SMON: the Virus that wasn’t

The clioquinol hypothesis explained all the features of the SMON syndrome that had made it appear to be a virus. Its tendency to appear in hospital patients, to cluster in families, to afflict medical workers, and to break out more heavily in the summer—all of these reflected the patterns of clioquinol use. It also explains why SMON had been a particularly Japanese phenomenon, as sales of the drug were much higher there.    Notes: Inventing the AIDS Virus, by Peter H. Duesberg: https://amzn.eu/d/0FvCvVD   Viruses Don't Exist and Why It Matters, by Dr. Sam Bailey: https://odysee.com/@drsambailey:c/Viruses-Don't-Exist-and-Why-It-Matters:4   Music by: Rain and Tears by Neutrin05   / neutrin05   Creative Commons — Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported  — CC BY-SA 3.0  Free Download / Stream: http://bit.ly/2PKvY28 Music promoted by Audio Library    • Rain and Tears – Neutrin05 (No Copyright)   matt2131@hotmail.com

Om Podcasten

Hello and welcome to the DSC Podcast. Step inside and join our conversations as we seek the depth in all things. Be it mysticism, therapy, mythology or world events – we will seek not to find answers but rather to come up with ever better questions. Hosted by Richard Cox.