AIDS

Study Suggests Vaginal Ring May Protect Against HIV in Women

A small silicone ring, known as the dapivirine ring, may protect as many as 75 percent of women using it from contracting HIV, the virus that leads to AIDS. The ring is inserted into the vagina and infused with a special antiviral drug, called dapivirine. Researchers say the findings are especially important in countries where there is a cultural taboo for women refusing sex, even with their husbands, and may not have a say in whether or not he wears a condom.

What G. Edward Griffin won’t be talking about on Coast to Coast AM

G. Edward Griffin is scheduled to be a guest on Coast to Coast AM this November 2, 2015, for the first time since September 7, 2011. Here is the description of his upcoming appearance: “Writer and documentary film producer G. Edward Griffin will discuss a variety of his favorite topics including how the Federal Reserve […]

Fallacies in Modern Medicine: The HIV/AIDS Hypothesis

By Donald W. Miller, Jr., MD This commentary was published in the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons Volume 20, Number 1, Pages 18-19, Spring 2015. Modern medicine has spawned great things like antibiotics, open heart surgery, and corneal transplants. And then there is antiretroviral therapy for HIV/AIDS. A civic-minded, healthy person volunteers to donate […]

“Questioning the HIV-AIDS hypothesis: 30 years of dissent”

There are still courageous scientists, doctors, journalists and publishers out there exposing the 30-year-old HIV/AIDS scam, and Patricia Goodson of Texas A&M University and the Frontiers peer-reviewed journal are the latest to aid in this regard. Check out her September 23, 2014 article, “Questioning the HIV-AIDS hypothesis: 30 years of dissent,” for a synopsis of […]