the-truth-about-cancer

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andrew.j.green
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The Truth About Cancer two, and she was well loved by the media. She was the first great media star. She knew how to use the media. She knew how to call press conferences. And she announced radiation is the cure to cancer to the media. Beard was this nerdy, ivory tower scientist who thought the media was a bunch of morons, had no use for them and no use for his critics. He wasn’t maybe the most diplomatic person who ever lived. Madam Curie knew how to nurture the media. So all over the world Madam Curie, the great beloved—you know, she was the first woman to get a PhD in theoretical physics at the University of Paris. So she had this extraordinary history and movies had been made about her. And the press loved her. Who cared about Dr. Beard and pancreatic enzymes. Well nobody apparently. So it was book one unheated. Radiation came into the forefront of cancer treatment. Of course, Madam Curie was completely wrong on all counts. It isn’t nontoxic. In fact, she herself died as a result of radiation exposure. She died of aplastic anemic caused by radiation. Most tumors that regress come back very quickly, more deadly. And it was only a few cancers actually responded to it. So radiation was not the simple, easy, non-toxic way of treating all cancers. She was wrong. But by that point by the time scientists realized that, you know, hundreds of them died. Hundreds of scientists involved with radiation died because of their cavalier exposure to radiation thinking, you know, it’s invisible so it’s safe. Madam Curie’s notebooks from the late 19 th century are still too radioactive to be handled without protection. They will continue to be until at least 3511. Dr. Nicholas Gonzalez: To answer your original question, the three components, individualized diet, individualized supplements, large doses of pancreatic enzymes, the third component is detoxification, which is often the proponent—the component of the therapy that elicits the most grins and mockery from conventional doctors. But it’s really very simple. When Kelly was treating himself he was taking the pancreatic enzymes and tumors were breaking down and that’s when he got really sick, almost life threateningly sick. First, they thought the enzymes weren’t working anymore but then he realized the tumors are shrinking. I’m getting sick. And then he realized I’m reacting to the tumor waste. And indeed conventional oncologists know today in 2014 that The Quest for The Cures Page 150

Episode 6: What Would Doc Do nothing is more toxic to the human than dead cancer. In fact, chemotherapy, though it doesn’t work for most cancers, does work for some like Hodgkin’s and certain leukemias. And in a Hodgkin’s patient if you break a tumor down too fast with chemo you’ll kill the patient from the dead tumor. And they call it tumorlysis syndrome. it’s recognized in the textbooks, all my textbooks, conventional textbooks, talk about it. Well, Kelly recognized that back in 1963 when he was trying to get over his own cancer. And he started going into the literature as he always did. He was a great scholar. He would go into the literature trying to find some technique that would help his liver and kidney work better. The liver and the kidney are the body’s main detoxification organs. That’s for environmental chemicals, our own metabolic waste and in the dead cancer process neutralize and prepare for excretion. And he opens up the Merck manual and lo and behold there are coffee enemas. You know, the interesting thing or the sad thing is, the ironic thing, Kelly was brutalized in the media for his use of coffee enemas and we get attacked about it today too. But they come right out of the conventional medical literature. He didn’t learn about it from alien space beings, you know, injected into his brain through some mystic psychic experience. He didn’t learn about them through some alternative throw away journals or something else. He learned about them from the conventional medical textbooks. The Merck manuals is a ______ [00:09:27] and most conventional therapies. And they were in the Merck manual. Coffee enemas were in the Merck manual right up until the 1970s. And when I was doing my investigation of Kelly, the trained investigative reporter that I was, I called up the editor of the Merck manual then and had a talk with him. And he said the only reason they were taken out is we get kind of folksy and we had all this high tech stuff to use. And he had files on coffee enemas which he sent me. And dozens of studies from the 20s and the 1930s and 40s at major institutions where they’re using coffee enemas for a variety of things-- arthritis, mental illness. I have a study from the New England Journal of Medicine, the preeminent medical journal in the US, 1932 from Harvard Medical School, a good of research psychiatrists successfully treatable, what we today call bipolar illness, in those days they call it manic depressive, with enemas. And they’re hypothesis was that they were toxins from the intestinal track that were polluting the mind and that’s what was causing the mental illness. And they put these people on enemas and colonics and they got well and they got them off medication and out of the hospital. It was in the New England Journal. I have a copy, 1932. I have a study from Uruguay, just because it’s Uruguay doesn’t mean they weren’t serious scientists and people downplay it. It was not from Boston. It was a good study of patients with septic shock, in those days The Quest for The Cures Page 151

Episode 6: What Would Doc Do<br />

nothing is more toxic to <strong>the</strong> human than dead <strong>cancer</strong>. In fact,<br />

chemo<strong>the</strong>rapy, though it doesn’t work for most <strong>cancer</strong>s, does work for<br />

some like Hodgkin’s and certain leukemias. And in a Hodgkin’s patient if<br />

you break a tumor down too fast with chemo you’ll kill <strong>the</strong> patient from<br />

<strong>the</strong> dead tumor. And <strong>the</strong>y call it tumorlysis syndrome. it’s recognized in<br />

<strong>the</strong> textbooks, all my textbooks, conventional textbooks, talk <strong>about</strong> it.<br />

Well, Kelly recognized that back in 1963 when he was trying to get over<br />

his own <strong>cancer</strong>. And he started going into <strong>the</strong> literature as he always<br />

did. He was a great scholar. He would go into <strong>the</strong> literature trying to find<br />

some technique that would help his liver and kidney work better. The<br />

liver and <strong>the</strong> kidney are <strong>the</strong> body’s main detoxification organs. That’s for<br />

environmental chemicals, our own metabolic waste and in <strong>the</strong> dead<br />

<strong>cancer</strong> process neutralize and prepare for excretion.<br />

And he opens up <strong>the</strong> Merck manual and lo and behold <strong>the</strong>re are coffee<br />

enemas. You know, <strong>the</strong> interesting thing or <strong>the</strong> sad thing is, <strong>the</strong> ironic<br />

thing, Kelly was brutalized in <strong>the</strong> media for his use of coffee enemas<br />

and we get attacked <strong>about</strong> it today too. But <strong>the</strong>y come right out of <strong>the</strong><br />

conventional medical literature. He didn’t learn <strong>about</strong> it from alien space<br />

beings, you know, injected into his brain through some mystic psychic<br />

experience. He didn’t learn <strong>about</strong> <strong>the</strong>m through some alternative throw<br />

away journals or something else. He learned <strong>about</strong> <strong>the</strong>m from <strong>the</strong><br />

conventional medical textbooks. The Merck manuals is a ______<br />

[00:09:27] and most conventional <strong>the</strong>rapies. And <strong>the</strong>y were in <strong>the</strong> Merck<br />

manual. Coffee enemas were in <strong>the</strong> Merck manual right up until <strong>the</strong><br />

1970s. And when I was doing my investigation of Kelly, <strong>the</strong> trained<br />

investigative reporter that I was, I called up <strong>the</strong> editor of <strong>the</strong> Merck<br />

manual <strong>the</strong>n and had a talk with him. And he said <strong>the</strong> only reason <strong>the</strong>y<br />

were taken out is we get kind of folksy and we had all this high tech stuff<br />

to use. And he had files on coffee enemas which he sent me. And<br />

dozens of studies from <strong>the</strong> 20s and <strong>the</strong> 1930s and 40s at major<br />

institutions where <strong>the</strong>y’re using coffee enemas for a variety of things--<br />

arthritis, mental illness. I have a study from <strong>the</strong> New England Journal of<br />

Medicine, <strong>the</strong> preeminent medical journal in <strong>the</strong> US, 1932 from Harvard<br />

Medical School, a good of research psychiatrists successfully treatable,<br />

what we today call bipolar illness, in those days <strong>the</strong>y call it manic<br />

depressive, with enemas. And <strong>the</strong>y’re hypo<strong>the</strong>sis was that <strong>the</strong>y were<br />

toxins from <strong>the</strong> intestinal track that were polluting <strong>the</strong> mind and that’s<br />

what was causing <strong>the</strong> mental illness. And <strong>the</strong>y put <strong>the</strong>se people on<br />

enemas and colonics and <strong>the</strong>y got well and <strong>the</strong>y got <strong>the</strong>m off medication<br />

and out of <strong>the</strong> hospital. It was in <strong>the</strong> New England Journal. I have a<br />

copy, 1932.<br />

I have a study from Uruguay, just because it’s Uruguay doesn’t mean<br />

<strong>the</strong>y weren’t serious scientists and people downplay it. It was not from<br />

Boston. It was a good study of patients with septic shock, in those days<br />

The Quest for The Cures Page 151

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