Title: Do viruses exist? | |
HIV debate > English > Other medical-scientific mistakes | Go to subcategory: |
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Peter_the_Roman | |
Date Posted:2020-12-19 01:25:59Copy HTML To discern that the medical-scientific mistake may be greater than the HIV matter, I suggest to read these words from an eminent official retrovirologist named Robin A Weiss (written in 1999): http://theperthgroup.com/EMAILCORR/vftweiss.html It is precisely because Val Turner and his colleagues in Perth have not queried the existence of other viruses that I find it difficult to take their ideas on HIV seriously. All the 'failings' they attirbute to HIV could equally well, according to their own stringent criteria, be levelled against any virus with a lipid envelope, eg small pox, influenza, measles, mumps or yellow fever. The evidence is as good, or rather, in Dr Turner's eyes as bad, as for HIV. No virologist in the 101 year history of the discovery of viruses ever demanded for any virus the definition of 'purification' that they and the magazine Continuum claim are the standard criteria of virus isolation. If you believe this man is right then you have two options from here: to think the Perth Group is wrong as many alleged viruses have not been isolated according to its criteria, or to be open-minded and bet, or at least don't rule out, the mistake regarding virology could be greater, far greater, than the alleged HIV matter. The next posts may help you to decide. There is an article on Wikipedia narrating the history of virology. It could be useful as a first impression of the issue: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_virology |
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Peter_the_Roman | Share to: #1 |
Re:Do viruses exist? Date Posted:2020-12-19 01:27:07Copy HTML The next link claims that certain alleged viruses have not been purified. As purification is a necessary (not sufficient) condition to isolate a virus, that is, to demonstrate its existence, then it would be deduced that they don't exist, or at least that their existence is not proven. The content is exhaustive, with recent studies, and very didactic too, explaining virology techniques from scratch. https://nourishingtraditions.com/the-contagion-fairy-tale-by-thomas-cowan-md-and-sally-fallon-morell |
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Peter_the_Roman | Share to: #2 |
Re:Do viruses exist? Date Posted:2020-12-19 01:28:52Copy HTML Investigative journalist Janine Roberts exposed that "viruses" are not infectious and not harmful particles. In her book "Fear of the Invisible" she didn't say that viruses don't exist, but it is obvious, according to her assumptions, that her perception of viruses doesn't match with the definition given by virologists and written in dictionaries. So viruses actually would not exist, they would be "exosomes" too, a name given to particles that look like alleged viruses but without the alleged ability to replicate, and that were observed as particles allegedly different from alleged virus particles. Exosomes are produced by our own body, probably due to physical aggressions that yield a disease state. So there would be exosomes as a consequence of a disease, not viruses acquired externally and causing a disease. I can't remember if Roberts reached such conclusion, but it is mentioned at the link I put in the previous post. Extracts from the Janine Roberts's book can be read here: https://fearoftheinvisible.wordpress.com and a review, with additional information here: https://davidpratt.info/roberts.htm The book is full available in Spanish, at the next link: https://superandoelsida3.ning.com/profiles/blogs/miedo-de-lo-invisible-de-janine-roberts-en-espanol |
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Peter_the_Roman | Share to: #3 |
Re:Do viruses exist? Date Posted:2020-12-19 01:31:27Copy HTML Another relevant person is German biologist Stefan Lanka. He clearly affirms that viruses existence is not proven (except;bacteriophages): Here you can read one of his articles: https://wissenschafftplus.de/uploads/article/Dismantling-the-Virus-Theory.pdf |
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Peter_the_Roman | Share to: #4 |
Re:Do viruses exist? Date Posted:2022-10-21 12:32:22Copy HTML A thread in a forum discussing the matter: |