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A very good video explains it very well. You can find it at:
68.251.204.5/video/intimetv/ote003.wmv |
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Here is what a major "expert" on hepatitis B (Baruch Blumberg) has pointed out about this "disease" (one of the "molecular signature" diseases) in his book "The hunt for a killer virus: Hepatitis B" (2002):
"Manfred [Bayer] is a paintstaking scientist with a meticulous approach to the craft of microscopy. It took him some time to select the correct shadowing methods for the preparations and to decide exactly where to look. In the ultracentrifuge fraction that contained the Australian antigen, he saw particles that were roughly circular, about 210 angstroms in diameter, and whose centers were, for the most part, empty. The particles were pretty small for a virus, but, as we concluded in our paper, they could be the sought-after hepatitis B virus." Page 108.
"...Lawrence Loeb... studied the physical and other charateristics of the particles. They did not contain nucleic acid, at least within the sensitvity of the tests we used." Page 109.
"Even now, when we know so much more than we did in the early days, it has not been possibe to grow HBV in conventional tissue cultures. Nor, for technical reasons we did not fully unravel, were the plaque assays feasible." Page 110.
When talking about the particles seen with the EM, he says: "There are many more of the noninfectious HBsAg particles (without DNA) in the blod than whole virus particles thare are infectious and can replicate..." Page 115.
I tried to find the text of a study Blumberg cited in the book, but it was not available online. However, another study that came later seems to be more on point. It can be found at:
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=1930759
Any thoughts (especially from "Softrat")? |
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After doing more research on "hepatitis B," I found some interesting material. Presumably, the "orthodox" view is best summed up by:
"The causative agent of hepatitis B was isolated and characterised by Professor Blumberg in 1967..."
Source: http://cgkd.anu.edu.au/menus/PDFs/Bellagio2005LuigiPalombi.pdf
This is the kind of statement one might find in an "infectious disease" textbook. However, in 1971, a group of scientists claimed:
"Recently, several investigators described virus-like particles measuring 42 nm. in diameter among Au antigen in the sera from cases of serum hepatitis.50 The presence of these particles throws strong doubt on the etiological significance of the Au antigen and suggests that the latter may be a by-product of viral replication rather than the virus itself.
The observations reported here confirm the above findings and provide additional evidence concerning the possibility of the larger virus-like particles being the etiological agent of Au antigen-associated hepatitis; they also suggest that the Au antigen is a product of viral degradation."
Source: Can Med Assoc J. 1971 January 23; 104(2): 145�?47.
Note that they took samples from three people who were "heavy" drug users. Case number 1:
"He was admitted to North York Branson Hospital on February 26, 1970, in a paranoid, delusional and suicidal state. He had been taking large amounts of all types of 'speed' prior to admission and had shared needles and syringes with many acquaintances who had developed hepatitis within the year."
Case number 2: "This 18-year-old youth had been on "speed" and other drugs, including narcotics, for about one year before he presented himself at the hospital on May 15, 1970, complaining of anorexia, nausea and dark urine along with right upper abdominal pain. His family had noticed that he was jaundiced."
Case number 3: "This 15-year-old girl had been using drugs (marijuana, LSD and mescaline) for about one year prior to her admission to hospital on June 7, 1970. She had taken the drugs both orally and intravenously. She was admitted because of the onset of acute pelvic inflammatory disease characterized by abdominal pain, vaginal discharge and fever."
Obviously, the stresses these people were placing on their bodies could cause all kinds of "abnormal" effects, and in order to adhere to the scientific method, a scientist would have to take healthy animals, subject them to these kinds of stresses, and see if the same effects occur, without the possibility of a "viral infection." My research has not been able to detect any such experiment ever being conducted.
Recent evidence, however, suggests that what many scientists have viewed as "viral infection" might be a way the body attempts to deal with such stresses, as well as the effects of too much stress. For example:
Abstract: "Exosomes are small vesicles originating from late endosomes, 30-100 nm in diameter with typical cup-shape morphology. They are reported to bear high levels of a narrow spectrum of molecules involved in immune response and signal transduction. Apart from removing obsolete membrane proteins, some surprising biological functions of exosomes were unveiled recently and their applications in immunotherapy of tumors are currently intensively investigated. Dendritic cell- (DC) and tumor-derived exosomes have considerable anti-tumor effects in experimental studies and several clinical trials. Despite their potential applications in eliciting a "positive" immune response, exosomes might induce some "unwanted" immune responses, such as immune tolerance and immune evasion. Therefore further investigations about the physiological functions of exosomes and the optimal way of exosome application in tumor immunotherapy are necessary. This review presents recent developments in the field of exosome research and focuses on its applications to tumor immunotherapy."
Source: J Cell Mol Med. 2006 Apr-Jun;10(2):364-75.
The wikipedia.org article on exosomes makes these relevant points:
QUOTE: Exosomes are 50-90 nm vesicles secreted by a wide range of mammalian cell types.[1] First discovered in maturing mammalian reticulocytes, they were shown to be a mechanism for selective removal of many plasma membrane proteins.[2] These proteins are lost or reduced in amount, without concomitant degradation, during the maturation to the erythrocyte. Although the exosomal protein composition varies with the cell of origin, most exosomes contain the soluble protein Hsc 70. Certain immune cells, such as dendritic cells and B cells, secrete exosomes that many scientists believe play a functional role in mediating adaptive immune responses to pathogens and tumors.[3]
An exosome is created intracellularly when a segment of the cell membrane spontaneously invaginates and is endocytosed.[1] The internalized segment is broken into smaller vesicles that are subsequently expelled from the cell. The latter stage occurs when the late endosome, containing many small vesicles, fuses with the cell membrane, triggering the release of the vesicles from the cell...
Exosomes can also contain both functional mRNA and microRNA, which can be shuttled from one cell to another, affecting the recipient cell's protein production. This RNA is called "exosomal shuttle RNA..." UNQUOTE.
Note that when "HIV" was sought, what was found was a large amount of these vesicles that get released in this cellular version of a waste disposal (and perhaps recycling) operation. |
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