If I were a devil creating a malicious virus to cause the most problems for the human race, the virus would be AIDS. The virus has found the Achilles’ heel of the immune system.

—Luc Montagnier (Co-Discoverer of the AIDS Virus), 1988




How AIDS Was Invented


by Jerry Leonard

 

This exposé reveals how published methods for manufacturing cross-species cancer viruses were used to create human versions of animal immunodeficiency viruses, shortly before AIDS began in human populations. Eminent cancer virus researchers continued to use these methods to make HIV more infective for human cells even after the killer virus had become a deadly international phenomenon.

 

The author has proposed that documented progress in modifying such immunodeficiency viruses for human cell growth was designed to supplement an ongoing line of cancer vaccine research in which deadly monkey sarcoma viruses were adapted to induce tumors in human subjects with compromised immune systems.

 

Adding immunodeficiency viruses to such injections allowed vaccine researchers to replicate, in human populations, a model form of experimentation conducted successfully for decades in animal populations, thereby creating the stunningly useful epidemic of AIDS-induced cancers. This epidemic has not only enabled cancer researchers to dramatically achieve their previously unattainable objectives, such as the identification of elusive human cancer viruses and the hypothesized immune system weaknesses that govern susceptibility to them. Indeed, the stepwise fulfillment of these prerequisite goals through AIDS research has made international headlines and led numerous observers to predict that scientists will shortly develop human versions of animal cancer vaccines—the “Holy Grail” of cancer researchers who invented and modified immunodeficiency viruses for this very reason.

 

 

To get the explosive story behind How AIDS Was Invented in e-book format for $3.95, please click here.

 

 

 


“. . . scientists saw in the tragedy of the AIDS epidemic an extraordinary opportunity to study the interplay of viruses, an impaired immune system and the development of cancer. In a way, AIDS research was an extension of the war on cancer that the Government declared in 1971.”

--Lawrence K. Altman, New York Times, 1998.

 

 

 

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