![]() But I think that is more to do with just the one semester at journalist school than anything else.īS:As a non-gay male AIDS reporter and Westerner investigating Africa, did you have to deal with identity politics?ĬF: I never got that kind of guff from any Africans, certainly from the gay community. NOT the fact that you did not earn more money. The damage and the blight Celia? Oh poor you and your poor family! How many of your denialist chums have died? How many people who have listened to your warped rhetoric are now dead because they did not access the treatments that could have prolonged their life? That is the damage and that is the blight Celia. But it’s unanswerable… What I wish I had done differently, in retrospect, was to calculate the damage and the blight, both on myself and on my family and ask myself, “Is it fair to do to others?” Because what you actually do is you invite financial ruin. Not only do you admit to having no substantial education as a journalist but you make it perfectly clear that you are not a scientist.īS:Do you wish you had taken a different approach reporting? Is there anything you would have done differently?ĬF:My quick answer is usually yes, of course. Good to see that you spent a hell of a lot of time earning the title of journalist!!!ĬF: It is not for me to say as a journalist - as a nonscientist - what causes or doesn’t cause AIDS. I took one semester of journalism in college. I don’t think I’ve ever said that HIV does not cause AIDS. I have never written that HIV does not cause AIDS. So how would you describe your views?ĬF: Thank you for noticing that critical detail. No Celia is an expert in very publicly stitching herself up! The following extracts from an interview are taken from bookslut all comments in bold are my own observations:īS:You are constantly described as an AIDS dissident that does not believe HIV causes AIDS - but nowhere in your book is this explicitly stated. Really she is nothing more than a person who gets paid for spreading HIV denialist propaganda. ▶ Commercial use requires explicit permission, as per Creative Commons.Ĭelia Farber claims to be an investigative *ahem* journalist. Follow on Instagram: Camera: Olympus OM-D E-M10 II. Follow on Twitter: Follow on Facebook: YoursForGoodFermentables. ▶ For a larger image, type 'L' (without the quotation marks). The species has few pests or diseases outside its native range and is widely naturalized and classified as an invasive species in parts of North America." It was once commonly planted in cemeteries in parts of the Southern United States and naturalized periwinkle may indicate the presence of graves whose other markers have disappeared. ▶ " The periwinkle species is commonly grown as a groundcover in temperate gardens for its evergreen foliage, spring and summer flowers, ease of culture, and dense habit that smothers most weeds. The blossom appears larger in the image than it did in 'real' life. Dwarf periwinkle ( Vinca minor) growing wild, in.
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