The New York Native newspaper publisher, editor, and author of "The Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Epidemic Cover-up" discusses the politics and science of the AIDS and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome epidemics.
Here is an op-ed in the distinct perspective of Rebecca Culshaw's Substack, titled "We Need to Find AIDS Agent X," blending her skepticism of HIV causation, the call for a new nosology, and the push for an inflammation-based paradigm: We Need to Find AIDS Agent X For decades, the global scientific corpus has insisted that HIV is the singular engine of the AIDS epidemic. But the mountain of evidence disproving this hypothesis has become insurmountable for those willing to look with clear eyes. HIV, as I've exhaustively documented, is not the cause of AIDS. The persistence of this myth has stymied scientific progress and distracted brilliant minds from confronting the real medical crisis at hand: the syndrome we called AIDS continues, and the question remains—what does unite its many victims? If we are brave enough to abandon the failed paradigm, we encounter a new landscape: a paradigm defined by immune dysregulation, chronic inflammation, and a complex web of risk factors that go far beyond the so-called “old risk groups.” In this inflammation paradigm, immune collapse is not the punishment of viral infection, but the common consequence of a much broader array of insults—environmental, chemical, toxicological, and perhaps microbial in ways radically different than "HIV causes AIDS" ever allowed. The so-called “HIV risk groups”—gay men, intravenous drug users, hemophiliacs, and others—are merely the canaries in the coal mine of our toxic modern world. This shift in nosology demands the humility to admit that science does not have all the answers. It also demands the courage to pursue the most important question left unanswered by the failed HIV theory: if not HIV, then what? What, or who, is Agent X? Agent X may not be a single infectious agent at all. It may represent a constellation of exposures, a storm of chronic inflammatory insults interacting with individual genetic susceptibility. Or Agent X could be an entirely novel entity—perhaps a latent or mischaracterized pathogen that has escaped detection by those fixated on HIV's dogma. Unraveling this riddle will require new thinking, openness to environmental and iatrogenic explanations, and a scientific community willing to abandon prestige in service to truth. Those genuinely suffering from the set of conditions called "AIDS" deserve more than the circular logic and moralizing of the old paradigm. They deserve a rigorous, evidence-based investigation into what binds them together. We need to find Agent X—not only to bring clarity to AIDS, but to illuminate the broader epidemic of chronic inflammation, immune collapse, and deteriorating public health across the developed and developing world. Science must move on. Let us do the hard, honest work of identifying Agent X, so the next decade is defined not by denial, but discovery.
Here is an expanded, multi-act play dramatizing the philosophical conflict and personal effort to foster a paradigm shift in AIDS research. The Paradigm Shift: A Play in Three Acts Here are the three Characters Rebecca Culshaw – Mathematician and critic of AIDS orthodoxy Karl Popper – Philosopher of science, logic-driven Thomas Kuhn – Philosopher of science, historically minded The Colleague – A skeptical scientist (optional for Act II-III) Act I – The Summoning Setting: Culshaw's cluttered study at midnight. A window is open, letting in a cold breeze. Culshaw is hunched over papers. Suddenly, mysterious figures materialize. Popper (stepping closer): Rebecca, do you know why we have come? Culshaw (startled but curious): I sense you bear advice. Kuhn (smiling softly): Your struggle echoes in the halls of scientific history. Few have challenged entrenched paradigms and lived to see the world change. Culshaw: The AIDS narrative is unyielding. Criticism draws scorn, not reasoned dialogue. How do I crack this shell? Popper: Treat the theory as a scientific hypothesis. Identify its core claims. What would it take to disprove them? Ask the establishment this at every turn. Kuhn: Yet do not forget, paradigm shifts require more than refutation. You must nurture a community—make them feel the cracks and offer a new framework. Popper: Truth is not a popularity contest, Kuhn. Kuhn: But consensus rules until new puzzles make the old vision unbearable. Culshaw: You mean I need both: a demonstration of failure and a replacement vision? Popper & Kuhn (together): Precisely. Fade out. Act II – Testing the Fortress Setting: A scientific conference. Culshaw stands before a skeptical audience, including The Colleague. Culshaw: Suppose key HIV tests predict nothing about immune decline. Suppose AIDS definitions are shifting sands. What, then, does our theory become? Colleague: You twist anomalies into attacks. What of the millions of lives believed saved? Popper: (now imagined at her shoulder) Demand evidence. Show that lives were saved by measurable intervention, not just by post hoc rationalization. Kuhn: Frame your findings as questions that the current theory cannot answer. Let the audience witness the struggle. Culshaw: Here are cases where test and disease do not align, where drugs harm, where predictions fail. This is not a collection of quirks—it is a crisis. Colleague: Science will patch these gaps. Popper: Only if the patches themselves are testable—not ad hoc excuses. Kuhn: And as the failures accumulate and the story loses coherence, your role shifts. Offer new lenses through which researchers can view their puzzles anew. Culshaw: I will. Here is a framework where immune collapse arises from multifactor exposures, not a virus. Here predictions become clear, testable, vulnerable to refutation. Colleague (uncertain): It is bold, but is it enough? Popper: Make it falsifiable. Kuhn: Make it irresistible. Fade to black. Act III – Turning the Tide The Setting: Culshaw's study, months later. She pores over data. Papers about her new model are being discussed worldwide. Popper: Are your ideas withstanding scrutiny? Culshaw: Some have tried to refute them. Some admit their theories don't predict as well. Kuhn: Is a community embracing the new framework? Culshaw: Slowly. Some see the anomaly pattern. Some consider new research. The old guard resists—naturally. Popper: The measure is not in popularity, but precision. Do not shy from critique. Kuhn: And always tend to the new paradigm's coherence. Invite others to build upon it. A real shift is communal. Culshaw: Thank you, Karl. Thank you, Thomas. Let science decide—through rigor, vision, and openness—not through the chill of consensus alone. Popper and Kuhn fade, their voices echoing: Popper: Progress thrives on falsification. Kuhn: And transformation blooms with imagination. Culshaw, alone, presses onward, her desk now a beacon among the cluttered battleground of ideas. End.
Rebecca Culshaw Smith's Substack, “The Real AIDS Epidemic,” highlights core criticisms of mainstream HIV/AIDS theory, medical testing, pharmaceutical practices, and challenges to scientific orthodoxy. Based on her popular posts, interviews, and thematic content, these are 20 of the most important ideas advanced on her platform: 1. Questioning the existence of HIV as a unique virus, arguing that classic virological isolation (Koch's postulates) has not been fulfilled. 2. Highlighting the non-specificity and cross-reactivity of HIV antibody tests, leading to potential misdiagnosis. 3. Criticism of “viral load” PCR tests for not detecting whole pathogens but only RNA fragments. 4. Noting the shifting criteria for HIV test positivity over time, calling diagnostic standards into question. 5. Documenting long-term “non-progressors” and “elite controllers” who remain healthy without antiretroviral therapy. 6. Raising awareness of AIDS-defining illnesses in HIV-negative individuals and questioning causality. 7. Arguing that hazard from AIDS medications (e.g., AZT, Truvada, Prep) may outweigh their benefits, especially due to their toxicity and inconsistent trial results. 8. Critique of the marketing and deployment of pre-exposure prophylaxis (Prep), calling it a pharmaceutical “scandal” targeting people not at significant risk. 9.Exploring how COVID-19 public health narratives mirror what she views as deception and fear tactics from the AIDS era. 10. Disputing the epidemiological narrative that AIDS is globally caused by a single infectious agent, and highlighting massive regional/demographic inconsistencies. 11. Exposing groupthink, censorship, and reputational shaming used against scientists questioning the HIV/AIDS paradigm. 12. Emphasizing failures of antiretroviral therapy in preventing disease progression for many patients. 13.. Explaining the statistical and mathematical problems in foundational HIV/AIDS research and the “shaky foundation” of guiding studies. 14. Arguing that AIDS-defining diseases may often reflect toxicity, malnutrition, or existing comorbidities, not a distinct viral syndrome. 15. Linking historical and social factors (such as drug use, pharmaceutical incentives) to the creation and persistence of the HIV/AIDS establishment. 16. Alerting readers to issues of false positive antenatal screening and broader concerns about mass diagnostic testing in medicine. 17. Suggesting that “virus-like particles” in the body are misidentified as pathogens, not proof of HIV's existence. 18. Forecasting that advances in AI and technology may help overturn scientific “consensus” by increasing transparency and debate. 19 Publicly refuting hit pieces and attempts to “cancel” her work as ideological suppression, not science. 20.Advocating for a return to fundamental scientific rigor and genuine skepticism in medical research, especially around virology and public health narratives. These topics synthesize her core objections to HIV/AIDS orthodoxy and frame her Substack as a point of dissent and critique against modern medical paradigms and their social consequences.
From Perplexity A.I. A close look at the facts about Kaposi's Sarcoma may cause a major shift in the AIDS PARADIGM. If autopsy studies—such as those reported by George Hensley—found that nearly all AIDS patients show internal Kaposi's Sarcoma (KS) lesions, yet not all such patients test positive for HHV-8 (Human Herpesvirus 8), this discrepancy fundamentally challenges the prevailing theory that HHV-8 is the sole and necessary causal agent for KS in AIDS. Evidence from Autopsy Studies Hensley's team found KS-like lesions in about 95% of AIDS autopsies, far exceeding the clinical diagnosis rate and implying KS is almost universal internally among AIDS patients. These autopsies revealed a broad morphologic spectrum and inflammatory variants of KS present in nearly all risk groups, independent of external symptoms. HHV-8 Positivity is Not Universal The scientific literature overwhelmingly associates HHV-8 with most cases of KS, detecting viral DNA in a majority of lesions. However, case reports and pathology studies document KS-like tumors in HIV-positive patients that are negative for HHV-8 by immunohistochemistry—a finding dubbed “atypical spindled endothelial proliferation,” with classic histologic and clinical features still matching KS. This existence of HHV-8-negative KS challenges the central paradigm tying KS causation strictly to HHV-8, especially when these lesions are indistinguishable from those found in HHV-8-positive patients. Implications for the Role of HHV-8 If widespread KS lesions occur in AIDS patients regardless of HHV-8 status, it raises questions about the sufficiency and necessity of HHV-8 for KS pathogenesis. The data suggest that either: KS can arise independently of HHV-8, possibly due to immune dysfunction, chronic inflammation, or exposure to other infectious or environmental agents, or Current HHV-8 detection methods may miss variants or low-level infections, or that HHV-8 acts in concert with other pathogenic factors, not alone. This challenges therapeutic and diagnostic practices that rely solely on HHV-8 as a biomarker or causal link and opens a line of inquiry: Are there alternative mechanisms or cofactors in KS development—particularly in the unique immunological milieu of AIDS? Overall, the autopsy data and reports of HHV-8 negative KS suggest that the role of HHV-8 in Kaposi's Sarcoma—especially in the context of AIDS—is not as clear-cut or exclusive as often assumed. This demands a re-examination of KS pathogenesis in immunosuppressed populations and a more nuanced model that allows for multiple contributing factors.
Why the radio silence about Dr. Rebecca Culshaw Smith? Perplexity A.I. explains.
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HIV & AIDS - Is HIV Guilty? If HIV is not the sole cause of AIDS, then the effort to fight the disease is in chaos. In fact, we wouldn't even know what disease-or how many different diseases-we are fighting. HIV is the glue that holds together an amorphous syndrome of usually common and nonlethal ailments that are hitting uncommon groups of people or becoming strangely lethal. If HIV is not the sole cause of AIDS, then five years of desperate searching for a way to kill a virus in already infected people-a feat that has never been accomplished with any virus-might have been spent more productively on another course of research. For scientists, the idea at this late date that HIV is not a lone assassin is the worst possible news. In the bars outside medical conferences and in off-the-record conversations, dozens of AIDS researchers admit they are disturbed by the persistent failure of the most monumental medical research effort in the nation's history to yield clear proof that HIV is a lone assassin. Yet in public, and on-the-record, few will express those doubts. "I'd bet my professional reputation that something more than HIV is involved in this disease," said one federally funded AIDS researcher. "But I wouldn't bet my grants, my ability to work." If there is fear about questioning the established line of thought, it is not because there is any conspiracy against skeptics: It is the intuitive understanding that the last thing anybody wants to hear is what the skeptics are saying. It is just too scary. "What epidemiologist or federal official wants to admit that the entire thrust of research and education might be misguided?" asks Robin Haueter, an AIDS activist in New York City. "What person with AIDS wants to consider the horrendous thought that we have wasted five years of research, that the end might not be anywhere in sight?
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Listen to more Musica Amente songs on Spotify. 1. Intangible 2. D-Day 3. Pack of Lies 4. Science 5. When I Hear You Sing 6. A Heart Must Die 7. Your Best Days 8. My Other Half 9. I Never Thought You'd Die 10. Intangible (Closing Version)
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(7) Live with Rebecca Culshaw Smith - by Rebecca Culshaw Smith
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These two Musica Amente songs, written for a friend who died recently, were composed with the help of Suno. A.I. But I wrote all the lyrics. Musica Amente's released songs are on Spotify.
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