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The AIDS Debate:
The Most Controversial Story
You've Never Heard.
Liam Scheff, The Boston Dig, 3rd May 2003

What about AIDS in Africa?
Rasnick: "It's the same story, even worse. Fifty percent of Africans have no sewage systems. Their drinking water mixes with animal and human waste. They have constant TB and malaria infections, the symptoms of which are diarrhoea and weight loss, the very same criteria UNAIDS and the World Health Organization use to diagnose AIDS in Africa.

These people need clean drinking water and treated mosquito nets [mosquitoes carry malaria], not condoms and lectures and deadly pharmaceuticals forced on pregnant mothers. We've put 20 years and $118 billion into HIV. We've got no cure, no vaccine and no progress. Instead we have thousands of people made sick and even killed by toxic AIDS drugs. But we can't just treat them for the diseases we know they have because if we do, we're called 'AIDS denialists'.

Treating them for the diseases they actually have would be more humane and effective than forcing toxic drugs down their throats, and it would also save billions of tax dollars. AIDS is a multi-billion dollar industry. There are 100,000 professional AIDS researchers in this country. It's as hard to challenge as Big Tobacco at this point". More at http://www.weeklydig.com/dig/content/3168.aspx

CTM COMMENT: The above article was posted to us by Christine Maggiore at AliveandWell.org. While not agreeing with the main content of this weekly online magazine, The Boston Dig resolutely takes on the AIDS industry in this series of ground-breaking articles on AIDS. Ground-breaking because so few publications actually dare go as far in exposing the corrupt nature of establishment AIDS theory. If you wish to write a letter to the editor encouraging the magazine to continue this coverage, write to: letters@weeklydig.com.

For the full story on AIDS and HIV, please refer to the Credence title World Without AIDS at www.credence.org