Not at all. The technology has multiple patents on it and while they're in question it's still worth investigating if only to clear up the misconceptions involved with them.
Bleach and spuds, wtf are you people talking about?
You seem to have missed my point, so I hope you read (and re-read if necessary) Splossy's response above too. Bleach and spuds were brought up because
anybody reasonable and sane can see that they're silly, and would consider it reasonable to dismiss them out of hand without wasting time on further testing. The fact that you or I may lack the medical knowledge to evaluate blood electrification out of hand does not change the fact that people who
do have the medical knowledge appear to consider it as unpromising as bleach and spuds.
A patent does not make anything worth investigating if the thing appears to a reasonable and knowledgeable person as worthless. If you think patents make something workable, useful or reasonable, you're not only mistaken, but missing a treasure trove of humor. Do some searching on the internet some time for weird and silly patents.
The idea that the idea was suppressed because of corporate greed or cabal is common conspiracy theory crap. If someone could find, and patent, a cure for aids that actually worked, they could make a fortune even if they could cure it in a single visit for a dollar a pop; they'd be heroes and they'd almost certainly win a Nobel Prize in the bargain. The idea that nobody in the world is willing to take up and implement an actual, workable cure is silly. After all, the people who developed it could be doing that right now. If they got results that could stand up to peer review, they'd have it made no matter how strange and unconventional the treatment appears.
It's obvious from the material we've seen here on this thread that it was
not suppressed. It was
dismissed, and that's a very different thing.