do influence this process,
but that does not mean they are harmful; they may be participating in
a natural immune response.
Whatever
the cause, the extremely low T4 cell counts commonly thought to
result from HIV infection are actually very common in people who are
HIV-negative. Conditions that result in these changes include infections,
burns, injections of foreign protein, malnutrition, overexercising,
pregnancy, psychological stress, and social isolation.(16)
T4 cells also die in people with AIDS, often through a process of self-destruction.
This had led some researchers to propose that AIDS may be primarily
an autoimmune condition in which the immune system becomes confused
and directs a response against some of its own cells.
In
essence, what all this means is that we do not know the meaning of the
phenomenon labeled HIV.
Is
the HIV Test Reliable?
A common
argument in support of the theory that HIV is the cause of AIDS is
that there is a close connection between testing positive and risk of
illness. Such a link does exist, but there are explanations for it that
do not require the presence of a deadly new virus.
The link
may be meaningless if the antibodies detected by the HIV test are nonspecific,
that is, if they can be a result of other disease processes and do not
necessarily indicate the presence of HIV. Evidence that this is indeed
the case was first comprehensively set out in an article in the journal
Bio/Technology. A team of scientists based in Perth, Western Australia,
examined each of the proteins used to make the HIV tests and showed
that there are potential non-HIV sources for all of them, including
normal cell constituents released when immune cells become overstimulated
and disordered.(17)
Heavy burdens
on the immune system, regardless of HIV, are present in all the main
risk groups for AIDS, which may explain the close correlation with testing
positive. The Gay Liberation years of the 1970s brought unprecedented
opportunities for men to have sex with one another, and all the early
gay victims of AIDS were leading the fast-track sex-and-drugs lifestyle.
Exposure to sperm and seminal fluid from many different partners, as
well as repeated bouts of sexually transmitted diseases, chronic use
of antibiotics, and the debilitating effects of heavy exposure to recreational
drugs may have combined to put such men at risk.(18)
Drug addicts,
another group at risk of AIDS, suffer immune deficiencies because of
directly damaging effects of opiates on T cells, for which they have
an enormous affinity, as well as because of malnutrition and infections
caused by sharing needles. This group's risk of developing AIDS is much
higher when addicts continue to inject drugs than when they stop.(19)
People
with the blood-clotting disorder hemophilia, also at risk, were known
to suffer immune disorders, include T4 cell decline, resulting directly
from their treatment. During the 1970s and 1980s, such treatment involved
repeated intravenous infusion of concentrates made from the blood of
thousands of people. It was estimated that a typical patient receiving
40 to 60 treatments a year could be exposed to blood from up to two
million donors.(20)
The greater the amount of clotting factor they received, and the longer
they received it, the greater their risk of immune deficiency. In the
late 1980s, when HIV-positive hemophiliacs were switched to an extremely
pure version of the clotting factor (made using genetic engineering
techniques), their T4 cell counts ceased to decline and in some instances
did a U-turn.(21)
Blood transfusion recipients, too, were a very high-risk
group and did not need HIV to become sick. In one US study, about half
th
recipients of noninfected blood transfusions died within one year of
the transfusion.(22)
The biggest
confusion of all has arisen in Africa. When the "AIDS test"
was first marketed in the mid-1980s, Western scientists looking for
the origin of HIV went to several central African countries with their
diagnostic kits and found high percentages of people testing positive
-- 40 to 50 percent in some areas. This created a climate of doom about
HIV/AIDS in which those suffering from traditional diseases of poverty
and malnutrition including tuberculosis, pneumonia, chronic intestinal
infections, and malaria were liable to be diagnosed as AIDS patients,
by virtue of their HIV antibody status. Yet there is now strong evidence
that the nonspecific nature of the HIV test is causing millions to test
false positive. Sufferers of leprosy and tuberculosis as well as carriers
of the germs responsible for those diseases are particularly at risk
of this false positive reaction.(23)
Convinced
that a terrible epidemic was unfolding, the World Health Organization
added to the confusion by allowing doctors to diagnose AIDS in Africa
even without the use of the HIV test, simply on the basis of a combination
of symptoms such as fever, persistent cough, diarrhea, or weight loss.
"Dressed up as HIV/AIDS, a variety of old sicknesses have been
reclassified," writes Charles Geshekter, a professor of African
history at California State University, Chico. After a recent trip to
Africa -- his 15th -- Geshekter concluded that it was impossible to
distinguish these common symptoms from those of malaria, tuberculosis,
or the indigenous
diseases of impoverished lands. Furthermore, "it is well understood
that many endemic infections will trigger the same antibodies that cause
positive reactions on the HIV antibody tests. ...The problem is that
dysentery and malaria do not inspire headlines or fatten public health
budgets. Infectious 'plagues' do."(24)
HIV tests
do not look directly for an AIDS virus but for antibodies that are thought
to be related to the purported virus. This could still be a valid approach
for establishing HIV infection, if it were possible to prove the presence
of the virus in people who test positive and to show that it is not
present in people who test negative. But because it has not been possible
to purify the virus directly from patients, this "gold standard"
for validating a diagnostic test has never been applied. Instead, the
test kits are calibrated to ensure that many AIDS patients, and people
at risk for AIDS, test positive, whereas most healthy people test negative.(25)
This is an extraordinary rough-and-ready approach, and not surprisingly,
elevated levels of "HIV" antibodies have been clearly shown
to relate to many non-AIDS conditions. About 70 different reasons for
getting a positive
reaction unrelated to HIV infection have been documented in the scientific
literature.(26) The
conditions include autoimmune illness, responses to flu shots, and as
mentioned above, even pregnancy itself.
The Perth
scientists, headed by medical physicist Eleni Papadopulos-Eleopulos
and physician Val Turner, conclude that whatever the condition, AIDS
or otherwise, a positive test doesn't indicate HIV infection but is
a nonspecific marker for a variety of conditions. "Consequently
the general belief that almost all individuals, healthy or otherwise,
who are HIV antibody-positive are infected with a lethal retrovirus,
has not been scientifically substantiated."(27)
Today the
tests remain beset with problems, despite claims to the contrary by
HIV protagonists.(28)
As one example of the confusion this creates, even among scientists
at the forefront of AIDS orthodoxy, in the US it is the practice not
to call someone HIV-positive based only on tests using a method known
as Elisa; confirmation with a different technique, Western blot, is
required. But in the UK, diagnosis relies primarily on various types
of Elisa, with Western blot being regarded by the experts as too unreliable
to be used other than as a research tool.
The authorities
have known about the nonspecificity of the HIV test from the
beginning yet, like Pontius Pilate, washed their hands of the problem.
As far back as 1986, a Food and Drug Administration official told a
World Health Organization meeting that the primary use of the test was
for screening blood donations, and that "it is inappropriate to
use this test as a screen for AIDS or as a screen for members of groups
at increased risk for AIDS in the general population." He added,
however, that enforcing this intention "would be analogous to enforcing
the Volstead Act which prohibited alcoholic beverage sales in the United
States in the 1920s -- simply not practical."(29)
I wonder what the millions whose lives have been marred by an "HIV"
diagnosis will say when they learn, as surely they must, of the shaky
science that lies behind the tests.
The manufacturers
know of the continuing shortcomings, and they cover themselves legally
by stating that their kit should not be used, on its own, to diagnose
HIV infection. But as Eleni Papadopulos-Eleopulos says, "We have
to question all types of the antibody test. ...If the test is no good,
you can repeat it a thousand times and it still won't be any good. When
the principle of the test, the basis of it, has not been established,
it doesn't matter how many times you repeat it, you still won't prove
anything."(30)
The
same applies to so-called viral loads, in which genetic segments attributed
to HIV are amplified millions of times in order to reach detectable
levels. Just as with HIV antibodies, these genetic segments have not
been shown to be specific to HIV; they, too, may indicate a more generalized
activation of the immune system. The root of the problem is the same
as with the antibodies: the research community's inability to purify
and unequivocally demonstrate the existence of HIV in AIDS patients.
John Papadimitriou,
professor of pathology at the University of Western Australia and an
internationally renowned expert on electron microscopy, also questions
whether the phenomena labeled HIV by AIDS scientists truly represent
an infectious virus. "They have not proven that they have actually
detected a unique, exogenous retrovirus," he told me. "The
critical data to support that idea have not been presented. You have
to be absolutely certain that what you have detected is unique and exogenous,
and a single molecular species. They haven't got conclusively to that
first step. Just to see particles in the tissues, and fail to look for
evidence that it is an infective virus, is wrong. Are these particles
that cause disease? The proper controls have never been done."
Of AIDS in Africa, he added, "Why condemn a continent to death
because of HIV when you have other explanations for why people are falling
sick?"
Val Turner,
of Perth, goes even farther. "HIV is a metaphor for a lot of
quasi-related phenomena," he told me. "No one has ever proved
its existence as a virus. We don't believe it exists." Etienne
de Harven, a former professor of athology at the University of Toronto
who pioneered a method of purifying viruses during 25 years' work at
the Sloan-Kettering Institute in New York, agrees with the Perth group
on this devastating omission. "Of course, I am very familiar with
the many reports and electron microscope pictures of 'HIV particles,'"
he says. "Indeed, they show particles which could very well be
taken as retroviruses on the basis of their
ultrastructure alone. But all these particles have been found in complex
cell cultures, never in one single AIDS patient!"(31)
Recent attempts to make good this omission, with electron microscope
studies that should have been done years ago, produced "disastrous"
results, de Harven says, suggesting "billions of research dollars
gone up in smoke."(32)
Does
Antiviral
Treatment Save Lives?
Medicine often works in a pragmatic way, with treatments evolved by trial
and error, and not always with a clear understanding of how those that
work
do so. Even if critics of the HIV/AIDS theory who believe the virus to
be
harmless or non-existent and the AIDS test invalid are right, researchers
might still have chanced upon treatments that do help. Is there evidence
of
such serendipity?
Just as
the HIV theory entered common currency more for social and political
reasons than through scientific evidence, those working in the AIDS
field
have desperately wanted to believe that the drug treatments are working.
The
evidence is thin, however. When AZT was first marketed, it rapidly
established itself as the "gold standard" of anti-HIV treatment,
and
hundreds of studies (mostly funded by its manufacturers) claimed to
show
benefit. But the biggest and longest trial, a collaborative effort involving
British and French government researchers, showed a 25 percent increase
in
deaths among those treated early with the drug compared with those in
whom
treatment was delayed.(33)
Sadly,
researchers failed to learn from this experience and in 1996 brought
in a policy of initiating treatment of "HIV disease" as early
as possible,
this time with cocktails of several antiviral drugs, including a group
of
"miracle drugs" called protease inhibitors. There were high-profile
stories
of individual patients with AIDS rising from their sickbeds like Lazarus,
and proud boasts that HIV was on the run at last. But as with AZT, this
was
more wishful thinking than sound science. AIDS patients suffer from
a lot of
viral and other infections, and the drug cocktails gave short-term relief
to
some, but until recently it was left to the "dissident" information
network
to report, usually within a few weeks or months, the deaths of many
of the
patients. For years, chemist David Rasnick, an expert on protease
inhibitors, has warned that they are dangerous and unlikely to bring
benefit. "To date," he says, "there is still no clinical
trial that has
proved that the protease inhibitors -- either taken alone or in combination
with other antiviral drugs -- reduce the mortality or improve the quality
of
life of AIDS patients."(34)
This year,
US government scientists issued guidelines acknowledging
"unanticipated toxicities" with the long-term use of antiviral
drugs and
signaling a reversal of the "hit early, hit hard" policy of
attacking the
virus in HIV-positive people.(35)
Drug companies have also been ordered to
stop advertising their antiviral drugs with images that imply they cure
AIDS
(such as photographs of "robust individuals engaged in strenuous
physical
activity") or reduce its transmission. These actions came a year
after a
powerful article by AIDS journalist Celia Farber that began, "In
1996 a
scientist claimed he'd found a way to defeat AIDS. In the wave of euphoria
that followed, a batch of new drugs flooded the market. Four years later,
those drugs are wreaking unimaginable horror on the patients who dared
to
hope. What went wrong?"(36)
As for
"AZT babies," there is no scientific evidence that the antiviral
drugs prolong or improve the quality of their lives. The benefit is
entirely
a supposition, based on the finding that the drugs cause fewer children
to
be born testing positive. Since we do not know the meaning of HIV
antibodies, we do not know what this finding means in terms of the babies'
health. David Rasnick, who has worked in the US pharmaceutical industry
for
more than 20 years, told an inquiry into AIDS science in South Africa
in
July 2000 that he had "scoured the literature" for evidence
of tangible
benefit, with zero results.(37)
In fact, several studies have shown harm. A
major Italian study found that children born to mothers treated with
AZT in
pregnancy were more likely to get severely sick and die by the age of
three
than those whose mothers were left untreated.(38)
The world
has not wanted to listen to those who question the HIV hypothesis.
The tens of billions of HIV research dollars support more than 100,000
doctors and scientists "who have built their careers and reputations
by
simply accepting the HIV dogma and the axioms of AIDS," Rasnick
told the
Naples International Conference on Science and Democracy [see Note 34].
"Many informed critics think that the billions of dollars at stake
is the
biggest roadblock to ending the AIDS insanity. That money is certainly
a
formidable weapon in the service of the HIV/AIDS establishment. However,
I
think it's simple human embarrassment that is the biggest obstacle to
bringing this insanity to an end. It is the fear of being so obviously
and
hopelessly wrong about AIDS that keeps lips sealed, the money flowing,
and
the AIDS rhetoric spiraling to stratospheric heights of absurdity."
Where does
this leave those who find themselves caught up in the nightmare
that follows an HIV diagnosis? Perhaps the simplest but most important
lesson is that science is unquestionably in a muddle, so individuals
have
every right to challenge and question orthodox AIDS beliefs, especially
when
these have a direct bearing on their own lives.
The belief
in HIV as a sexually transmitted virus that would in time put
heterosexuals at risk as much as gay men was never correct.(39)
AIDS has
stayed confined to groups of people who have non-HIV risks in their
lives,
including recreational drugs, severe poverty, multiple infections, and
the
relatively easy access into the bloodstream of foreign body fluids received
through anal sex. In the minority of cases where none of those risks
is
apparent, prescription drugs and the intensely damaging effect of an
HIV
diagnosis may have been to blame.
In 1992,
when AIDS cases were, in fact, dropping in the US and Europe,
experts agreed on an arbitrary widening of the range of disorders eligible
for registration as AIDS, including, for the first time, HIV-positive
people
with no illness but with T4 cell counts below 200, as well as women
with
cervical cancer. In the US, this produced an artificial doubling in
the
number of AIDS cases reported, but -- despite further expansions in
classification -- registrations have been declining ever since. About
650,000 cases of AIDS were registered in the US from 1982 to mid-1998,
and
75 percent of those were in high-risk groups. Of 1,789 babies registered
cumulatively as AIDS cases over the same period, 1,774 (99 percent)
were
birthed to mothers in high-risk groups.(40)
An analysis of data from the
AIDS epicenters of New York City and California by Gordon Stewart, emeritus
professor of public health, University of Glasgow, Scotland, a former
WHO
adviser of AIDS, shows that "perinatal and neonatal AIDS are minimal
except
where mothers and infants are exposed to risks in ethnic, drug-using
and
bisexual situations. After 20 years of intensive surveillance in a country
where AIDS is as prevalent as in some third world countries, this in
itself
excludes any appreciable spread of AIDS by heterosexual transmission
of HIV
in the huge majority of the general population."(41)
The HIV
story has done enormous harm, but there are positive sides to it as
well. The condom and clean needle campaigns will not have been in vain.
Furthermore, HIV brought the world together in a way that has been
beneficial for gay men, now far more accepted and valued in society
than
even 20 years ago, and perhaps increasingly for poor countries, where
the
links between poverty and disease are finally receiving renewed attention.
There is
clearly a transmissible component in AIDS, as seen in the risks
attached to anal intercourse and needle sharing. Indeed, if there is
anything to African AIDS more than the surge of infectious diseases
such as
tuberculosis and malaria that accompany impoverished living conditions
and
the collapse of health systems, it may turn out to have been transmitted
through the reuse of needles in mass vaccination campaigns exported
by
Western health agencies. While the contagious virus theory remains unproven
and unlikely, animal studies suggest that transmissible AIDS-like diseases
can be induced -- without any exogenous infection -- when the immune
system
is thrown into confusion through certain vaccination procedures.(42)
These
may hold a lesson for us in relation to vaccine policy in general, as
well
as provide a clue to what's really going on in AIDS. To molecular biologist
Rudolf Werner, these studies emphasize "that we still know very
little about
autoimmunity and how it works. Introduction of foreign protein into
someone
else's system quite clearly upsets that person's immune system. We need
to
learn much more about immunological tolerance and autoimmunity."(43)
We also
need to learn more about the link between the immune system and the
mind. At the University of Miami, researchers have reported that intensive
grief therapy significantly reduces "HIV viral load," as well
as maintaining
T4 cell levels, in gay men who have lost a partner or close friend to
AIDS.(44) Such studies
drive home the importance of de-hexing AIDS by
re-examining the unproven "deadly virus" hypothesis and discontinuing
use of
the discredited HIV tests.
Perhaps
the biggest obstacle to doing so is that HIV has a symbolic power in
our lives. On the one hand, it is an icon of fear, representing a breakdown
in the integrity of an individual's being that must bring dependency,
disease, and death in its wake. On the other hand, along with the red
ribbon, HIV/AIDS has become a symbol of unity, compassion, and hope,
a
banner behind which doctors and scientists, the priests of our time,
can
mobilize their beneficent energies into defeating this perceived threat
to
humankind, with the support of all decent people. To get in the way
of that
effort has been interpreted as a sign that you are lacking either common
decency or common sense.
A generation
of mothers and babies now risk becoming casualties of these
good intentions. Perhaps their suffering will help us realize that it
is
time to drop our preconceptions about AIDS, admit the mistakes that
have
been made, and make a fresh start in trying to understand the disease.
-----
Neville
Hodgkinson reported on HIV and AIDS as medical journalist for The
Sunday Times (London) from 1985 to 1989. beginning in 1991, as the
newspaper's science correspondent, he wrote a series of highly controversial
reports based on the arguments of scientists seeking a reappraisal of
the
HIV theory. He is the author of "AIDS: The Failure of Contemporary
Science -- How a Virus That Never Was Deceived the World" (London:
Fourth
Estate, 1996).
-----
Notes
1.
See "The Dynamics of CD4+ T-cell Depletion in HIV Disease"
by Joseph
McCune in Nature (April 19, 2001): "We still do not know how, in
vivo, the
virus destroys CD4+ T cells [T4 cells] or whether, in quantitative terms,
cell loss is due to direct destruction by virus or to other indirect
means.
This ignorance, arising in large part because it is difficult to study
the
immune system in living human beings, hinders the discovery and development
of effective vaccines and therapies. Several hypotheses have been proposed
to explain the loss of CD4+ T cells, some of which seem to be diametrically
opposed."
2.
Duesberg's Cancer Research article, "Retroviruses as Carcinogens
and
Pathogens: Expectation and Reality" was published in March 1987.
An insight
into the political nature of the response it triggered is given in a
leaked
US government memorandum, dated April 28, 1987. Headed "Media Alert,"
it was
sent from the office of the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS),
with copies to the Secretary, Undersecretary, and Assistant Secretary
for
Public Affairs, the Chief of Staff, the Surgeon General, and the White
House. The memo noted, "The article apparently went through the
normal
pre-publication process and should have been flagged at NIH." It
went on:
"This obviously has the potential to raise a lot of controversy
(if this
isn't the virus, how do we know the blood supply is safe? How do we
know
anything about transmission? How could you all be so stupid and why
should
we ever believe you again?) and we need to be prepared to respond. I
have
already asked NIH public affairs to start digging into this."
3.
See www.rethinkingaids.com and www.virusmyth.com/aids.
4.
Eleni Papadopulos-Eleopulos, Valendar Turner, John Papadimitriou, and
David Causer, "The Isolation of HIV: Has It Really Been Achieved?"
Supplement to Continuum 4, no. 3 (September/October 1996). See also
www.virusmyth.com/aids/perthgroup/index.html.
5.
On page 374 of my book "AIDS: The Failure of Contemporary Science"
(London: Fourth Estate, 1996), I suggest use of the term "enveloped
transposon" instead of endogenous retrovirus, to avoid the "deadly
virus"
connotation. See also work by virologist Stefan Lanka
(www.virusmyth.net/aids/index/slanka.htm), such as "HIV: Reality
or
Artifact?," first published in Continuum (April/May 1995).
6.
E. J. Steele, Somatic Selection and Adaptive Evolution: On the
Inheritance of Acquired Characters (University of Chicago Press, 1981),
42-57; Harry Rothenfluh and Ted Steele, "Lamarck, Darwin and the
Immune
System," Today's Life Science (August 1993): 16, 19, 20, 22.
7.
Lower et al., Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 93, no.
11
(1996): 5177-5184.
8. Personal
communication.
9.
Personal communication.
10. Gallo
wrote to The Lancet in early 1984, "No one has been able to work
with their particles. ...Because of the lack of permanent production
and
characterisation it is hard to say they are really 'isolated' in the
sense
that virologists use this term." He also dismissed as "ridiculous"
the
French team's claim that they had identified a virus specific to AIDS
on the
grounds that their particles reacted with antibodies in blood samples
from
AIDS patients. "That's bad virology," he said. "Patient
sera, especially in
AIDS patients, has antibodies to a lot of different things." And
he raised
doubts over photographs taken through an electron microscope by the
French,
purporting to show virus particles. See also J. Crewdson, "The
Great AIDS
Quest," Chicago Tribune, (November 19, 1989): 5.
11.
Montagnier himself admitted in a 1997 interview with French TV
journalist Djamel Tahi that "we did not purify" the virus
and added that he
did not believe Gallo had done so either.
12.
S. Wain-Hobson, "Virological Mayhem," Nature (January 12,
1995): 102.
13.
J. L. Marx, Science 241 (1988): 1039-1040. Howard Temin, who shared
the
1975 Nobel Prize for Medicine for his discovery of an enzyme characteristic
of retroviruses, makes a similar point in a chapter contributed to Emerging
Viruses (Stephen Morse, ed., Oxford University Press, 1993), 221: "The
data
indicate that in any one AIDS patient, at any one time, there are many
different virus genomes." Also see Neville Hodgkinson, "AIDS:
The Failure of
Contemporary Science" (London: Fourth Estate, 1996), 371.
14.
R. Kurth and S. Norley, "Why Don't the Natural Hosts of SIV Develop
Simian AIDS?," Journal of National Institutes of Health Research
8 (1996):
33-37. Quoted by Robin Weiss in "Gulliver's Travels in HIVland,"
Nature 410
(April 19, 2001): 964.
15.
Joseph McCune, "The Dynamics of CD4+ T-cell Depletion in HIV Disease,"
Nature 410 (April 19, 2001): 974-979.
16.
See news-gap.com/mb/sda/irwinlowcd4.html for a well-documented paper
on this topic by Matt Irwin, MD.
17.
E.P. Eleopulos et al., "Is a Positive Western Blot Proof of HIV
Infection?," Bio/Technology 11 (June 1993): 696-707.
18.
J. A. Sonnabend and Serge Saadoun, "The Acquired Immunodeficiency
Syndrome: A Discussion of Etiologic Hypotheses," AIDS Research
1, no. 2
(1984): 107-120. This article pointed out that semen and sperm were
well
documented as a cause of immune system abnormalities in anal intercourse,
when the proteins involved permeate the colon's thin lining and enter
the
bloodstream. (In vaginal sex, the vagina's thick walls restrict the
invasion
of semen to its intended target, the womb.) There are antigens expressed
on
cells in the ejaculate that are shared by cells of the immune system,
raising the possibility that repeated exposure could set up a reaction
in
the body against one's own immune cells. Anal sex has been around a
long
time, of course, but the Gay Liberation years brought exceptional exposures.
A Centers for Disease Control study of the first 100 gay men with AIDS
found
that their median number of lifetime sexual partners was 1,160; a subsequent
group boasted 10,000 or more partners. See also Robert Root-Bernstein,
"Rethinking AIDS: The Tragic Cost of Premature Consensus"
(New York: The
Free Press, 1993), 115-120.
19.
One of the best examples of this phenomenon was a study by Maurizio
Luca
Moretti of the Florida-based Inter-American Medical and Health Association,
who collaborated with colleagues in Italy on a study of 508 former
intravenous drug abusers. [Robert Root-Bernstein, "Rethinking AIDS:
The
Tragic Cost of Premature Consensus" (New York: The Free Press,
1993),
359-360.] The men, all HIV-positive, were voluntarily confined to a
rehabilitation center where their lives were under the daily management
of
staff. Most were found to be severely malnourished on arrival, 397 of
them
chronically so. Their nutritional status was returned to normal, their
drug
use ended, and their sex lives were curtailed (the center is a monastery,
where patients sleep in small groups under supervision). Among 139
individuals who had been using heroin daily for an average of more than
five
years, all were still free of AIDS symptoms after an average of more
than
four years since they had first tested positive. This is a phenomenal
success rate compared with the US, where 32 percent of HIV-positive
addicts
develop AIDS within two years and more than 50 percent within four years.
For more information, see Neville Hodgkinson, "AIDS: The Failure
of
Contemporary Science" (London: Fourth Estate, 1996), 205.
20.
Blood 73 (1989), 2067-2073
21.
S. Seremetis et al., "Three-year Randomised Study of High-Purity
or
Intermediate-Purity Factor VIII Concentrates in Symptom-Free
HIV-Seropositive Haemophiliacs: Effects on Immune Status," The
Lancet 342
(September 18, 1993): 700-703; De Biasi et al., "The Impact of
a Very High
Purity Factor VIII Concentrate on the Immune System of Human
Immunodeficiency Virus-Infected Hemophiliacs," Blood 78, no. 8
(1992):
1919-1922. These findings prompted Gordon Stewart to tell The Sunday
Times
in London, "If this work is confirmed, it means the patients may
not get
AIDS at all. It also gives us an immense clue to the mechanics of AIDS.
We
now know that if the haemophiliacs are infused with impure concentrates,
they get changes that resemble AIDS; and if they get the high-purity
product, they don't get those changes. So the probability is that the
haemophiliacs' response is to the foreign protein in their treatment,
and
not to HIV. The allegation that haemophiliac patients get AIDS because
of
being infected by HIV has to be questioned." "Factor 8 Hope
in HIV Battle,"
The Sunday Times (February 21, 1993).
22.
Hardy et al., "Incidence Rate of Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome
in
Selected Populations," Journal of the American Medical Association
253
(1985): 215-220; J. W. Ward et al., "The Natural History of
Transfusion-Associated Infection with Human Immunodeficiency Virus,"
New
England Journal of Medicine 321 (1989): 947-952, quoted in Peter Duesberg,
"Inventing the AIDS Virus" (Washington, DC: Regnery Publishing,
1996), 285.
23.
A study from Zaire (Kashala et al., "Infection with Human
Immunodeficiency Virus Type I [HIV-1] and Human T-cell Lymphotropic
Viruses
among Leprosy Patients and Contacts: Correlation between HIV-1
Cross-Reactivity and Antibodies to Lipoarabinomannan," Journal
of Infectious
Diseases 169 (1994): 296-304), in which 67 percent of leprosy patients
and
23 percent of their contacts tested HIV-positive, found that only two
of the
patients and none of the contacts could be confirmed as positive using
more
detailed and expensive procedures. Even the two cases were questionable.
24.
"The Plague That Isn't," Canadian Globe and Mail, (March 14,
2000).
25.
The calibration is done by diluting the blood enormously, to a ratio
of
1:400. Roberto Giraldo, a New York physician and author of the book
"AIDS
and Stressors," reported an experiment in which he tested undiluted
serum
samples with the most commonly used HIV diagnostic kit (Continuum 5,
no. 5
[1998]: 8-10). All the samples tested negative when diluted; tested
straight, they all became positive. The antibodies that have been
misinterpreted as representing HIV are probably present in all of us,
but
they reach much higher levels when our immune system is activated.
26.
Christine Johnson, "Factors Known to Cause False-Positive HIV Antibody
Test Results," Zenger's (September 1996).
27.
Eleni Papadopulos-Eleopulos et al., "HIV Antibody Testing:
Autoreactivity and Other Associated Problems" (unpublished).
28.
For a wide-ranging review of this evidence, see chapter nine of my book
"AIDS: The Failure of Contemporary Science" (London: Fourth
Estate, 1996).
29.
Thomas F. Zuck, "AIDS: The Safety of Blood and Blood Products (Wiley
Medical Publication on behalf of the World Health Organization, 1987),
Ch.
21.
30.
Personal communication.
31.
Correspondence, September 2000.
32.
Letter in Continuum 5, no. 2.
33.
Concorde, "MRC/ANRS Randomised Double-blind Controlled Trial of
Immediate and Deferred Zidovudine in Symptom-free HIV Infection,"
The Lancet
343: 871-881.
34.
"Time to Separate State and Science," speech before the International
Conference on Science and Democracy, Naples, Italy, April 20-21, 2001.
35.
"Guidelines for the Use of Anti-Retroviral Agents in HIV-Infected
Adults
and Adolescents," February 2001, at
www.hivatis.org/guidelines/adult/Feb05_01/text/index.html.
36.
Celia Farber, "Science Fiction," GEAR magazine (March 2000).
37.
Presidential AIDS Advisory Panel Report, March 2001, at
www.polity.org.za/govdocs/reports/aids/aidspanel.htm.
38.
"Rapid Disease Progression in HIV-1 Perinatally Infected Children
Born
to Mothers Receiving Zidovudine Monotherapy During Pregnancy,"
AIDS 13
(1999): 927-933.
39.
Stuart Brody, "Lack of Evidence for Transmission of HIV Through
Vaginal
Intercourse," Archives of Sexual Behaviour 25, no. 4 (1995): 383-393.
40.
G. Stewart, "Epidemiological and Statistical Aspects of AIDS,"
a review
for the Royal Society, UK, January 2000 (unpublished).
41.
Ibid.
42. Victor
Ter-Grigorov et al., "A New Transmissible AIDS-Like Disease in
Mice Induced by Allo-immune Stimuli," Nature Medicine 3, no. 1
(January
1997): 37-41.
43.
Personal communication, June 1998.
44.
Christine Morris, "Counseling Weakens HIV's Attack, Study Finds,"
Miami
Herald, (March 3, 2001).

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