Thursday, January 29, 2015

Cancer: The Forbidden Cures

At the 23-minute mark the "forbidden cures" begin to be reviewed, starting with Dr. Caisse's herbal cancer medicine which is still available at Amazon for about $33.  


Harry Hoxey's story begins at the 35-minute mark.  The documentary on Hoxey's fight against the medical establishment in the US is called "The Quack Who Cured Cancer." His book "You Don't Have to Die" is available at Amazon for a princely sum.  Hoxey was an ex-coal miner with an 8th grade education.  Was this why the medical elite went after him?  I do not claim to know this Cancer Cure Foundation, but it has been recommended by G. Edward Griffin.  According to Hoxey, he claims that his treatment can "cure" melanoma, the most serious and aggressive form of cancer.  My understanding of cancer is that it does not like highly concentrates of oxygen.  So, saturate your body with oxygen, starting with water.  If that's not enough, try 1 capful of hydrogen peroxide.  Then incorporate fresh-squeezed juices into your regime.  Charlotte Gerson, daughter of Max Gerson, recommends fresh-squeezed carrot juice.  It's got to be fresh-squeezed.  If you're relying on juice that's been sitting on a grocery shelf for a week, you'll miss the power of the enzymes, anti-oxidants, and so forth.  Hoxey had 17 cancer clinics operating across the country before the FDA shut him down.  Hoxey treatment has never been made available to Americans and it cannot be shipped legally into the country. Anyone wanting to get the Hoxey treatment must travel to his clinic in Mexico (and here) and can only get the amount necessary for their personal use. 



Maximillian Gerson's story begins at the 49-minute mark. Perhaps not the first, but noted for making public the connection between good health and nutrition.  

So Morris Fishbein of the AMA worked to shut Harry Hoxey's clinics down, forcing him to set up shop in Mexico, and he shut down Max Gerson's clinics.  To boot, Fishbein promote cigarettes as healthy.  What a creep. Max Gerson denounced the dangers of smoking at a time when the largest advertising contributor for the AMA was Philip Morris, the tobacco company, that was promoting its health benefits.    

Stephen Barrett is considered today's version of Morris Fishbein.  Barrett runs the site QuackWatch.  Here is a list of Gerson's published articles.

Ernst T. Kreb's story begins at the 104:30 mark.  He's responsible for asserting that B-17, the seeds of apricots and other similar fruit, has been one of the more effective remedies of breast, lung, colon, and prostate cancers. 

Friday, January 23, 2015

How Amazing Is Garlic?  Let Me Count the Ways
Garlic Versus the Developed World's #1 and #2 Killers
The research on Greenmedinfo.com shows garlic has value in 167 health conditions or disease symptoms, but the greatest density of research indicates garlic's role in preventing and/or treating Cardiovascular Disease and Cancers, the two primary causes of death within high-income countries.[27]   

This is an interesting finding. The drug industry has been fantasizing about a so-called 'polypill' for quite some time, an idea involving mixing various patented medicines together for a condition like heart disease (e.g. blood pressure, cholesterol, blood thinner), but to no avail. Patented chemicals have far too many side effects, so when you mix them together, you only compound their multitudinous chemical toxicities. Natural substances, on the other hand, and especially those which play a role in culinary traditions as "spices," appear to have the opposite karma. Namely, they have far more 'side benefits' than 'side effects.'

Garlic's cardioprotective effects include:
1.   Retards progression of arterial plaque[28] [29] [30]
2.   Beneficially decreases white adipose tissue, increases white adipose tissue around heart muscle.[31]
3.   Protects against clotting[32] [33]
4.   Positively modulates blood lipids[34],[35],[36]
5.   Vasodilator[37]
6.   Reduces blood pressure[38]
7.   Antioxidant[39]
8.   Endothelial Dysfunction[40] [41]
9.   Vascular Inflammation[42]

Here is a quick review of the cancers that garlic has been found to kill:
1.   Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia[43]
2.   Acute Myeloid Leukemia[44]
3.   Basal Cell Carcinoma[45]
4.   Breast Cancer[46],[47]
5.   Cervical Cancer[48]
6.   Colon Cancer[49]
7.   Endometrial Cancer[50] [51]
8.   Gastric Cancer[52] [53]
9.   Leukemia: Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL)[54]
10.     Liver Cancer[55] [56] [57]  [58]
11.     Lymphoma[59] [60]
12.     Melanoma[61
13.     Osteosarcoma[62]
14.     Pancreatic Cancer[63]

Garlic, like so many other complex foods, contains a wide range of phytocompounds that articulate at least 150 distinct physiological responses in the mammalian body (see our 157 pharmacological actions list on the Garlic Research page).

How can this be so?

One explanation is that all foods contain not only physical building blocks, e.g. carbs, proteins, lipids, and are not only a source of energy (caloric content), but contain gene and epigene regulatory information. There are 'packets' of energy and information contained within the conformational state of the biomolecules found within these plant tissues. Our co-evolution with the plant kingdom for the past half a billion years has resulted in the very genetic/molecular fabric of our body depending on certain key compounds from plants in our diet, delivered in natural form, not irradiated, overly-cooked, petrochemically-farmed. Garlic's ability to fit like a key, into many different types of locks (an impossible feat for monochemical 'magic bullets'), reflects an likely infinitely complex intelligence in the relationship between plant and animal species. Which speaks to how important foods are not simply as 'medicine,' but that from which our bodily health grows organically, and without which disease is a natural consequence.

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Mississippi Wants Eisenhower-Era Doctor to Quit


I like this story because it's about a guy who is committed to his original principles as a physician. Dr. Carroll Frazier Landrum, 88, attends professionally and intelligently to people who need his services.  Most of his clients are people he's been treating for years if not decades, many on medicare who prefer him as their doctor.  

The state of Mississippi is claiming that Dr. Landrum is incompetent because he works out of his car.  Landrum points out the meaning of that charge:  

At a recent hearing, Landrum said, he was labeled “incompetent” by the board. He said the charge is a catchall, one designed to avoid citing a specific occupational violation, and he maintains he’s done nothing wrong. He said he doesn’t recruit patients and only responds to those who have nowhere else to turn.

Correct.  It is a catchall.  But hopefully the charge will be difficult to stick given the love and support coming forward by all of his patients in his defense.  Here is one example:

Responding to the WLBT story, Margie Williams Divinity, a former registered nurse who said she has worked alongside Landrum in the past, wrote:
I beg the state board of medicine to allow Dr Landrum to continue practicing medicine. He is one of the smartest physicians still practicing. His knowledge base is vast. His diagnosis are always on point and he refers patients and always follow up with his patients. He cares about people, about treating them. He doesn’t care about all of the billing insurances and Medicare and all of the politics associated with medicine. He just wants to help people. He is still very sharp mentally at 88 probably because he did not let all of this political monopoly on healthcare stress him out by not continuing to partake. He is 88 y/o. Let him do what he enjoys and at the same time continue to serve his community…
And you have to love his background:
He grew up on a rural farm picking cotton during the Great Depression. After high school, he said, he was drafted into the Navy, where he worked as a sonar operator on a destroyer in the South Pacific. A stint in the Air Force during the Korean War followed, and then medical school at Tulane University came next. By the mid-1950s, he’d launched a private practice that has lasted for decades.

“After all these years, I still want to be like the small-town doctor who cared for us growing up — Dr. Coursey,” Landrum said. “He was good and always happy. There was never a time when he treated anyone like they were not someone.”

Sunday, January 18, 2015

Saturated Fats, Good; Trans-Fats, Bad














Ketogenic diet means eating lots of good fats and eliminating hydrogenated fats, sugars, high-fructose corn syrup, and high-glycemic carbs.
"Saturated Fat from Coconuts Is...Super Healthy"

Chris Wark writes . . .
In recent years coconut oil has made a comeback, as scientific research has proven that saturated fat from coconuts is in fact super healthy.
Saturated fats from plant sources like coconuts, olives, avocados, and some nuts are good for our cells, bones, blood, cardiovascular system, liver, immune system, and brain.
Coconut oil has even been shown to prevent colon and breast cancer in laboratory tests. 
It also assists in weight loss, which is why islanders who consume a lot of coconut in their diet are rarely overweight.
And coconut oil also great for your skin and hair.
Coconut oil has been shown to prevent and/or reverse Alzheimer’s and other neurodegenerative diseases. Dr. Mary Newport M.D. has a site called coconut ketones.com. It’s a great resource for more information about this.
Cooking with coconut oil is amazing.  It smells soooo good and adds delicious new flavor to everything from scrambled eggs to stir fry.  Cook with it once and you’ll be hooked.
Somedays I just eat a spoonful of coconut oil or coconut butter for a quick fix.
We’re so crazy about coconut oil, we buy Giant Tubs of the stuff!