FINAL WARNING: The Illuminati Influence on International Affairs
To allow the disease to become entrenched within the population,
various facts were covered-up and glossed-over. A great deal of
emphasis had been put on the prime cause of AIDS infection, being the
exchange of body fluid, through sexual activity and intravenous drug
use, which has brought a campaign for the importance of using clean,
unused needles, and condoms. The use of a condom does not
guarantee protection against the transmission of the AIDS virus. All it
takes is one AIDS virion (a complete virus particle with its outer coat
intact), and the smallest sperm is 500 times larger that one such virion.
In addition, the quality of condoms have become highly suspect, since
failure rates of 30-50% have been reported.
The risk of casual contact has been played down when in fact AIDS is
a highly contagious disease which demands that a quarantine be
placed on those who suffer from the disease. Rather than treat the
disease as the epidemic it is, the government has concerned itself with
giving AIDS carriers more rights and more exposure to the general
population. There is concrete medical evidence that indicates that the
virus can survive up to 7 days on a dry petri dish, and up to 15 days, in
an aqueous (wet) environment. This raises the question, what would
happen if an AIDS carrier would sneeze into a punch bowl or a salad
bowl. It can incubate 10-15 years before causing any noticeable signs
of illness, which means that sexual relations exposes you to every
sexual contact your partner has had in that period of time.
A February, 1985 report in the British medical journal Lancet, said:
“There is little evidence for homosexual activity among African AIDS
patients (and it) appears to be transmitted through heterosexual
contact or exposure to blood through insect bites...” On September 9,
1985, a research team of researchers from the National Cancer
Institute, the Laboratory of Tumor Cell Biology and the Institute of
Tropical Medicine, said that “human retroviruses could be transmitted
by mosquitoes or within the parasite itself.” In a report published in
the October, 1981, issue of Science, Boston hematologist Dr. Jerome
Groopman, and researchers with the National Institute of Health said
that recovery of the AIDS virus “from saliva suggests that direct
contact with this body fluid should be avoided...”
On January 11, 1985, the Center for Disease Control reported: “There
is a risk of infecting others by ... exposure of others through oral-