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These ten books presented in one collection are a monumental achievement in the history of journalism and critical thinking The first newspaper publisher and editor to take AIDS and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome seriously has written ten unique works that capture the truth about what we have been through for the last forty years and he provides us with a chilling warning about where we are headed. On May 18, 1981, Charles Ortleb’s New York Native, a small newspaper in Manhattan, published a story that turned out to be the very first report on the AIDS epidemic. The newspaper subsequently made AIDS its signature story by covering the epidemic from every conceivable angle. New York Native was mentioned twenty-two times in And the Band Played On, the bestselling history of the early AIDS epidemic by Randy Shilts. He praised New York Native’s “singularly thorough coverage of the epidemic.” He also wrote, “Because of the extraordinary reporting of the New York Native, the city’s gay community had been exposed to far more information about AIDS than San Francisco’s in 1981 and 1982.” Shilts also noted that New York Native “published the first report anywhere from a government official that the cause of AIDS had been discovered.” New York Native made history when it published Larry Kramer’s famous essay, “1,112 and Counting,” which many credit with the launching of the AIDS activist movement. The newspaper was cited in the stage and film versions of Kramer’s play, The Normal Heart. In an interview in New York Press, Nicholas Regush, ABC News producer, and author of The Virus Within, said that New York Native “did an astounding job” in its coverage of AIDS and he credited it with “educating him early on.” In a 1988 profile on Charles Ortleb titled “The Outsider” in Rolling Stone, Katie Leishman wrote, “It is undeniable that many major AIDS stories were Ortleb’s months and sometimes years before mainstream journalists took them up. Behind the scenes he exercises an enormous unacknowledged influence on the coverage of the medical story of the century.” New York Native’s Neenyah Ostrom was the only reporter to cover the emerging epidemic of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and its scientific and political relationship to HHV-6, the virus that continually threatened the prevailing HIV paradigm of AIDS. Hillary Johnson, in her groundbreaking book on Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Osler’s Web, wrote, “Ortleb, in fact, increasingly suspected the AIDS outbreak was merely a modest subset of the more pervasive immune-damaging epidemic disease claiming heterosexuals – chronic fatigue syndrome.” The breaking news these days seems to be vindicating New York Native’s reporting. This collection of ten books by Charles Ortleb (which are also available individually) contains forty years of journalism, history, philosophical thought, and imaginative writing about what he refers to as “an epidemic of lies” and “Holocaust II.” These books capture one of the great uncompromising minds of our time as he tries to convey in every way possible, the horror of what has been hidden from the public about the real science and politics of the one of the greatest public health crises in history. By the time you finish these ten unique books, you will have experienced an intellectual nuclear explosion that threatens to destroy every assumption you have about the epidemic you thought you knew. Welcome to your apocalypse.
eBook details
- Title: Apocalypse Then and Now: Collected Works 1980-2020
- Author : Charles Ortleb
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- Genre: Kindle Store,Kindle eBooks,Health, Fitness & Dieting
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