Gary Null Award-Winning Documentaries That Make A Difference
Gary Null say NO to GMO!!! part 1.mp4
Gary Null In Huntington - Knocking On the Devil's Door Screening
Dr. Andrew Wakefield response to the measles outbreak in South Wales
Forging his way through the predictable UK media censorship: Dr Andrew Wakefield Responds to Measles Outbreak in Swansea
Entries from January 1, 2013 - January 31, 2013
Vaccination: An Analysis of the Health Risks By: Gary Null, Ph.D., and Martin Feldman, M.D.

For more than a hundred years, two basic assumptions have been put forth by public health officials. One is that vaccines are safe. The second is that vaccines are effective for the conditions for which they're given. The public and our legislators have, by and large, accepted these assumptions as true, and as a result it is now compulsory in many states that children have as many as 33 separate inoculations before entering school. Some of these are given as early as the first few weeks of life. We've been told that the end of polio, for example, as a serious health threat is due to mass inoculation programs, and again we have accepted the official dogma without question. But as we shall see, this is not exactly the truth. What's more, a disturbing reality that generally has gone unrecognized is the ever-growing number of people suffering adverse reactions to vaccinations. These individuals are predominantly infants and children, and the problems they've incurred as a result of vaccination go far beyond sore arms and transitory fever: Conditions such as autism, attention deficit disorder, minimal brain dysfunction, and other biochemical and neurological abnormalities have been linked to the effects of vaccines. Most tragically, so has SIDS-Sudden Infant Death Syndrome.











The Pain, Profit and Politics of AIDS

In the May 4, 1984 issue of the prestigious journal Science, one of the most important research papers of the last quarter century was published. “Frequent Detection and Isolation of Cytopathic Retroviruses (HTLV-III) from Patients with AIDS and at Risk for AIDS” would rapidly become the medical Magna Carta for the entire gold rush to develop diagnostic methods to identify the presence of HIV in human blood and to invent pharmaceutical drugs and vaccines in a global war againstAIDS. This paper, along with three others published in the same issue of Science, was written by Dr. Robert Gallo, then head of the Laboratory of Tumor Cell Biology (LTCB) at the National Cancer Institute (NCI) inBethesda,Maryland, and his lead researcher Dr. Mikulas Popovic. To this day, this article continues to document the most cited research to prove the HIV hypothesis in scientific papers and places like the nation’s Centers of Disease Control (CDC) website.
The Gary Null Menopause/Andropause Study

Menopause can be defined as the conclusion of the female reproductive phase of life. In most women, the onset of menopause occurs between the ages of 45 and 50, but it has been known to occur anywhere from age 40 to 60. In addition, menopause can be provoked at an earlier time due to uterine ovarian surgery, or certain types of illnesses. Menopause is characterized by the decreased functioning of the ovaries, which results in reduced quantities of the hormone estrogen in the body. Not just a discrete event, menopause is actually a process, one that lasts several years, or even a decade.
Gary Null: The Poultry Explosion

The Poultry Explosion. Chicken and turkey have become highly over-rated foods in recent years as handy replacements for fatty red meat. The exposure of the many health risks of eating red meat led us to seek alternatives. Poultry has since enjoyed a popularity wildly surpassing its reserved 1950s image as “Sunday chicken dinner,” or as annual Thanksgiving turkey dinner. (Note that cancer rates have soared since those days, and many believe our contaminated poultry supply may be partly responsible.) Americans now eat turkey or chicken every day, even several times a day.
Gary Null: Effects of Dairy

As wholesome as motherhood and apple pie? Most of us have been raised to think of cows’ milk as wholesome. We take it for granted. Throughout history, milk, coming as it does from “mothers,” tends to be a trusted symbol of nurturing and nutrition. We give it to our children. We are told that milk builds strong bones, yet “most research shows that dairy products are not beneficial to bone health”[501] at any age. The milk of one species is not designed to support the health of another. There are, for example, natural hormones in cows’ milk for the mother cow to pass on to her calf. When humans drink that milk, we ingest those strong hormones that are designed specifically to regulate the biochemistry of another animal’s system, not ours.
Caffeine: Psychological Effects, Use and Abuse By: Sanford Bolton, Ph.D. and Gary Null, M.S.

Caffeine, probably the most widely used drug, affects the psychological state of those who consume it. Abuse results in symptoms of caffeinism which include agitation, disorientation and a syndrome which may be mistaken for anxiety/neurosis. It is a habit-forming drug in which tolerance develops. It affects sleep in a dose related manner which is dependent on the daily caffeine intake, i.e., high users have less effect. Its central nervous system stimulation can cause pleasant effects with improved attention and concentration at lower doses. At high doses, the reverse may occur. Used judiciously, it may be a useful therapy in the treatment of hyperkinetic children. These and other effects of caffeine are discussed in this review article.