Hepatitis C is yet another disease based on tests for antibodies and genetic material — not actual virus. Alistair Mackinnon survived the nightmare of toxic interferon and Ribavirin treatments. He now shares with “How Positive Are You” co-hosts David Crowe and Elizabeth Ely his journey of healing his liver naturally.
CORRECTION, March 25, 2016: The original introductory portion of this Episode was confusing and contradictory as to AIDS dissidents’ view of “hepatitis C” testing and whether liver problems should be treated. Our position is that, even though we warn against believing “HCV” tests, we do not advise anyone to ignore signs of liver toxicity, and we provide here a natural alternative for treating the liver. This is potentially life-saving information, and we regret any misunderstanding. We have revised the introduction today, to clarify this.
Mackinnon rests his protocol for liver health on his own research into the healing properties of Umlingo Wamangcolosi, a recipe invented by South African nurse and healer Tine van der Maas and improved on by others. We interviewed van der Maas in Episode 66 of August 2013. UPDATE, March 21, 2016: Mackinnon’s “Protocol for Liver Health” is published HERE.
UPDATE, February 13, 2016: David posted excerpts from the scientific literature on HCV/hepatitis C to his preview-able research page for his upcoming book, The Infectious Myth.
The tests for the hepatitis C “virus” are as flawed as the “HIV tests.” Viral Forensics plans to offer electron microscopy blood analysis to validate — or not — your test results. E-mail VF confidentially for details once the lab begins to take samples.
Alistair Mackinnon became an HIV and “hepatitis C” rethinker, or dissident, only after doing research for a post-graduate dissertation on hepatitis C at University of the West of Scotland in 2009. Before that, he had kept to the mainstream view on AIDS and hepatitis C, having himself tested positive for the alleged hepatitis C virus, HCV, in 1992. In the U.S. in the 1990s, he worked as an outdoor adventure therapist in drug and alcohol rehabilitation before “going inside” to do residential work with gang members on the south side of Chicago. He currently resides back in his native Scotland, where he is active in the Scottish independence movement and has been a leader in preserving an 1892 law that created a system of community farming. He also serves on a community council and a local drugs-and-alcohol forum.