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Author

  • Peter Duesberg

Publisher

  • -

Category

  • Controversy

Topic

  • AIDS Paradox

  • AIDS Dilemma

Article Type

  • Editorial articleArticle

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  • -

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  • The content discusses the existence of long-term HIV survivors, suggesting that avoiding antiviral drugs and recreational drugs may contribute to their survival.

Summary

  • The content discusses the phenomenon of long-term HIV survivors or "non-progressors". These are individuals who remain healthy for extended periods post-infection, challenging the belief that HIV inevitably leads to AIDS. The HIV orthodoxy suggests these cases may be due to non-virulent, mutant strains of HIV. However, independent scientists and anecdotal evidence suggest that long-term survival may be linked to abstaining from antiviral and recreational drugs. The content also highlights the pressure from certain segments of AIDS activism for patients to take antiviral drugs. It concludes by stating that the majority of HIV-positives worldwide are long-term survivors.

Meta Tag

  • Long-term survivors

  • Non-progressors

  • HIV/AIDS

  • Antiviral drugs

  • Cell-mediated immunity

  • Cytotoxic CD8+ T-cells

  • Natural killer cells

  • Healthy survivors

  • Recreational drugs

  • Anecdotal reports

  • Scientific studies

  • HIV orthodoxy

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The Drug-AIDS Hypothesis
By Peter Duesberg(a) and David Rasnick(b)
a) Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, 229 Stanley Hall, UC Berkeley Berkeley, CA 94720, phone 510.642.6549, FAX 510.643.6455, email: duesberg@uclink4.berkeley.edu
b) Resident AIDS investigator at UC Berkeley, 229 Stanley Hall, UC Berkeley Berkeley, CA 94720, phone (510) 642-6549, fax (415) 826-1241, email: rasnick@mindspring.com

The Drug-AIDS Hypothesis