"AIDS" Anecdotes
By Gene Franks
The late Dr. Robert Mendelsohn, author of Confessions of a Medical Heretic and several other books and articles that everyone should read, used to say that the one piece of information that orthodox doctors have absolutely no interest in is what happens to people who refuse to follow their advice. Have you ever heard of a follow-up study of people who were bitten by a rabid animal and refused treatment, or a comparative study tracking the twenty-year health record of vaccinated vs. unvaccinated children?
The accounts of the healthy untreated fall into the medical wasteland category of "anecdotal information." Anecdotal is a dirty word in orthodox medicine that collectively describes everything that is not sanctified by being reported via a "peer review" medical publication. This convenient labeling system avoids having to confront embarrassing contradictions to medical dogma and entails a built-in snobbery that says, "If we didn't say it, it is of no value."
Although there's no way to count them, the number of "anecdotal" and therefore medically non-existent people who were supposed to die of "AIDS" but who never got sick, or who got well without medical treatment, are beginning to challenge the numbers of "AIDS" cases themselves. Actual "AIDS" patients who are willing to cooperate and keep taking their drugs are becoming so scarce that there are now in the United States only six "AIDS" cases for every "AIDS" support group. Support groups are beating the bushes for patients to support and are hopping mad at "dissidents" who go around telling people that "AIDS" is dead.
The first "AIDS" recovery anecdote to gain wide circulation was, I think, the book Roger Recovers from AIDS from the 1980s. Since then the pesky HIV-positives who screw up the "AIDS" theory by not dying are popping up everywhere. These include, for example, some of the members of ACT-UP San Francisco, who drive that city's "AIDS" establishment nuts by flaunting their drug-free wellness, and California writer and activist Christine Maggiore, who has been an energetic, HIV-positive, drug-free "AIDS dissident" mom for several years.
Christine's exhaustively researched and extremely readable book, What If Everything You Thought You Knew About AIDS Was Wrong?, (for sale in the Gazette's book sales section) contains many informative and interesting "AIDS" anecdotes as well as a wealth of hardcore science that's hard to argue with. Her organization, Alive and Well, has four thick binders filled with thank-yous and first- person accounts of medically non-existent anecdotal people who don't fit the official "AIDS" model.
We thought it would be worthwhile to archive a few of these in the Gazette. Here they are, in no particular order. We'll add to the list, so keep coming back.
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