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lundi, 16 mars 2015

La droite est plus activement liberticide que la gauche

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La droite est plus activement liberticide que la gauche

François Billot de Lochner, président de la Fondation de service politique, répond à Présent. Extraits

« Un renforcement du contrôle de l’Etat sur internet a été voté à l’Assemblée nationale, sous couvert de lutte contre le terrorisme. 1984 de George Orwell, c’est maintenant ?

Nous nous en approchons dangereusement. La liberté d’expression est fortement malmenée depuis un demi-siècle dans notre pays : l’accélération de la dictature politico-médiatique prend des proportions telles que nos mentalités anesthésiées risquent de se réveiller trop tard.

Un projet de loi similaire avait été présenté par l’UMP en 2010. Finalement, droite et gauche, même combat dans la répression de la liberté d’expression ?

Oui… et non ! Le combat est le même, mais la droite est plus activement liberticide que la gauche : c’est effrayant, mais c’est ainsi. La loi Pompidou-Pleven de 1972 restreint considérablement la liberté d’expression, dans une indifférence générale, et la loi Chirac-Raffarin de 2004 est un véritable outil au service de la dictature de la pensée. Ce n’est pas moi qui le dis mais Laurent Joffrin, rédacteur en chef du Nouvel Observateur, qui écrit dans un éditorial retentissant, juste avant le vote de la loi, que la France va se doter d’un outil unique au monde, mis à part dans les pays de dictature…

Vous proposez, parmi vos trente mesures pour sauver la France, d’abroger les lois de 1972 (Pleven) et de 2004 (création de la Halde), ainsi que toutes les lois mémorielles (Gayssot, Taubira…). Qui oserait le proposer dans son programme, alors que les associations antiracistes (CRAN, MRAP, LICRA), le CRIF et les médias le dénonceront à tous coups ?

Un parti courageux, ou un candidat très courageux… Il ne faut jamais désespérer des hommes ! Prenons par exemple la loi liberticide de 2004 : il suffit de la lire pour comprendre à quel point elle abîme la liberté d’expression. Un grand débat sur ce sujet avant 2017 est nécessaire et salutaire : je l’ouvre, et ne compte pas baisser la garde sur ce sujet pendant les deux ans à venir. Les partis politiques et les candidats s’en rendront très vite compte. Et s’ils restent liberticides, je communiquerai haut et fort sur le sujet ! »

L'opposition démocratique en Russie

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L’OPPOSITION DÉMOCRATIQUE EN RUSSIE
Ce n’est pas celle que vous croyez !

Ivan Blot
Ex: http://metamag.fr
Lorsque vous lisez ou écoutez les médias occidentaux, vous avez l’impression qu’il y a en Russie une forte opposition au président Poutine qui est incarnée par des noms qui reviennent en boucle : Navalny, Oudaltsov, et autrefois Nemtsov. Pourtant, cette impression ne cadre pas du tout avec d’autres informations. 

Le président Poutine, selon des instituts de sondage indépendants comme Levada, bénéficie d’un soutien de l’ordre de 85% de la population : du jamais vu, à comparer avec le soutien de 18% en France pour le président Hollande. On ne parle pas de déstabilisation du régime français alors qu’on évoque souvent ce thème pour la Russie !

De plus, les personnalités évoquées par les médias occidentaux font des scores très faibles aux élections. Le malheureux Nemtsov, assassiné peut-être par une filière islamiste, a fait dans sa ville natale de Sotchi, 18% des voix seulement. Serguei Oudaltsov n’a pas fait de score électoral significatif et se consacre plutôt à des manifestations de rue. Quant à Alexei Navalny, ancien étudiant de l’université de Yale aux Etats Unis, il obtint un maximum de voix de 30% dans une élection municipale à Moscou. Le parti libéral Yabloko fait des scores très faibles.

Curieusement, on ne parle guère de la vraie opposition qui a des parlementaires et une forte base électorale. Le plus grand parti d’opposition à Poutine reste le parti communiste, ce que l’on se garde bien de dire car le citoyen occidental moyen pourrait préférer Poutine à un retour du communisme. De plus, ce parti communiste se veut patriote ce qui est fort mal vu en Occident. En 2011, le parti de Poutine, Russie Unie, a obtenu 238 sièges avec plus de 32 millions de voix. Le parti communiste de Ziouganov obtint 19% des suffrages soit 12,5 millions de voix et 92 sièges. Russie Juste, que l’on considère comme socialiste modéré obtint 64 sièges et plus de 8 millions de voix. Le parti libéral démocrate de Jirinovski, ultra nationaliste, a eu 11,6% et 7,6 millions de voix donc 64 sièges. Iabloko, le parti libéral adoré en Occident a eu moins de 4% des voix donc aucun député à la Douma d’Etat (Assemblée Nationale).

C’est donc étonnant de voir nos médias si assoiffés d’opposition à Poutine ne jamais citer les grands partis d’opposition et leurs chefs Ziouganov (communiste) Mironov (social-démocrate) Jirinovski (ultra nationaliste) au profit de quelques personnalités artificiellement lancées dans les médias. On dirait que le monde occidental ignore la représentation démocratique au profit des opposants de rue ultra minoritaires.

Aux élections présidentielles, on retrouve les mêmes tendances. En 2012, Poutine obtint 63,6% des voix dès le premier tour. Son principal opposant communiste Ziouganov obtint 17,1%, puis le milliardaire libéral Prokhorov obtint presque 8% et le nationaliste Jirinovski 6% environ. Russie Juste, social-démocrate n’a eu que 4% à peine. La participation électorale fut des deux tiers.

On refuse de voir la réalité : les électeurs russes sont en majorité poutiniens et l’opposition reste dominée par le parti communiste de Russie. De plus, la plupart des partis représentés au parlement donc représentant effectivement une fraction populaire importante, sont patriotes. D’autres sondages évoqués dans la brochure de club de Valdaï de 2013 sur l’identité nationale révèlent que 81% des Russes se disent patriotes ou très patriotes. Les élites occidentales trouvent commodes de se prononcer contre Poutine mais en réalité elles s’opposent à l’immense majorité de la société civile russe qui défend les valeurs traditionnelles et le patriotisme. Ces élites ont d’ailleurs des problèmes croissants avec leur propre opinion publique : en France, en Angleterre, en Italie, et plus récemment en Allemagne, on observe une montée du patriotisme et des valeurs conservatrices surtout chez les jeunes. Ces élites devraient plutôt s’interroger sur leur défaveur croissante dans le public plutôt que de rêver sur une déstabilisation de la Russie parfaitement invraisemblable dans l’état de la sociologie politique de la Russie. 

Si l’on considère que la démocratie est un régime « par le peuple et pour le peuple » comme c’est écrit dans l’article deux de la constitution française, la Russie est bien plus démocratique aujourd’hui que la plupart des régimes d’Occident (sauf la Suisse). Les valeurs des élites politiques russes et du peuple russe sont les mêmes : valeurs traditionnelles, notamment chrétiennes et patriotisme. Par contre, en Occident, il y a un fossé croissant entre le peuple et les élites politiques comme je l’ai montré dans mon livre « l’oligarchie au pouvoir ». En France, MM. Bréchon et Tchernia, du CNRS ont montré que seulement 35% de la population fait confiance au gouvernement et au parlement ; Les partis ont le score catastrophique de 18% de confiance et le président Hollande n’a guère plus de soutien. Curieuse démocratie que la France où les citoyens donnent au régime la note de satisfaction de 3,9 sur 10, chiffre qui ne fait que baisser depuis une vingtaine d’années. Ce chiffre est de 8 sur 10 en Suisse, pays où les citoyens sont consultés fréquemment par référendums.

La Russie est actuellement attachée à son président qui a une légitimité démocratique réelle que beaucoup de présidents de pays occidentaux pourraient lui envier. C’est peut-être la source d’une jalousie maladive ! Mais l’opposition démocratique représentée au parlement défend elle aussi des valeurs traditionnelles et patriotiques, ce qui est inadmissibles pour des médias occidentaux formés aux valeurs de mai 68, hostiles à la famille, aux traditions, aux racines historiques et chrétiennes et détestant le sentiment patriotique lui-même. Donc ces médias se raccrochent à des opposants de rue très minoritaires dans l’électorat, adulés par les élites politiques occidentales mais peu reconnues au sein du peuple russe. En fait l’hystérie antirusse n’est pas seulement tournée contre Poutine mais aussi contre l’opposition démocratique représentée au parlement russe. C’est pour cela que l’on fait silence sur cette opposition.

Cette attitude est un aveu : en réalité les manipulateurs de l’opinion en Occident se méfient de tous les peuples, et cette méfiance leur est d’ailleurs justement retournée : 38% seulement des citoyens en France (études de Bréchon et Tchernia déjà citées) disent faire confiance aux médias pour dire la vérité !

Il ne fait donc pas s’attendre à une déstabilisation de la Russie mais plutôt à une déstabilisation en Europe occidentale où les dirigeants ont d’ores et déjà perdu beaucoup de leur légitimité populaire !

 

La Russie répond à l’appel du Venezuela

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La Russie répond à l’appel du Venezuela

Auteur : Oscar Fortin
Ex: http://zejournal.mobi

Le président Obama doit se mordre les doigts d’avoir ouvert toutes grandes les portes à la présence militaire russe en Amérique latine et dans les Antilles. Par son décret, véritable déclaration de guerre contre le Venezuela, il aura incité ce dernier à faire appel aux bons offices de la Russie et de sa technologie militaire pour assurer sa défense. S’il s’agit pour le Venezuela d’un appui de grande importance, c’est pour la Russie, à n’en pas douter, une opportunité tout à fait inattendue. Une occasion en or pour Poutine de donner la pareille à Washington qui se fait si présent politiquement et militairement en Ukraine, dans les Balkans, la Mer noire et la Méditerranée.

La nouvelle du jour qui va interpeller très fortement les bien-pensants des politiques guerrières étasuniennes est que la Russie et le Venezuela vont se joindre aux manœuvres militaires défensives planifiées pour cette fin de semaine (14 et 15 mars) dans tout le Venezuela. Le ministre de la Défense, Serguéi Shoigu, a accepté l’invitation de son collègue vénézuélien, Vladimir Padrino Lopez, pour que la Russie participe aux exercices militaires des forces de défense antiaérienne et aux manœuvres de tir de lance-roquettes multiple russe BM-30 Smerch. À ceci s’ajoute l’entrée amicale de navires russes dans les ports du Venezuela.

Cette participation de la Russie à la défense du Venezuela contre les menaces d’invasion militaire de la part des États-Unis ne sera pas sans rappeler à Obama sa propre participation militaire en Ukraine et dans la majorité des pays frontaliers à la Russie. Il sera mal placé pour se plaindre du fait qu’un pays ami, la Russie, apporte son soutien à un autre pays ami, le Venezuela, lequel est menacé d’invasion par son pire ennemi, les États-Unis.

Nous ne sommes évidemment plus en 1962, lors de la crise des missiles à Cuba où la menace nucléaire était à 90 kilomètres des frontières étasuniennes. Au Venezuela, il n’y a pas d’armes nucléaires et les frontières des deux pays sont séparées par des milliers de kilomètres. De plus, l’Amérique latine d’aujourd’hui n’est plus celle des années 1960. De nombreux peuples sont parvenus à vaincre les résistances oligarchiques et impériales pour conquérir démocratiquement les pouvoirs de l’État et les mettre au service du bien commun. De nombreux organismes régionaux se sont développés. Leur présence devient une caution de l’indépendance et d’intégration des peuples de l’Amérique latine. C’est le cas, entre autres, d’UNASUR, de MERCOSUR, de l’ALBA, de CELAC.

De toute évidence, l’Oncle SAM s’acharne à ne pas reconnaître ces changements et continue de vivre comme si l’Amérique latine était toujours sa Cour arrière dont il peut disposer à volonté. Tôt ou tard, il faudra qu’il change son attitude et ses politiques. Ce ne sont plus ces peuples qui doivent changer leurs politiques et leur régime de gouvernance, mais c’est plutôt lui qui doit procéder à ce changement. Ce sont maintenant les peuples qui lui tordent le bras pour qu’il change ses vieilles habitudes impériales en celles de partenaire respectueux et respectables.


- Source : Oscar Fortin

Le Vénézuela «extraordinaire menace pour les Etats-Unis»

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Le Vénézuela «extraordinaire menace pour les Etats-Unis»

par Jean-Paul Baquiast

Ex: http://www.europesolidaire.eu

En préambule d'un décret imposant un régime de sanctions (interdiction d'accès au territoire, gel des avoirs bancaires) à 7 responsables vénézueliens impliqués dans la répression violente de manifestations ayant eu lieu récemment et dirigées contre le président Maduro, Barack Obama a publié une déclaration estimant que le Venezuela était responsable «d'une inhabituelle et extraordinaire menace pour la sécurité nationale et la politique extérieure des États-Unis».
 
Le Vénézuela est ainsi assimilé à la Syrie, l'Iran ou la Birmanie, sans mentionner la Russie. Barack Obama a ajouté qu'il déclarait « l'urgence nationale pour faire face à cette menace.»

Le président Nicolas Maduro a vivement réagi à la décision américaine. «Le président Barack Obama [...] a décidé de se charger personnellement de renverser mon gouvernement et d'intervenir au Venezuela pour en prendre le contrôle», a-t-il affirmé, au cours d'un discours télévisé de deux heures. En réponse, il a décidé de nommer ministre de l'Intérieur le chef des services de renseignements sanctionné par les Américains. Le plus haut responsable diplomatique à Washington a également été rappelé.

Nous avions indiqué ici, dans un article du 11 février, que tout laissait penser qu'un coup d'Etat contre le président Maduro, successeur de Hugo Chavez et aussi détesté à Washington aujourd'hui que ne l'était ce dernier de son vivant, était sans doute en préparation.

Effectivement, peu après, le 13 février, le maire de Caracas, et figure de l'opposition Antonio Ledezma avait été arrêté par les services de renseignement, soupçonné d'avoir encouragé un coup d'Etat dans le pays. Nous ne pouvons évidemment nous prononcer sur ce point. Néanmoins il est connu de tous que les Etats-Unis, directement ou par personnes interposées, ont l'habitude de faire tomber les régimes qui s'opposent à eux en provoquant de tels pronunciamientos.

Il est clair que la nouvelle déclaration de Barack Obama contre le Vénézuéla, ressemblant beaucoup à une déclaration de guerre, ne pourra qu'être interprétée à Caracas et dans les autres capitales, ainsi qu'au sein du BRICS, comme préparant une intervention militaire. Ainsi pourrait disparaître un gouvernement dont le grand tort est d'être non aligné sur Washington et allié de la Russie, sans compter le fait que le Vénézuela dispose d'importantes réserves de pétrole sur lesquelles les grandes compagnies pétrolières américaines aimeraient bien mettre la main.

L'affaire ne sera pas cependant aussi facile qu'Obama semblait le penser. On apprend ce jour 12 mars que la Russie va se joindre aux manœuvres militaires défensives planifiées pour cette fin de semaine (14 et 15 mars) dans tout le Venezuela. Le ministre de la Défense, Serguéi Shoigu, a accepté l'invitation de son collègue vénézuélien, Vladimir Padrino Lopez. La Russie participera aux exercices militaires des forces de défense antiaérienne et aux manœuvres de tir de lance-roquettes multiple russe BM-30 Smerch. À ceci s'ajoutera l'escale de navires russes dans les ports du Venezuela.

L'Amérique ne pourra évidemment pas comparer cela à la crise des missiles de 1962 l'ayant opposée à Cuba et indirectement à l'URSS. Mais nous pouvons être certain que l'accusation sera lancée. Il serait pertinent alors de rappeler à Obama sa propre participation militaire, directement ou via l'Otan, en Ukraine et dans la majorité des pays frontaliers à la Russie, à des manoeuvres militaires plus qu'agressives.

Jean Paul Baquiast

Europe: la leçon islandaise

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EUROPE : LA LEÇON ISLANDAISE
Ils ne veulent pas de cette Europe-là!

Jean Bonnevey
Ex: http://metamag.fr

Alors que, pour cause de petite stratégie politicienne pour éviter le naufrage des départementales, les partis systémiques se rattachent à l’Europe, certains européens, eux, ne perdent pas le nord.


L’Islande a annoncé jeudi avoir retiré sa candidature à l’Union européenne, deux ans après l’arrivée au pouvoir d’un gouvernement eurosceptique de centre-droit qui promettait de mettre un terme au processus lancé en 2009. Comme quoi, on peut tenir ses promesses électorales et se passer de l'UE.


Cette décision est l’application simple du programme de la coalition de centre droit arrivée au pouvoir en 2013, qui promettait de mettre fin au processus d’adhésion. « Les intérêts de l’Islande sont mieux servis en dehors de l’Union européenne », a justifié le ministère des Affaires étrangères.


Il avait fallu des circonstances très particulières pour que Reykjavik dépose sa candidature en 2009, le premier gouvernement de gauche de l’histoire du pays, une grave crise financière qui avait ébranlé la confiance des citoyens dans leurs institutions nationales et la chute de la valeur de la couronne, qui avait suscité l’envie d’adopter l’euro…envie vite passée depuis. Plus de six ans après, l'effondrement d'un secteur financier hypertrophié qui avait plongé l'île dans la récession, la principale préoccupation d'une majorité d'Islandais n'est pas l'UE, mais les emprunts contractés durant les années de "boom" économique qu'ils ont du mal à rembourser.


Les sociaux-démocrates islandais n’ont jamais réussi à expliquer à l’opinion comment ils allaient combler le fossé entre Bruxelles et Reykjavik sur les quotas de pêche. Ce sujet épineux n’aura même pas été abordé lors des négociations entre juin 2011 et janvier 2013.


L’Europe déteste les spécificités qui font les nations


L’adhésion aurait soviétisée la principale ressource du pays. "Le gouvernement n'a pas l'intention d'organiser un référendum", a précisé le ministère des Affaires étrangères. Et mieux, "si le processus doit être repris à l'avenir, le gouvernement actuel considère important de ne pas progresser sans en référer préalablement à la Nation".


Même si une majorité des électeurs aurait souhaité un référendum, il semble difficile d'imaginer ce qui pourrait les amener à voter "oui" un jour, alors que le pays bénéficie déjà de nombreux avantages grâce à ses liens avec l'UE, sans souffrir des inconvénients. L'Islande est ainsi membre de l'Association européenne de libre échange (AELE) et applique la convention de Schengen qui permet la libre circulation des personnes. Cela permet au pays d'exporter ses produits de la mer vers le continent sans barrière tarifaire, alors même qu'il est engagé dans une "guerre du maquereau" avec l'UE. Depuis que l'Islande a relevé son quota de pêche en 2010, au motif que le réchauffement climatique aurait fait migrer l'espèce vers le nord, le conflit n'a pas pu être résolu malgré une multitude de réunions. Laisser Bruxelles décider du quota de pêche islandais paraît impensable sur l'île.


L'espace Schengen stimule une autre industrie importante pour le pays, le tourisme, crucial pour les entrées de devises. On peut donc être eurosceptique, européen  et hors de l'Union l’assumer et s’en bien porter. Gageons que Manuel Valls parlera peu de l'Islande avant le premier tour de la municipale.


The HIV/AIDS Hypothesis

 

 

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Fallacies in Modern Medicine: The HIV/AIDS Hypothesis

By

Ex: http://www.lewrockwell.com

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 blood but, tested for HIV (human immunodeficiency virus), is found to be HIV-positive. This would-be donor will be put on a treatment regimen that follows the (285-page) Guidelines for the Use of Antiretroviral Agents in HIV-1-Infected Adults and Adolescents [1] and will be thrust into a medical world peppered with acronyms like CD4, ART, HIV RNA, HIV Ag/Ab, NRTI, NNRTI, PI, INSTI, PrEP, and P4P4P.

Adhering to these government-issued guidelines, a “health care provider” will start this healthy blood donor on antiretroviral therapy (ART). For the last two decades the standard for treating HIV infection is a three-drug protocol—“2 nukes and a third drug.” The “2 nukes” are nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTI) and DNA chain terminators, like AZT (azidothymidine – Retrovir, which is also a NRTI). The “third drug” is a non-NRTI (NNRTI), a protease inhibitor (PI) or an integrase strand transfer inhibitor (INSTI). [2]

These drugs are toxic. With prolonged use they can cause cardiovascular disease, liver damage, premature aging (due to damage of mitochondria), lactic acidosis, gallstones (especially with protease inhibitors), cognitive impairment, and cancer. The majority of people who take them experience unpleasant side effects, like nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea.

AZT, the most powerful “nuke” in the ART arsenal actually killed some 150,000 “HIV-positive” people when it started being used in 1987 to the mid-1990s, after which, if the drug was used, dosage was lowered. [3] When an HIV-positive person on long-term ART gets cardiovascular disease or cancer, providers blame the virus for helping cause these diseases. Substantial evidence, however, supports the opposite conclusion: it is the antiretroviral treatment itself that causes cancer, liver damage, cardiovascular and other diseases in these patients. [3] They are iatrogenic diseases.

The orthodox view holds that HIV causes AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome)—one or more of an assemblage of now 26 diseases. Reinforcing this alleged fact in the public’s mind, the human immunodeficiency virus is no longer just called HIV, it is now “HIV/AIDS.”

A new development in HIV care, called preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP), promotes universal coverage with antiretroviral drugs to prevent HIV infections, based on the tenet that prevention is the best “treatment.” Given their unpleasant side effects, however, many people stop taking their antiretroviral drugs. An answer for that in the HIV/AIDS-care world is addressed by its P4P4P acronym (pay for performance for patients). With P4P4P, now under study, patients are given financial incentives to encourage them to keep taking the drugs. [2]

Could the hypothesis that the multi-billion-dollar HIV/AIDS medical-pharmaceutical establishment bases its actions on be wrong? In 1987, Peter Duesberg, a professor of molecular and cell biology at the University of California, Berkeley, who isolated the first cancer gene, and in 1970 mapped the genetic structure of retroviruses, published a paper in Cancer Research questioning the role of retroviruses in disease and the HIV/AIDS hypothesis in particular [4]. Then, in 1988, he published one in Science titled “HIV is Not the Cause of AIDS.” [5] As a result, Dr. Duesberg became a pariah in the retroviral HIV/AIDS establishment, which branded him a “rebel” and a “maverick.” Colleague David Baltimore labeled him “irresponsible and pernicious,” and Robert Gallo declared his work to be “absolute and total nonsense.”

Skeptics of the HIV/AIDS hypothesis are chastised and subjected to ad hominem attacks. Anyone who questions this hypothesis is now branded an “AIDS denier,” which is analogous to being called a Holocaust denier. Nevertheless, non-orthodox scholars have been questioning the HIV/AIDS paradigm for thirty years; and now, in the 21st century, as Rebecca Culshaw puts it, “there is good evidence that the entire basis for this theory is wrong.” [6]

A key feature of the HIV/AIDS hypothesis is that the virus is sexually transmitted. But only 1 in 1,000 acts of unprotected intercourse transmits HIV, and only 1 in 275 Americans is HIV-positive!  Drug-free prostitutes do not become HIV-positive, despite their occupation. [3,7]

HIV is said to cause immunodeficiency by killing T cell lymphocytes. But T cells grown in test tubes infected with HIV do not die. They thrive. And they produce large quantities of the virus that laboratories use to detect antibodies to HIV in a person’s blood. HIV infects less than 1 in every 500 T cells in the body and thus is hard to find. The HIV test detects antibodies to it, not the virus itself. For these and other reasons a growing body of evidence shows that the HIV theory of AIDS is untenable. [7]

A positive HIV test does not necessarily mean one is infected with this virus. Flu vaccines, hepatitis B vaccine, and tuberculosis are a few of the more than 70 things that can cause a false-positive HIV test. In healthy individuals, pregnancy and African ancestry conduce to testing HIV positive. In some people a positive test may simply indicate (without any virus) that one’s immune system has become damaged, from heavy recreational drug use, malnutrition, or some other reason. [8]

If HIV does not cause AIDS, then what does? The classic paper on AIDS causation, published in 2003 by Duesberg et al., implicates recreational drugs, anti-viral chemotherapy, and malnutrition. [9]

If the theory is wrong, how can it persist? In a review of The Origin, Persistence, and Failings of the HIV/AIDS Theory by Henry Bauer, the late Joel Kaufman writes:

“One of the most difficult things to write is a refutation of a massive fraud, especially a health fraud, in the face of research cartels, media control, and knowledge monopolies by financial powerhouses… The obstacles to dumping the dogma are clearly highlighted as Dr. Bauer discusses the near impossibility of having so many organizations recant, partly because of the record number of lawsuits that would arise.” [10]

Henry Bauer, professor emeritus of chemistry and science studies and former dean of the Virginia Tech College of Arts and Sciences, also presents a concisely reasoned refutation of the HIV/AIDS hypothesis in a 28-page online study, “The Case Against HIV,” with 51 pages of references—now 896 of them, which he continually updates. [3]

In a review of Harvey Bialy’s book, Review of Oncogenes, Aneuploidy, and AIDS: A Scientific Life and Times of Peter Duesberg, my colleague Gerald Pollack, professor of bioengineering at the University of Washington, writes:

“The book reminds us that although over $100 billion has been spent on AIDS research, not a single AIDS patient has been cured—a colossal failure with tragic consequences. It explains in too-clear terms the reasons why AIDS research focuses so single-mindedly on this lone hypothesis to the exclusion of all others: egos, prestige, and money. Mainstream virologists have assumed the power of the purse, and their self-interests (sometimes financial), propel them to suppress challenges. This is not an unusual story: challenges to mainstream views are consistently suppressed by mainstream scientists who have a stake in maintaining the status quo. It’s not just Semmelweis and Galileo, but is happening broadly in today’s scientific arena.” [11]

Adhering to the erroneous hypothesis that HIV causes AIDS, the U.S. government spends billions of dollars annually on HIV/AIDS programs and research—$29.7 Billion for fiscal year 2014. It is a waste of money. It fleeces taxpayers and enriches the HIV/AIDS medical establishment and the pharmaceutical companies that make antiretroviral drugs. The annual cost of HIV care averages $25,000-$30,000 per patient, of which 67-70 percent is spent on antiretroviral drugs. [2]

The tide is beginning to turn, as evidenced in the Sept 24, 2014, publication by Patricia Goodson of the Department of Health and Kinesiology at Texas A&M University. She notes that “the scientific establishment worldwide insistently refuses to re-examine the HIV-AIDS hypothesis,” even while it is becoming increasingly “more difficult to accept.” She writes:

“This paper represents a call to reflect upon our public health practice vis-à-vis HIV-AIDS… The debate between orthodox and unorthodox scientists comprises much more than an intellectual pursuit or a scientific skirmish: it is a matter of life-and-death. It is a matter of justice. Millions of lives, worldwide, have been and will be significantly affected by an HIV or AIDS diagnosis. If we – the public health work force – lose sight of the social justice implication and the magnitude of the effect, we lose ‘the very purpose of our mission.’” [12]

Despite its long-term, widespread acceptance, the HIV/AIDS hypothesis is proving to be a substantial fallacy of modern medicine.

REFERENCES

  1. These Guidelines are available at: http://aidsinfo.nih.gov/contentfiles/lvguidelines/adultandadolescentgl.pdf . Accessed Dec 15, 2014.
  2. “10 Changes in HIV Care That Are Revolutionizing the Field,” John Bartlett (December 2, 2013) Available at: http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/814712 . Accessed Dec 15, 2014.
  3. The Case Against HIV, collated by Henry Bauer. Available at: http://thecaseagainsthiv.net/ . Accessed December 15, 2014
  4. Duesberg PH. Retroviruses as Carcinogens and Pathogens: Expectations and Reality. Cancer Research. 1987;47:1199-1220.
  5. Duesberg PH. HIV is Not the Cause of AIDS. 1988;241:514-517. Available at: http://www.duesberg.com/papers/ch2.html   Accessed Dec 15, 2014.
  6. Culshaw R. Science Sold Out: Does HIV Really Cause AIDS?, Berkeley, CA: North Atlantic Books; 2007.
  7. Bauer H. The Origin, Persistence and Failings of HIV/AIDS Theory, Jefferson, NC: McFarland; 2007.
  8. Duesberg PH. Inventing the AIDS Virus, Washington, D.C.: Regnery Publishing; 1996.
  9. Duesberg PH, Koehnlein C, Rasnick D. The Chemical Basis of the Various AIDS Epidemics: Recreational Drugs, Anti-viral Chemotherapy, and Malnutrition. J Biosci 2003;28:384-412. Available at: http://www.duesberg.com/papers/chemical-bases.html. Accessed Dec 15, 2014.
  10. Kauffman JM. Review of The Origin, Persistence, and Failings of the HIV/AIDS Theory, by Henry H. Bauer, Jefferson, NC, McFarland, 2007. J Am Phys Surg. 2007;12:121-122.
  11. Pollack G. Statement on HIV/AIDS at: http://www.aras.ab.ca/aidsquotes.htm Accessed Dec 15, 2014.
  12. Goodson P. Questioning the HIV-AIDS hypothesis: 30 years of dissent. Frontiers in Public Health. 2014; 2[Article 154]: 1-11. Available at: http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpubh.2014.00154/full . Accessed Dec 15, 2014.

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Israel, Gaza, and Energy Wars in the Middle East

Tomgram: Michael Schwartz, Israel, Gaza, and Energy Wars in the Middle East
 
Ex: http://www.tomdispatch.com

oil-in-gaza.jpgTalk of an oil glut and a potential further price drop seems to be growing. The cost of a barrel of crude now sits at just under $60, only a little more than half what it was at its most recent peak in June 2014. Meanwhile, under a barrel of woes, economies like China's have slowed and in the process demand for oil has sagged globally. And yet, despite the cancellation of some future plans for exploration and drilling for extreme (and so extremely expensive) forms of fossil fuels, startling numbers of barrels of crude are still pouring onto troubled waters.  For this, a thanks should go to the prodigious efforts of "Saudi America" (all that energetic hydraulic fracking, among other things), while the actual Saudis, the original ones, are still pumping away.  We could, in other words, have arrived not at "peak oil" but at "peak oil demand" for at least a significant period of time to come.  At Bloomberg View, columnist A. Gary Shilling has even suggested that the price of crude could ultimately simply collapse under the weight of all that production and a global economic slowdown, settling in at $10-$20 a barrel (a level last seen in the 1990s).

And here's the saddest part of this story: no matter what happens, the great game over energy and the resource conflicts and wars that go with it show little sign of slowing down.  One thing is guaranteed: no matter how low the price falls, the scramble for sources of oil and the demand for yet more of them won't stop.  Even in this country, as the price of oil has dropped, the push for the construction of the Keystone XL pipeline to bring expensive-to-extract and especially carbon-dirty Canadian "tar sands" to market on the U.S. Gulf Coast has only grown more fervent, while the Obama administration has just opened the country's southern Atlantic coastal waters to future exploration and drilling.  In the oil heartlands of the planet, Iraq and Kurdistan typically continue to fight over who will get the (reduced) revenues from the oil fields around the city of Kirkuk to stanch various financial crises.  In the meantime, other oil disputes only heat up.

Among them is one that has gotten remarkably little attention even as it has grown more intense and swept up ever more countries.  This is the quarter-century-old struggle over natural gas deposits off the coast of Gaza as well as elsewhere in the eastern Mediterranean.  That never-ending conflict provides a remarkable and grim lens through which to view so many recent aspects of Israeli-Palestinian relations, and long-time TomDispatch regular Michael Schwartz offers a panoramic look at it here for the first time.

By the way, following the news that 2014 set a global heat record, those of us freezing on the East Coast of the U.S. this winter might be surprised to learn that the first month of 2015 proved to be the second hottest January on record.  And when you're on such a record-setting pace, why stop struggling to extract yet more fossil fuels? Tom

The Great Game in the Holy Land
How Gazan Natural Gas Became the Epicenter of An International Power Struggle

By Michael Schwartz

Guess what? Almost all the current wars, uprisings, and other conflicts in the Middle East are connected by a single thread, which is also a threat: these conflicts are part of an increasingly frenzied competition to find, extract, and market fossil fuels whose future consumption is guaranteed to lead to a set of cataclysmic environmental crises.

Amid the many fossil-fueled conflicts in the region, one of them, packed with threats, large and small, has been largely overlooked, and Israel is at its epicenter. Its origins can be traced back to the early 1990s when Israeli and Palestinian leaders began sparring over rumored natural gas deposits in the Mediterranean Sea off the coast of Gaza. In the ensuing decades, it has grown into a many-fronted conflict involving several armies and three navies. In the process, it has already inflicted mindboggling misery on tens of thousands of Palestinians, and it threatens to add future layers of misery to the lives of people in Syria, Lebanon, and Cyprus. Eventually, it might even immiserate Israelis.

Resource wars are, of course, nothing new. Virtually the entire history of Western colonialism and post-World War II globalization has been animated by the effort to find and market the raw materials needed to build or maintain industrial capitalism. This includes Israel's expansion into, and appropriation of, Palestinian lands. But fossil fuels only moved to center stage in the Israeli-Palestinian relationship in the 1990s, and that initially circumscribed conflict only spread to include Syria, Lebanon, Cyprus, Turkey, and Russia after 2010.

The Poisonous History of Gazan Natural Gas

Back in 1993, when Israel and the Palestinian Authority (PA) signed the Oslo Accords that were supposed to end the Israeli occupation of Gaza and the West Bank and create a sovereign state, nobody was thinking much about Gaza's coastline. As a result, Israel agreed that the newly created PA would fully control its territorial waters, even though the Israeli navy was still patrolling the area. Rumored natural gas deposits there mattered little to anyone, because prices were then so low and supplies so plentiful. No wonder that the Palestinians took their time recruiting British Gas (BG) -- a major player in the global natural gas sweepstakes -- to find out what was actually there. Only in 2000 did the two parties even sign a modest contract to develop those by-then confirmed fields.

BG promised to finance and manage their development, bear all the costs, and operate the resulting facilities in exchange for 90% of the revenues, an exploitative but typical "profit-sharing" agreement. With an already functioning natural gas industry, Egypt agreed to be the on-shore hub and transit point for the gas. The Palestinians were to receive 10% of the revenues (estimated at about a billion dollars in total) and were guaranteed access to enough gas to meet their needs.

cyprus-israel-natural20gas_1.jpg

Had this process moved a little faster, the contract might have been implemented as written. In 2000, however, with a rapidly expanding economy, meager fossil fuels, and terrible relations with its oil-rich neighbors, Israel found itself facing a chronic energy shortage. Instead of attempting to answer its problem with an aggressive but feasible effort to develop renewable sources of energy, Prime Minister Ehud Barak initiated the era of Eastern Mediterranean fossil fuel conflicts. He brought Israel's naval control of Gazan coastal waters to bear and nixed the deal with BG. Instead, he demanded that Israel, not Egypt, receive the Gaza gas and that it also control all the revenues destined for the Palestinians -- to prevent the money from being used to "fund terror."

With this, the Oslo Accords were officially doomed. By declaring Palestinian control over gas revenues unacceptable, the Israeli government committed itself to not accepting even the most limited kind of Palestinian budgetary autonomy, let alone full sovereignty. Since no Palestinian government or organization would agree to this, a future filled with armed conflict was assured.

The Israeli veto led to the intervention of British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who sought to broker an agreement that would satisfy both the Israeli government and the Palestinian Authority. The result: a 2007 proposal that would have delivered the gas to Israel, not Egypt, at below-market prices, with the same 10% cut of the revenues eventually reaching the PA. However, those funds were first to be delivered to the Federal Reserve Bank in New York for future distribution, which was meant to guarantee that they would not be used for attacks on Israel.

This arrangement still did not satisfy the Israelis, who pointed to the recent victory of the militant Hamas party in Gaza elections as a deal-breaker. Though Hamas had agreed to let the Federal Reserve supervise all spending, the Israeli government, now led by Ehud Olmert, insisted that no "royalties be paid to the Palestinians." Instead, the Israelis would deliver the equivalent of those funds "in goods and services."

This offer the Palestinian government refused. Soon after, Olmert imposed a draconian blockade on Gaza, which Israel's defense minister termed a form of "'economic warfare' that would generate a political crisis, leading to a popular uprising against Hamas." With Egyptian cooperation, Israel then seized control of all commerce in and out of Gaza, severely limiting even food imports and eliminating its fishing industry. As Olmert advisor Dov Weisglass summed up this agenda, the Israeli government was putting the Palestinians "on a diet" (which, according to the Red Cross, soon produced "chronic malnutrition," especially among Gazan children).

When the Palestinians still refused to accept Israel's terms, the Olmert government decided to unilaterally extract the gas, something that, they believed, could only occur once Hamas had been displaced or disarmed. As former Israel Defense Forces commander and current Foreign Minister Moshe Ya'alon explained, "Hamas... hasconfirmed its capability to bomb Israel's strategic gas and electricity installations... It is clear that, without an overall military operation to uproot Hamas control of Gaza, no drilling work can take place without the consent of the radical Islamic movement."

Following this logic, Operation Cast Lead was launched in the winter of 2008. According to Deputy Defense Minister Matan Vilnai, it was intended to subject Gaza to a "shoah" (the Hebrew word for holocaust or disaster). Yoav Galant, the commanding general of the Operation, said that it was designed to "send Gaza decades into the past." As Israeli parliamentarian Tzachi Hanegbi explained, the specific military goal was "to topple the Hamas terror regime and take over all the areas from which rockets are fired on Israel."

Operation Cast Lead did indeed "send Gaza decades into the past." Amnesty International reported that the 22-day offensive killed 1,400 Palestinians, "including some 300 children and hundreds of other unarmed civilians, and large areas of Gaza had been razed to the ground, leaving many thousands homeless and the already dire economy in ruins." The only problem: Operation Cast Lead did not achieve its goal of "transferring the sovereignty of the gas fields to Israel."

More Sources of Gas Equal More Resource Wars

In 2009, the newly elected government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu inherited the stalemate around Gaza's gas deposits and an Israeli energy crisis that only grew more severe when the Arab Spring in Egypt interrupted and then obliterated 40% of the country's gas supplies. Rising energy prices soon contributed to the largest protests involving Jewish Israelis in decades.

As it happened, however, the Netanyahu regime also inherited a potentially permanent solution to the problem. An immense field of recoverable natural gas was discovered in the Levantine Basin, a mainly offshore formation under the eastern Mediterranean. Israeli officials immediately asserted that "most" of the newly confirmed gas reserves lay "within Israeli territory." In doing so, they ignored contrary claims by Lebanon, Syria, Cyprus, and the Palestinians.

gaza-marina-yacimiento-de-gas-natural.jpg

In some other world, this immense gas field might have been effectively exploited by the five claimants jointly, and a production plan might even have been put in place to ameliorate the environmental impact of releasing a future 130 trillion cubic feet of gas into the planet's atmosphere. However, as Pierre Terzian, editor of the oil industry journal Petrostrategies, observed, "All the elements of danger are there... This is a region where resorting to violent action is not something unusual."

In the three years that followed the discovery, Terzian's warning seemed ever more prescient. Lebanon became the first hot spot. In early 2011, the Israeli government announced the unilateral development of two fields, about 10% of that Levantine Basin gas, which lay in disputed offshore waters near the Israeli-Lebanese border. Lebanese Energy Minister Gebran Bassil immediately threatened a military confrontation, asserting that his country would "not allow Israel or any company working for Israeli interests to take any amount of our gas that is falling in our zone." Hezbollah, the most aggressive political faction in Lebanon, promised rocket attacks if "a single meter" of natural gas was extracted from the disputed fields.

Israel's Resource Minister accepted the challenge, asserting that "[t]hese areas are within the economic waters of Israel... We will not hesitate to use our force and strength to protect not only the rule of law but the international maritime law."

Oil industry journalist Terzian offered this analysis of the realities of the confrontation:

"In practical terms... nobody is going to invest with Lebanon in disputed waters. There are no Lebanese companies there capable of carrying out the drilling, and there is no military force that could protect them. But on the other side, things are different. You have Israeli companies that have the ability to operate in offshore areas, and they could take the risk under the protection of the Israeli military."

Sure enough, Israel continued its exploration and drilling in the two disputed fields, deploying drones to guard the facilities. Meanwhile, the Netanyahu government invested major resources in preparing for possible future military confrontations in the area. For one thing, with lavish U.S. funding, it developed the "Iron Dome" anti-missile defense system designed in part to intercept Hezbollah and Hamas rockets aimed at Israeli energy facilities. It also expanded the Israeli navy, focusing on its ability to deter or repel threats to offshore energy facilities. Finally, starting in 2011 it launched airstrikes in Syria designed, according to U.S. officials, "to prevent any transfer of advanced... antiaircraft, surface-to-surface and shore-to-ship missiles" to Hezbollah.

Nonetheless, Hezbollah continued to stockpile rockets capable of demolishing Israeli facilities. And in 2013, Lebanon made a move of its own. It began negotiating with Russia. The goal was to get that country's gas firms to develop Lebanese offshore claims, while the formidable Russian navy would lend a hand with the "long-running territorial dispute with Israel."

By the beginning of 2015, a state of mutual deterrence appeared to be setting in. Although Israel had succeeded in bringing online the smaller of the two fields it set out to develop, drilling in the larger one was indefinitely stalled "in light of the security situation." U.S. contractor Noble Energy, hired by the Israelis, was unwilling to invest the necessary $6 billion in facilities that would be vulnerable to Hezbollah attack, and potentially in the gun sights of the Russian navy. On the Lebanese side, despite an increased Russian naval presence in the region, no work had begun.

Meanwhile, in Syria, where violence was rife and the country in a state of armed collapse, another kind of stalemate went into effect. The regime of Bashar al-Assad, facing a ferocious threat from various groups of jihadists, survived in part by negotiating massive military support from Russia in exchange for a 25-year contract to develop Syria's claims to that Levantine gas field. Included in the deal was a major expansion of the Russian naval base at the port city of Tartus, ensuring a far larger Russian naval presence in the Levantine Basin.

While the presence of the Russians apparently deterred the Israelis from attempting to develop any Syrian-claimed gas deposits, there was no Russian presence in Syria proper. So Israel contracted with the U.S.-based Genie Energy Corporation to locate and develop oil fields in the Golan Heights, Syrian territory occupied by the Israelis since 1967. Facing a potential violation of international law, the Netanyahu government invoked, as the basis for its acts, an Israeli court ruling that the exploitation of natural resources in occupied territories was legal. At the same time, to prepare for the inevitable battle with whichever faction or factions emerged triumphant from the Syrian civil war, it began shoring up the Israeli military presence in the Golan Heights.

And then there was Cyprus, the only Levantine claimant not at war with Israel. Greek Cypriots had long been in chronic conflict with Turkish Cypriots, so it was hardly surprising that the Levantine natural gas discovery triggered three years of deadlocked negotiations on the island over what to do. In 2014, the Greek Cypriots signed an exploration contract with Noble Energy, Israel's chief contractor. The Turkish Cypriots trumped this move by signing a contract with Turkey to explore all Cypriot claims "as far as Egyptian waters." Emulating Israel and Russia, the Turkish government promptly moved three navy vessels into the area to physically block any intervention by other claimants.

As a result, four years of maneuvering around the newly discovered Levantine Basin deposits have produced little energy, but brought new and powerful claimants into the mix, launched a significant military build-up in the region, and heightened tensions immeasurably.

Gaza Again -- and Again

Remember the Iron Dome system, developed in part to stop Hezbollah rockets aimed at Israel's northern gas fields? Over time, it was put in place near the border with Gaza to stop Hamas rockets, and was tested during Operation Returning Echo, the fourth Israeli military attempt to bring Hamas to heel and eliminate any Palestinian "capability to bomb Israel's strategic gas and electricity installations."

Launched in March 2012, it replicated on a reduced scale the devastation of Operation Cast Lead, while the Iron Dome achieved a 90% "kill rate" against Hamas rockets. Even this, however, while a useful adjunct to the vast shelter system built to protect Israeli civilians, was not enough to ensure the protection of the country's exposed oil facilities. Even one direct hit there could damage or demolish such fragile and flammable structures.

turkey_israel_maritime.jpg

The failure of Operation Returning Echo to settle anything triggered another round of negotiations, which once again stalled over the Palestinian rejection of Israel's demand to control all fuel and revenues destined for Gaza and the West Bank. The new Palestinian Unity government then followed the lead of the Lebanese, Syrians, and Turkish Cypriots, and in late 2013 signed an "exploration concession" with Gazprom, the huge Russian natural gas company. As with Lebanon and Syria, the Russian Navy loomed as a potential deterrent to Israeli interference.

Meanwhile, in 2013, a new round of energy blackouts caused "chaos" across Israel, triggering a draconian 47% increase in electricity prices. In response, the Netanyahu government considered a proposal to begin extracting domestic shale oil, but the potential contamination of water resources caused a backlash movement that frustrated this effort. In a country filled with start-up high-tech firms, the exploitation of renewable energy sources was still not being given serious attention. Instead, the government once again turned to Gaza.

With Gazprom's move to develop the Palestinian-claimed gas deposits on the horizon, the Israelis launched their fifth military effort to force Palestinian acquiescence, Operation Protective Edge. It had two major hydrocarbon-related goals: to deter Palestinian-Russian plans and to finally eliminate the Gazan rocket systems. The first goal was apparently met when Gazprom postponed (perhaps permanently) its development deal. The second, however, failed when the two-pronged land and air attack -- despite unprecedented devastation in Gaza -- failed to destroy Hamas's rocket stockpiles or its tunnel-based assembly system; nor did the Iron Dome achieve the sort of near-perfect interception rate needed to protect proposed energy installations.

There Is No Denouement

After 25 years and five failed Israeli military efforts, Gaza's natural gas is still underwater and, after four years, the same can be said for almost all of the Levantine gas. But things are not the same. In energy terms, Israel is ever more desperate, even as it has been building up its military, including its navy, in significant ways. The other claimants have, in turn, found larger and more powerful partners to help reinforce their economic and military claims. All of this undoubtedly means that the first quarter-century of crisis over eastern Mediterranean natural gas has been nothing but prelude. Ahead lies the possibility of bigger gas wars with the devastation they are likely to bring.

Michael Schwartz, an emeritus distinguished teaching professor of sociology at Stony Brook University, is a TomDispatch regular and the author of the award-winning books Radical Protest and Social Structure andThe Power Structure of American Business (with Beth Mintz). His TomDispatch book, War Without End, focused on how the militarized geopolitics of oil led the U.S. to invade and occupy Iraq. His email address is Michael.Schwartz@stonybrook.edu.

Follow TomDispatch on Twitter and join us on Facebook. Check out the newest Dispatch Book, Rebecca Solnit's Men Explain Things to Me, and Tom Engelhardt's latest book, Shadow Government: Surveillance, Secret Wars, and a Global Security State in a Single-Superpower World.

Copyright 2015 Michael Schwartz

Rencontre militante: Anjou/Touraine

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