AIDS – Origin, Spread and Healing

7,50

97% of the persons, who have HIV in their bodies, were purposely infected with this virus, which can lead to AIDS.

The majority of people affected by AIDS/HIV are dark-skinned people in some states in Africa, in the USA and Caribbean, as well as homosexual men and persons using crack or heroin in some industrialised states.

HIV was since 1957 supplied to them in vaccines, drugs, and blood-transfusions, by HIV-containing microbes in food and water, by insects and by spraying.

Only roughly 3% of infected persons were exposed to HIV unintentionally – either by sexual intercourse or as new-born infants by their mothers.

HIV impairs in particular the body’s ability to combat unknown disease causing agents.

HIV was developed out of the Virus of Infectious Anaemia of Horses.

Research work was predominantly carried out in Germany and Japan until 1945 and since then mainly in the USA and France.

The agents of the main AIDS diseases are specific, exceptionally rare and, to a certain extent, new microbes. They are intentionally transmitted in the air and food.

The agents causing the AIDS diseases were mainly researched by scientists in military service and mainly tested in Uganda and Zaire.

HIV-infections and outbroken AIDS diseases can be cured.


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Beschreibung

Contents

 

1            What is eye-catching about mass AIDS diseases?               1

 

2            What is AIDS said to be?                                                                3

 

3            What is AIDS?                                                                                     5

3.1        Which illnesses occur in persons with AIDS?                                   7

3.1.1    Unusual disease agents                                                                             7

 

3.2        Mode of action of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)  8

3.2.1    Double attack on the immunosystem                                                  8

3.2.2    Cortisol triggers off a vicious circle                                                      9

3.2.3    Contradictory statements on cortisol values of HIV-infected persons                                                                                                          10

3.2.4    Antidote sex hormones diminished                                                   11

 

3.3        How can HIV infect?                                                                                 11

3.3.1    Inborn resistance of human beings to HIV                                     11

3.3.2    Mycotoxins and measles viruses pave the way                            12

3.3.3    Mode of action of mycotoxins                                                              12

3.3.4    Aspergillus vanished?                                                                              12

3.3.5    AIDS patients had been exposed to mycotoxins                           13

3.3.6    Epidemic-type diseases as a result of mycotoxins, measles and  Epstein-Barr viruses                                                                                13

3.3.7    HIV can be transmitted like the virus of Infectious Anaemia of Horses                                                                                                            17

3.3.8    Transmission by sperm and injection syringes unproved       18

3.3.9    HIV and insects                                                                                          18

3.3.10  Transmission in the air                                                                           21

3.3.11  Distribution in food and water                                                            21

 

4            Spread of AIDS and HIV                                                               23

4.1        Centers for Disease Control informed in advance                       23

4.1.1    Pneumocystis carinii-pneumonia in Los Angeles                        23

4.1.2    Neoplasma of skin, Kaposi’s sarcoma in New York                     23

4.1.3    Centers for Disease Control name “risk groups”                          24

 

4.2        Dark-skinned persons mainly affected world-wide                   26

4.2.1    AIDS among “Blacks”, “Hispanics” and “Whites” in the USA   26

 

4.3        Acquiring HIV through sexual intercourse practically impossible                                                                                                    29

4.3.1    HIV-infectiosity                                                                                          30

4.3.2    Acquiring HIV through sexual intercourse between homosexual men practically impossible                                         30

4.3.3    Acquiring through sexual intercourse with female prostitutes practically impossible                                                                             34

 

4.4        Haitian persons                                                                                          36

 

4.5        AIDS and forbidden drugs                                                                     40

 

4.6        Infection of children                                                                                 44

 

4.7        HIV among haemophilia patients                                                       46

 

4.8        Spread of HIV in some states of Africa and the Caribbean       48

4.8.1    HIV-free brothels for soldiers from NATO-states                        48

4.8.2    Spread of HIV as a result of medical treatment, food supply, prepared insects                                                                                        52

 

4.9        Spread of HIV and AIDS among people in Algeria, Angola, Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Cape Verde, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo, Comores, Dominican Republic, Equatorial Guinea , Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea-Bissau, Guinea, Haiti, Haiti-born USA- and Canada-immigrants, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauretania, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria, Réunion, Rwanda, Sao Tome & Principe, Senegal, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Sudan, Swaziland, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, Zaire, Zambia, Zimbabwe                         57

 

5            The development of HIV out of the Virus of Infectious Anaemia of Horses (EIAV)                                                         85

5.1        Descendant of the subfamily of lentiviruses of the family of retroviruses                                                                                                 85

 

5.2        HIV is closest to the Virus of Infectious Anaemia of Horses    86

 

5.3        The Virus of Infectious Anaemia of Horses, an old biological weapon                                                                                                          89

5.3.1    Insects as virus-transmitters                                                                90

5.3.2    Used as a biological weapon during World War I                        91

5.3.3    Memorandum: Onset of Infectious Anaemia of Horses epidemic feasible                                                                                       92

 

5.4        From horse to human being                                                                 94

 

5.5        Experiments with the EIAV derivative Maedi-Visna Virus      95

 

5.6        Biological weapon-research in Japan                                                96

5.6.1    The USA acquire knowledge from Germany and Japan             96

 

5.7        AIDS experiments on dogs, monkeys and children                     98

5.7.1    The AIDS symptom Burkitt’s lymphoma produced in dogs, cats and monkeys                                                                                      98

5.7.2    Similar epidemics among animals and humans                           99

 

5.8        Human Immunodeficiency viruses in monkeys and apish immunodeficiency viruses in human beings                               101

 

5.9        HIV, mystery of unity in variety                                                        104

 

5.10     Distribution of HIV connected with HTLV-I                                105

 

6            The particular diseases                                                             107

6.1        Pneumocystis carinii-pneumonia                                                    107

 

6.2        Tuberculosis                                                                                             114

 

6.3        Kaposi’s sarcoma                                                                                    123

 

6.4        Cryptosporidiosis                                                                                   134

6.5        Isosporosis                                                                                                136

 

6.6        Cryptococcosis                                                                                         137

 

6.7        Cerebral toxoplasmosis                                                                        139

 

6.8        Cytomegalo Virus-infection                                                                140

 

6.9        Candidiasis                                                                                                144

 

6.10     Herpes simplex                                                                                        144

 

6.11     Mycobacterium avium complex                                                       146

 

6.12     Epstein-Barr Virus and Burkitt’s lymphoma                               147

 

6.13     Progressive Multifocal Leukoencephalopathy                           150

 

6.14     Histoplasmosis                                                                                        150

 

6.15     Aspergillosis                                                                                             151

 

7            Illnesses as weapons                                                                  153

7.1        Influenza precursor of AIDS                                                               153

 

7.2        Testing the generation of diseases                                                  160

 

7.3        Testing diseases in the West Nile district in Uganda               166

7.3.1    AIDS-tests                                                                                                  168

 

8            Fighting mass AIDS diseases                                                  171

8.1        Targets of AIDS-infections                                                                  171

 

8.2        Avoidance of AIDS                                                                                  172

 

8.3        Curing AIDS                                                                                               173

8.3.1    Effective medications prohibited, defamed and kept back from patients                                                                                                       181

 

8.4        Treatment of HIV-infections and AIDS diseases                        181

 

9            Concepts, specialist terms, abbreviations                         183

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