Beschreibung
"What this book teaches you more than anything else is that science is a dangerous game. The notion that science is precise and unambiguous is wrong. When there is doubt, there is the potential for powerful interested parties to make life miserable for a scientist with integrity. Throughout the book, intrigue is seamlessly intertwined with fascinating revelations about the still poorly understood science behind the potential role of retroviruses in mysterious debilitating diseases like chronic fatigue syndrome and autism." Dr. Stephanie Seneff, senior research scientist, MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory "The breathtaking story of an extraordinary scientist who discovered the most likely cause of chronic fatigue syndrome, only to witness a cover-up and character assassination emanating from the highest levels of the scientific community. An incisive critique of what's wrong with science today, and yet a hopeful portrait of how science still has the means to find the truth. It leaves you overwhelmed by the insidious methods and players corrupting science, but hopeful for truth-seekers in the scientific community like Dr. Mikovits who are persevering against all odds." J.B. Handley, cofounder of Generation Rescue and author of How to End the Autism Epidemic "A truly shocking set of revelations about the deep corruption and criminality of the medical industrial complex. Exposes the scientific fraud and brazen intellectual dishonesty that now characterizes the pharmaceutical cartels that sacrifice human health for corporate profits." Mike Adams, the "Health Ranger," and publisher of Science.news "This book is a jaw-dropping excursion through the lies of Big Money, Big Government and Big Pharma. God bless Dr. Mikovits for her courage in sharing this story!" Max Swafford, author and educator
Autorenportrait
Dr. Judy Mikovits arbeitete über zwanzig Jahre zusammen mit Dr. Frank Ruscetti, einem der Pioniere im Bereich Human-Retrovirologie, am National Cancer Institute. In dieser Zeit war sie an über vierzig wissenschaftlichen Papers als Co-Autorin beteiligt. Sie ist Mitbegründerin und Direktorin des ersten Instituts für Neuroimmunerkrankungen, an dem sie im Jahr 2006 einen systembiologischen Ansatz entwickelte. Dr. Mikovits lebt mit ihrem Mann David in Südkalifornien.