Walter Last See book keywords and concepts | Red beet is one of the key foods in preventing as well as curing cancer; it is equally important in the treatment of other degenerative diseases, such as chronic fatigue syndrome, characterized by reduced cell respiration.
When cellular energy is produced through the oxidation of nutrients, electrons and hydrogen ions are transferred onto the inhaled oxygen to produce water and energy. In cancer cells and in conditions of chronic fatigue, the respiratory enzymes that accomplish this transfer have been diminished or destroyed. | Kevin Trudeau See book keywords and concepts | This cancer and health area is so well-guarded, people are so hyper, that even though our bread ad in no way intended to imply that the bread had anything to do with curing cancer, it was taken that way by these paranoid groups.
Second, we competed in other business areas which may be of less influence, but nonetheless still have some power. These would be weight-loss aids and the bread industry. Third, we have the unelected bureaucracy itself who wants to grow and eventually have dictatorial powers. | Richard Gerber, M.D. See book keywords and concepts | Doctors may have once had the key to curing cancer with energy. But something happened to that priceless knowledge. Shortly after Vibrational Medicine was published in 1988,1 learned of some research on cancer treatment that was buried by orthodox medical opponents until recently. It appears that a possible cure for all types of cancer may exist in the form of specialized frequencies of eletromagnetic energy. A pioneering researcher of the 1930s named Royal R. Rife made the connection between cancer and electromagnetic energy his life's work. | Kenny Ausubel See book keywords and concepts | In private letters, the ten doctors made additional comments about their impressions: "That place does the best work in the field of curing cancer and many kindred conditions." "I am convinced that he has something for cancer." "They are doing more to relieve suffering humanity among cancer sufferers than all the other doctors in that city." "Doing very good work—the Hoxsey Clinic is genuine." "Curing about 50 percent of the cases." "The Hoxsey cancer cure is all it claims and more, for if the public knew the real facts of its value, there would be an uprising. | | Charged with a daunting deathbed patrimony, Harry Hoxsey dedicated himself to curing cancer. To accomplish the mission, he recognized he had to become a doctor. With no money and a widowed mother and sick sister to support, he focused on making a living at his medley of jobs. He returned home late every night to study for a high school diploma, which he gained by correspondence course. He deposited his earnings each week in a cigar box marked college. Tellingly, he also took a mailorder course in forensic medicine, the legal aspects of medical practice. | | I had heard about this man from southern Illinois who was being arrested for curing cancer and I didn't pay much attention. In the summer there was a notice on my fraternity brothers' board that there were jobs to be had. This was in the days of the Depression when it was hard to get a job, and they wanted students from the university to apply for jobs. I went down to a hotel and here was a young, robust, tall man giving a speech about selling pots and pans. I was fascinated by this man's speech and his drive. | | He was in Texas, according to the article, curing cancer and being put in jail for it. But he was making a lot of money and the AMA was in an uproar.
"Well, I picked up the phone and called him. It was just like no time had passed between. We had become real good friends. I liked the man, thought he was a great personality, a great human being with a big heart. He was such a salesman, so persuasive, that he convinced me to give up this luxurious conqueror's life in Berlin and return to Dallas to assist him in his battle with the AMA."
Burke returned to find Hoxsey thriving. | | But perhaps curing cancer is not even the fundamental issue. "Treatment is damage control," provocatively states Samuel Epstein, M.D., the author of 280 scientific articles and ten books, including the groundbreaking 1978 book The Politics of Cancer, which documented the link between industrial pollutants in the environment and rising cancer rates.
He estimates that 70 to 90 percent of cancers are caused by environmental and occupational exposure to carcinogens.1
In precise, rapid-fire British diction, Dr. Epstein makes an irrefutable case for concentrating foremost on cancer prevention. | John Robbins See book keywords and concepts | Many of the novel and innovative approaches to cancer may turn out in the end to be no more successful than orthodox treatments at actually curing cancer, but that doesn't mean they can't have enormous value to people with cancer. Methods that can mobilize patients' inner resources, add to their feelings of well-being and comfort, support their healing process, and also sometimes prolong their lives are no small achievement.
Even for people who are near death, activities that enhance health can provide wonderful benefits. | Bernie S. Siegel, M.D. See book keywords and concepts | My message is peace of mind, not curing cancer, blindness, or paraplegia. In achieving peace of mind, cancer may be healed, sight may be restored, and paralysis may disappear. All of these things may occur through peace of mind, which creates a healing environment in the body. Anyone who is willing to work at it can achieve it, and the first step is understanding—realistically, without guilt or self-pity—how the mind has contributed to the body's ills. This understanding can show you how you must change to be at peace with yourself. | Susun S. Weed See book keywords and concepts | Orthodox medicine rarely focuses on the immune system as a means of preventing or curing cancer. In fact, orthodox medicine urges women to detect and treat cancer with techniques known to suppress the immune system.
But building powerful immunity can help us remain cancer-free. Building powerful immunity is also an important part of treatment, whether alone or as complementary medicine. Immune system strengthening is especially useful against cancers initiated by viruses. (Epstein-Barr virus is associated with breast cancer.1 | Kenny Ausubel See book keywords and concepts | He mollified his sermon of hellfire with the balm of godly natural healing, and often ended his windy broadcasts by intoning, "God bless the quacks, the only quacks who are curing cancer."20 Winrod maintained that the Hoxsey treatment cured him as a child of a horrible neck cancer under the care of a Dr. Rochelle of Wichita, a friend of Hoxsey's father. He saw it as nothing less than an act of divine intervention that he was now situated to lift Hoxsey's righteous banner.21
In many ways the granddaddy of modern televangelism, Winrod was a voluble demagogue with a tainted past. | Ralph W. Moss PhD See book keywords and concepts | Johnson's 1754 "receipt" for curing cancer (see chapter 2).
Like other active plants, celandine is rich in alkaloids, which are among the most potent compounds known to man. (Only some bacterial toxins are more potent by weight.) These range from. 2,500 to 22,000 parts per million of the plant. There are three chemically different groups of alkaloids that have been extracted from the plant. The most prominent of these are chelidonine and chelerythrin, which is narcotic and poisonous.
Chelidonium is on James Duke's short list of folk anticancer species that contains active compounds. | Barrie R Cassileth, Ph.D. See book keywords and concepts | Practitioners describe reports of qigong curing cancer; reducing farsightedness and nearsightedness; and successfully treating sinus allergies, hemorrhoids, and problems of the prostate (all highly unlikely). Other reports indicate that qigong can lessen the pain of arthritis and migraine headaches and alleviate depression, reduce anxiety, and promote sounder sleep (very probable). | Bradley J. Willcox, D. Craig Willcox, and Makoto Suzuki See book keywords and concepts | These claims range from the ability to induce relaxation to slowing the aging process and curing cancer and cardiovascular disease. Buddhist and Shinto priests used tea to help stay awake through long bouts of meditation.
The evidence. These folkloric claims may actually have some basis in science. Once again it harkens back to the free-radical connection. The antioxidant EGCG (a catechin of the flavonoid class) is thought to be the most active component of tea's free-radical defense system. | Daniel B. Mowrey, Ph.D. See book keywords and concepts | Here, I will only discuss the research on the herb's possible role in curing cancer. Evidence shows that some people with certain types of cancer in certain stages of development may benefit from Chaparral, but it is not clear who may benefit, which cancers are most susceptible or at which stage of cancer development the herb is most effective. | G. Edward Griffin See book keywords and concepts | Based upon this perversion of truth, laws have been passed making it illegal to prescribe, administer, sell, or distribute Laetrile or to "make any representation that said agents have any value in arresting, alleviating, or curing cancer."^
1. Ralph Moss, The Cancer Industry; Unraveling the Politics (New York: Paragon House, 1989), p. xi.
2. "Closing the Books on Laetrile," New England Journal of Medicine, January 28,1982, p. 236.
3. See Section 10400.1, Title 17, of the Calif. Administrative Code. | Ralph W. Moss PhD See book keywords and concepts | This was particularly controversial, since it was illegal in South Africa at the time for non-medical personnel to try curing cancer with herbs (175). Davis's formula consisted of several crushed and dried herbs that were used in infusion form. At one time, its popularity in South Africa was similar to that of the Hoxsey, Essiac or Jason Winters formulas in the United States. It consisted of the following: The Davis Herbal Remedy
Scientific Name Common Name Part Used
Maytenus heterophyllus Maytens leaves
Scutia martina — leaves, roots
Sanseviera spp. | | Just scanning my book shelf I see such recent titles as Cancer Cure, curing cancer, The Man Who Cures Cancer and The Cure for All Cancers. I am awaiting delivery of a new title that deals in part with cancer. It is called Miracle Herbs.
Second, John Heinerman (who himself wrote a now out-of-print book on herbs and cancer) explained the economic dilemma this way:
"Publishers of health books generally like authors to include information that is safe, simple, and for everyday aches and pains. | Patrick Quillin, PhD,RD,CNS See book keywords and concepts | We have spent an extraordinary amount of money researching therapies that hold little promise in preventing or curing cancer. Much of our problem lies in our misconception about cancer: that blasting it out of the system is more appropriate than changing the underlying causes of the condition. That test tube studies with chemo drugs have anything to do with humanely curing a cancer patient. | Ralph W. Moss PhD See book keywords and concepts | For example, he learned that in 1926, the American Cancer Society (ACS) had offered a prize for anyone who could produce a valid method of preventing or curing cancer. They received many entries, 76 of which described putative herbal cures. Although the prize was never awarded, the ACS kept those letters in a dusty bin until the day that Hartwell requested them for his compilation of folk remedies.
Similarly, the NCI itself received scores of letters on reputed cures. | Margarita Artschwager Kay See book keywords and concepts | Another plant, Simmondsia chinensis (jojoba), may have proved to be disappointing—not curing cancer, treating sores, or helping childbirth (eighteenth-century expectations)—and is hard to find outside its normal range.
Many people are nevertheless turning to alternative medicine, disenchanted with the power of biomedicine and frightened by its cost; might it not be valuable for them to learn what is beneficial and what is dangerous in helping themselves with plants? And biomedical knowledge could be expanded. | Donald R. Yance, j r.,C.N., M.H., A.H.G., with Arlene Valentine See book keywords and concepts | The battling between proponents of different approaches to curing cancer only exacerbates the problem. The cancer establishment has characterized natural adjunctive therapies as the work of quacks, offering questionably "miraculous" cures to desperate and hopeless cancer victims, while the proponents of alternative therapies have depicted established therapies as a "cut, burn, and poison" approach that is completely profit-driven. Although I believe there is some kernel of truth in both these exaggerations, it is unproductive to stereotype either side in this way. Who benefits? | Ralph W. Moss, Ph.D. See book keywords and concepts | The recent identification of environmental oncogenic [cancer-causing] factors, some of them prenatal, some of them found even in the household, and their elimination are obvious and totally effective ways of curing cancer, before it develops (D'Angio, 1975).
The elimination of these cancer-causing substances might at first sight appear to be a simple and rational way to reduce the incidence of cancer. It may be rational, but it is certainly not simple. | | In September 1979, Mayo Clinic researchers announced that they had found large amounts of vitamin C ineffective in curing cancer or in alleviating pain in patients with advanced cancer (Creagan, 1979). The majority of these patients had first received chemotherapy and radiation. The researchers themselves granted that it was "impossible to draw any conclusions about the possible effectiveness of vitamin C in previously untreated patients" (New York Times, September 27, 1979). | | The Crisis of Credibility
Twenty years ago, there was tremendous optimism about curing cancer. America had put a man on the moon, and it was natural to ask whether the nation which could achieve that once-proverbial impossibility couldn't also conquer humanity's most dreaded disease.
Congress had appointed a blue-ribbon National Panel of Consultants on the Conquest of Cancer whose purpose, in the words of Senator Ralph Yarborough (D.-Tex.), was to "recommend to Congress and to the American people what must be done to achieve cures for the major forms of cancer by 1976. . . . | Ralph W. Moss, Ph.D. See book keywords and concepts | Coley, MD in the late 19th century of an all-natural method of treating and even curing cancer. As chief bone surgeon at Memorial Hospital (now MSKCC), Coley initiated a forty-year experiment in the use of bacterial toxins (mixed bacterial vaccine) in the treatment of cancer.
Coley's toxins are the starting point of all modern immunotherapy. They are the byproducts of two common bacteria, Streptococcus pyogenes and Serratia marcescens. In 1943, a National Cancer Institute scientist, M. J. | | The first study was announced in September, 1979 and claimed that large amounts of vitamin C were ineffective in curing cancer or alleviating the pain of patients with advanced disease (8).
Pauling complained that this test was invalid because the Mayo patients had previously received chemotherapy, which undermines the body's ability to fight disease. And so, the Mayo scientists performed the study again, this time on patients who had not received prior chemotherapy. Once again, they claimed that vitamin C had no effect on the outcome of cancer (9). | Ralph W. Moss PhD See book keywords and concepts | Little is known about her, but she is sometimes said to have been an herbal practitioner with a reputation for curing cancer. In the end, the House of Burgesses awarded Mrs. Johnson the £100 for her efforts. Apparently, in their view, the cancer puzzle had been solved.
Mrs. Johnson's formula is no secret. "Take a peck of garden sorrel (Rumex acetosa), and better than half as much celandine (Chelidonium majus); beat them in a mortar and express the juice through a fine cloth into a pewter basin. |
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