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'The
AIDS War; Propaganda, profiteering and genocide from the medical-industrial
complex'
John
Lauritsen,
Asklepious Press USA 1993, ISBN 0-943742-08-0.
BOOK REVIEW:
From the beginning
I realized something was very wrong with the basic concept of "AIDS",
but it is one think to sense something, and quite another to understand
it analytically... One part of my mind saw clearly that "AIDS"
was a phoney construct. At the same time another part of my mind
... blithely went about analyzing the incidence of a non-existent
entity ... Although people were undeniably sick, the diagnoses themselves
were arbitrary and irrational. -- John Lauritsen
Assume, just
for the sake of argument, that journalist John Lauritsen is correct
in this thinking that "AIDS," as we know it, does not
exist. It's easy to appreciate the formidable task he faces in making
such an idea comprehensible, much less trying to win over the public
mind. Everyone "knows" AIDS exists. Most people are informed
as well about HIV, announced to be the cause of AIDS by the Secretary
of Health and Human Services in 1984 and believed to be most often
spread through sexual contact and in the sharing of contaminated
needles by drug abusers. Certainly the media have given the U.S.
public little reason to think otherwise. Thus the correctness of
the HIV/AIDS hypothesis seems to be both the obvious and unanimous
opinion of scientists, doctors, and informed laypeople throughout
the world. Accordingly, Lauritsen could have begun his most recent
book by exposing the illusion of complete scientific conformity
on this issue. He is, after all, a member of the Group for the Scientific
Reappraisal of the HIV/AIDS Hypothesis, which counts among its members
Kary Mullis, the most recent winner of the Nobel Prize for Chemistry,
as well as Harvard's Walter Gilbert, who garnered the same award
in 1980. Other outstanding virologists, epidemiologists, and medical
doctors have signed on with the group as well.
Yet there would
be a problem with opening The AIDS War with such an authoritative
scientific perspective. Although it would have the advantage of
establishing credibility and demonstrating that an important controversy
indeed exists, it might tend to reinforce the notion that issues
of medical science are inaccessible technical matters best left
to the elite scientific community. Lauritsen wisely adopts a different
strategy. The AIDS War presents his previously published investigative
reports in chronological order with a few new chapters interspersed.
This format allows the reader to follow along as the author's knowledge
and insights develop. Thus a potential scientific labyrinth is avoided
and a complex story is made comprehensible for the general reader.
The result, whatever one might ultimately come to believe about
its subject, is a totally fascinating book that turns the AIDS world
upside down.
In 1985 Lauritsen
published his first major AIDS article in Philadelphia Gay News,
which showed he was already skeptical of the way the epidemic was
being framed by the Center for Disease Control (CDC). The CDC was
reporting cases in such a way that risk factors were being misrepresented:
"Published
studies on gay men with AIDS indicate many of them had something
in common besides sexual orientation. They were drug abusers --
not necessarily IV drug abusers, but nonetheless regular and generally
heavy users of many different unhealthful chemical substances, including
quaaludes, cocaine, nitrite inhalants (poppers), ethyl chloride,
amphetamines, tuinol, barbiturates, uppers, downers, etc.
The significance
of Lauritsen's insight that non-IV drugs are a common denominator
in gay men given an AIDS diagnosis becomes apparent if we consider
the official definition of AIDS. AIDS is an acronym for Acquired
Immune Deficiency Syndrome. A syndrome is a collection of separate
diseases, and there are about 29, according to the Centers for Disease
Control. These are all "old" diseases, including tuberculosis,
pneumonia (PCP), candidiasis (yeast infection), among others. In
other words, one "acquires" a deficient or suppressed
immune system, which in turn renders the body unable to resist one
or more of these old diseases. One way to acquire a depressed immune
system, Lauritsen suggests, is heavy drug use. He tracks down evidence
that "recreational" drugs do in fact cause such damage.
His early findings (reprinted in The AIDS War) were first published
in his book Death Rush: Poppers (Nitrite Inhalants) & AIDS (with
Hank Wilson [Pagan Press, 1986]). Lauritsen's "toxicological
model" of drugs that weaken or destroy the body's ability to
resist infection includes antibiotics and other prescription drugs
and their side effects. The AIDS War examines one particular medical
drug, AZT, in critical detail.
The Food and
Drug Administration approved the marketing of AZT for treatment
of AIDS in 1987. The basis of its approval was data obtained from
drug trials that were designed to be part of a double-blinded placebo-controlled
study. (Neither the doctors nor the patients were to know who received
AZT.) Using evidence obtained via the Freedom of Information Act
and other sources, Lauritsen discovers the study was "not double
blinded by any sense of the word" and was "not only appallingly
sloppy but manifestly fraudulent." For example:
"Patient
#1009, who was already taking AZT [before the study began] and who
was suffering from typical AZT toxicities (severe headaches and
anemia), was illegally entered into a study for which he was ineligible.
Patient #1009 was then assigned to the placebo group, although he
continued to take AZT. He dropped out of the study after being in
it less than a month, and died on 20 August 1986, two months after
leaving the study. He was then counted as a death in the placebo
group."
Lauritsen presents
evidence that AZT is mutagenic, carcinogenic, and cytotoxic, and
causes severe anemia, muscle disease, headaches, nausea, and damage
to all organs of the body -- in essence, all the symptoms associated
with AIDS. He concludes that "death is the inevitable biochemical
consequence" of taking this drug. (That AZT was approved in
record-breaking time is one result of pharmaceutical companies and
AIDS "activists" working together.)
In 1987 Lauritsen
received scientific support for his skepticism of the HIV/AIDS hypothesis.
University of California virologist and member of the National Academy
of Sciences, Dr. Peter Duesberg published a paper in Cancer Research
in which he concluded that HIV was not sufficient to cause AIDS
-- "That virus is a pussy cat," he is quoted as saying
in the March 25, 1988 issue of Science. In an interview Lauritsen
conducted for the July 6, 1987, New York Native, Duesberg explained
that viruses such as HIV typically do not kill cells and, even if
they could, HIV infects so few cells that their death could have
no serious effect on a person's health. One might expect that the
conclusions
of a high-ranking scientist such as Duesberg -- that HIV cannot
cause AIDS (and variations on this theme by a growing number of
other scientists) -- should have made the headlines by now. However,
with few exceptions (notably the London Sunday Times), they have
not. Nevertheless, the breaking of the link between HIV and AIDS
eventually enabled Lauritsen to arrive at his remarkable conclusion
that AIDS does not exist.
The argument
goes like this. A person with one of the 29 "old" diseases,
such as tuberculosis, who tests positive for HIV antibodies, is
given an AIDS diagnosis. If a person with the identical clinical
symptoms is HIV-negative the diagnosis would be tuberculosis. In
other words, without HIV to hold the syndrome together, AIDS collapses
into its separate diseases.
Lauritsen made
many attempts to warn mainstream AIDS organizations that "AIDS"
is a "phoney diagnosis followed by lethal treatment."
However, the drug companies had gotten there first. Organization
leadership had been co-opted in the manner in which drug companies
seek to "educate" doctors and promote their drugs. Thus
the organization Act Up:
"under
a radical cover ... has consistently served the interests of the
pharmaceutical industry. It has helped to put dangerous and worthless
drugs ... on the market, and to undermine the principles of rational
drug regulation.
Other organizations,
such as the Gay Men's Health Crisis in NYC and the American Foundation
for AIDS Research, which "is the AIDS establishment,"
have also received funds from the pharmaceutical industry.
Lauritsen blames
drug companies, the leadership of mainstream AIDS organizations,
the media, scientists, and the medical profession for causing much
unnecessary death. Their exclusive emphasis on a virus has resulted
in the prescribing and taking of toxic medical drugs, while it has
obscured the recreational and street drug connection. These institutions
and individuals have also diverted attention away from the roles
of poverty and malnutrition, particularly in developing nations.
Lauritsen's
main focus in on the U.S., but he gives some attention to the third
world:
Africans are
diagnosed as having "AIDS" when they are sick with diseases
which have been prevalent in Africa for centuries -- diseases which
result from poverty and unhealthful living conditions. In fact (as
reported in Clinical Aspects of Immunology, Fifth Edition), malnutrition
is the number one cause of immune suppression in the world today.
Lauritsen anticipated
challenges to his radical call to rethink all things AIDS. Transfusions,
infant cases, AIDS in hemophiliacs, and the case of Kimberly Bergalis
(who was believed to have contracted AIDS from her dentist), are
included and all deeply considered.
The AIDS War,
a thorough investigation of an ugly (although, unfortunately, not
unique) episode in the history of biomedical research, is not without
a positive side. It removes the death sentence commonly associated
with both AIDS and a positive HIV-antibody test. In addition, Lauritsen
writes,
"recovery
from the various AIDS-illnesses is possible, and has been happening
without publicity since the early days of the epidemic." Although
pointedly "not a self-help book," The AIDS War does contain
some common-sense advice concerning recovery and provides useful
leads in obtaining additional information for both preventing and
healing the illnesses commonly associated with AIDS.
Obviously,
medical research has failed to produce a vaccine or cure -- this
after more than a decade of research costing billions of dollars.
The AIDS War is the perfect place to begin to understand why it
can never succeed. At the very least, the missing information and
critical second opinion provided here deserve to be part of the
debate and discussion on the epidemic. Certainly no one who reads
The AIDS War will think about the "dread disease" of our
time in quite the same way ever again.
Reviewed
by Mike Chappelle
Source:
The Bloomsbury Review, Jan./Feb. 1994.
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