For over 20 years, UC Berkeley professor Peter Duesberg has believed that HIV does not cause AIDS, an opinion that he says has limited his academic career and alienated him from the scientific ...
Editor's Note: Since 1987, Peter Duesberg, a University of California, Berkeley, retrovirologist, has been contending that HIV is not the cause of AIDS. Eight years after he first put forth his ...
OXFORD, Miss., Oct. 3, 2006 (PRIMEZONE) -- Modern Technology Corp (OTCBB:MODC), a diversified technology development and acquisition company, released today the material terms of its cash-free ...
The latest issue of Harper’s Magazine contains a stunning 15-page article by well-known AIDS denialist Celia Farber (formerly of Spin magazine) that extensively repeats UC Berkeley virologist Peter ...
A heretical theory about the origins of cancer could explain a long-standing medical mystery - why cancers often become resistant to the drugs used to treat them. The controversial theory, if correct, ...
Peter Duesberg has grown accustomed to all of the slights that come with a life in intellectual exile. The 72-year-old molecular biologist no longer expects an invitation to present his research at ...
In reference to your article on the AIDS gene ("Good News, Bad News on AIDS Gene," 2:00 a.m. Nov. 16, 2000 PST) have a look at Peter Duesberg's commentaries about the non-relationship between HIV and ...
Controversial researcher Peter Duesberg has been cleared of wrongdoing following formal complaints made after he and others published a paper arguing that there is "as yet no proof that HIV causes ...
My October 3 post about an LA Times story about AIDS "dissident" Christine Maggiore provoked one of the longer and more lively discussion threads in recent weeks at Hit & Run. I mentioned in passing ...
We think of cancer as a disease, a form of runaway cell growth within an organism. But we might not have realized what cancers really are: separate, brand new parasitic species that evolve from and ...
Peter Duesberg has grown accustomed to all of the slights that come with a life in intellectual exile. The 72-year-old molecular biologist no longer expects an invitation to present his research at ...
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