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Professor Paul Johnson describes iron triangles as “closed, mutually supportive relationships between government agencies, special interest lobbying organizations, and the legislative committees or subcommittees with jurisdiction over a particular functional area of government policy. (more…)
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A UC Berkeley investigation has concluded that there is no basis to support the allegations regarding Professor Duesberg. (more…)
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Profits of the “AIDS industry” run into many billions of dollars every year. When AIDS dissidents speak up, they are ridiculed with often ad hominem arguments. Here, the AIDS dissident John Lauritsen looks at one piece of ridicule in particular, and questions why he was not allowed to write a reasoned reply in a British humanist publication. (more…)
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In December 2007, Merkuri Stanback entered the Park Community Federal Credit Union in Macon, Georgia brandishing a firearm. Stanback and his cohorts restrained employees and ransacked the teller area before making off with almost $200K. When Stanback was arrested, a prosecutor declared that “bank robbers should be put on notice that they will serve the full term of years imposed because there is no parole in the federal system.” (more…)
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The word is chutzpa – and it’s hard to imagine a better way to describe UC Berkeley (UCB) Vice Provost Sheldon Zedeck’s assignment of Arthur Reingold to investigate misconduct allegations against Professor Peter Duesberg, PhD. The charges stem from Duesberg’s (et al) report that was published in 2009 by Medical Hypotheses. Citing 35 references that includes South Africa’s (SA) own mortality reports, Prof. Duesberg’s team concluded that: (more…)
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Johnson Tagarisa grew up during the 1970s when his cousins, brothers and uncles worked in the mines of South Africa. Upon return to their native Zimbabwe, they spoke often of their experiences. By the time that people were starting to “die from AIDS in South Africa,” Johnson was old enough and educated enough to connect the dots. Even when his stepbrother died in 1993, Johnson argued with the doctor that he had died of syphilis because he had (more…)
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Johnson Tagarisa grew up during the 1970s when his cousins, brothers and uncles worked in the mines of South Africa. Upon return to their native Zimbabwe, they spoke often of their experiences. By the time that people were starting to “die from AIDS in South Africa,” Johnson was old enough and educated enough to connect the dots. Even when his stepbrother died in 1993, Johnson argued with the doctor that he had died of syphilis because he had (more…)
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