i have read that after some years of being clean of HIV he picked it up all over again. so the question is open: did the TT not get it all, or was it intractable lifestyle that took him down? he wouldn't comment to me about that when asked in email. he did say that trials in africa that he had coordinated were ongoing and looking encouraging. i didn't know he had died. he was quite a soldier for his cause. i wouldn't be surprised if it turned out his HIV reccurence was engineered by gov't assasins. if his research is true and correct, they have a lot to deny and hide, and putting him down with apparent failure of the treatment would be the best way to dispose of him. but he probably just got it again from his buddies. nice to see you're here Duncan. hope you're still doing as well as the last report you made some time ago which was super impressive. i stopped reading almost all the lists except re silver and LDN naltrexone the past year or so. i think it was Ben Stein that proved Time = Money (he didn't say what happens as you approach the speed of light). bobL
_____ From: Duncan Crow [mailto:duncanc...@yahoo.com] Sent: Sunday, March 20, 2011 10:58 AM To: silver-list@eskimo.com Subject: RE: CS>EIS and Tick-borne diseases Seems Dr. Graves eventually died of AIDS. Obit: In March 2009 his suit against the government for disclosure of its role in the development of AIDS was accepted. The Justice Department is engaged, and lawyers have been assigned to the case. Soon after, his health began to deteriorate. The other thrust of Dr. Graves work was his interest in having a certain AIDS cure tested clinically. This was Tetracyl, a silver oxide, patented by Dr. Marvin Adelman as a cure for the HIV virus. The efficiency of this treatment has not been researched. Some patients have reported eradication of the virus, other, usually more advanced, cases have not responded. After March Graves continued to lose ground. He tried another injection of Tetracyl, but the results were not positive. He had a bone infection and his T-cells were down to 20. Valiently putting his life on the line for what he believed, he elected for one more Tetracyl before he resorted to retrovirus medications. Last Monday night he had severe chest pains and his excellent caretaker-boys took him to the hospital. Next morning he was intubated, comatose, and incommunicado. Thursday morning his sister called and said he had an intractable lung infection. He was to be put on "comfort care" at 2:30, meaning life support would be withdrawn and more morphine would be applied. He died that afternoon.