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A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 99

use of antihistamines to relieve the hay fever. The mucous membranes of the nostrils become dry (the catarrh stops), and their responsiveness is destroyed by this treatment. But since the organism needs the relief afforded by a catarrh, it is now forced to mobilize its defenses on a deeper level in the bronchi in the form of an asthmatic condition.
Very seldom is this done automatically as a natural process. It is only when the organism is already too weak to keep the disturbance on a peripheral level (nostrils) that such a process develops automatically. But suppression is considerably easier to accomplish with chemical drugs such as antihistamines. The reason is that natural diseases have limited power over the organism; an inherent predisposition must exist before a natural disease invades deeper levels. But chemical drugs have an unlimited power over any organism when they are introduced into it in great quantities and for a sufficient length of time. If such a process is repeated over and over again, even the strongest organisms will succumb and allow the manifestation of new diseases.
The hypothesis in this treatise is that the HIV (Human Immunosuppressive Virus) would not have appeared and affected the human race in such an epidemic manner unless it had been preceded by widespread and frequent use of antibiotics which prepared the ground by breaking down the organism’s immune system.
The people who became its first victims were almost exclusively those who had used huge quantities of such antibiotics. These drugs obviously broke down several lines of defense in the organism’s immune system, rendering it susceptible to the virus. In the last chapter of this book I will expound on the logic of this hypothesis.
An organism can fall vulnerable to any kind of disease to which it is predisposed as long as there is a strong stress applied to it on a constant basis. It will soon be verified in research laboratories beyond any reasonable doubt that a predisposition is necessary before an individual can be affected by the HIV virus.