Should we make ANY plastics that are not biodegradable?
Is the petroleum industry (which makes the plastics) hiding behind the “global warming” scam?
Have they known about this problem and if so for how long?
Everyone has a Mission!
Should we make ANY plastics that are not biodegradable?
Is the petroleum industry (which makes the plastics) hiding behind the “global warming” scam?
Have they known about this problem and if so for how long?
Abstract
Scleroderma is a disease characterized by thickening and hardening of the skin. While most traditional and established treatments provide temporary improvement at best, remission is rare — and cure impossible. Furthermore, the various medications commonly prescribed have serious side effects. There is urgent need for better treatment.
Scleroderma is erroneously considered an incurable disease of unknown cause. This communication provides evidence implicating infectious bacteria as the cause of scleroderma; and proposes antibiotic therapy as a rational and beneficial treatment for this disease.
Continue reading ‘Bacterial Infection as the Cause of Scleroderma: A Guide to Antibiotic Therapy’
Abstract
Hodgkin’s disease (HD) is widely considered a neoplastic disease. However, for more than a century some investigators have considered HD an infectious disease, caused by pleomorphic bacteria closely related to the mycobacteria that cause tuberculosis. A recent report showing “intracellular bacteria” in HD, as well as a previous electron microscopic study showing intra- and extracellular “microorganism-like structures,” adds credence to the idea that bacteria are associated with HD. This communication provides a review of the largely forgotten literature pertaining to the complex microbiology of HD. Microphotographs of cell wall deficient and mycoplasma-like intracellular and extracellular forms, observed in vivo in acid-fast stained microscopic tissue sections of HD, are also presented, as previously reported.
Abstract
In 1890 the pathologist William Russell reported spherical forms in histopathologic sections from cancer which he interpreted as “the parasite of cancer.” These forms were subsequently discredited as microbial forms but have became known to every pathologist as “Russell bodies.” Identified in a wide variety of disease states, these forms are now widely considered to be immunoglobulins. This paper reviews the case for Russell’s original belief that these forms are microbial in nature and in origin. It is theorized that Russell bodies are derived from bacterial-sized intracellular organisms that have been reported in cancer, proliferative, and inflammatory diseases by various authors over the past century. It is also suggested that some larger-sized Russell bodies could represent large L-forms (so-called “large bodies”) that develop from the small coccal-sized intracellular and extracellular microbes described in cancer. Obviously Russell’s idea of a cancer parasite is heretical. However, newer findings of the universal presence of cell wall-deficient bacteria in the blood of all human beings should lead to a reconsideration of the idea that such bacteria might be implicated in the pathogenesis of cancer. Furthermore, Russell bodies might represent cell wall-deficient growth forms of these universal bacteria in histopathologic sections and support Russell’s nineteenth century view of an infectious agent in cancer.
Continue reading ‘The Russell Body: The Forgotten Clue to the Bacterial Cause of Cancer’
A proper understand of the disease and its causes is necessary to properly answer the question.
Suppressed and Forgotten Research Could Hold the Key to a Cure for this Dread Disease
Abstract
Bacteria in the form of previously described “cancer microbes” were identified in a Fite (acid-fast)-stained histopathologic tissue section from a case of prostate adenocarcinoma in a 68 year-old, HIV-negative Italian-American man with a concomitant history of a solitary skin lesion of classic Kaposi’s sarcoma. The pleomorphic bacteria observed in vivo are consistent with so-called cancer-associated bacteria previously described in breast cancer, Kaposi’s sarcoma, and other forms of cancer, by various investigators over the past century. The proposed microbiology of cancer is discussed, as well as the new finding of the Kaposi’s sarcoma virus (human herpes virus-8) in the blood of up to 40% of patients with prostate cancer. Further studies of acid-fast bacteria in vivo and the KS virus in prostate cancer are sorely needed to further determine the possible role of these infectious agents in this common cancer of men.
According to this hypothesis based on years of scientific and clinical research, the cause of cancer is infection by a common fungus,Candida albicans. The good news is that it can be treated with a powerful antifungal agent that can’t be patented.
The leaders of the US, UK and Australia and the people and industries behind them are guilty of war crimes.
It’s just a matter of what we as the people of this planet are going to do to hold them accountable.
If the use of DU is not terrorism then please tell me what is.
Continue reading ‘America’s Use Of Radiological Weapons Calls For An International Tribunal’
Well, you don’t have to be a brain surgeon to figure out that applying a microwave oven to the side of your head on a regular basis could potentially be bad for your head. Yet another article on this aspect of corporate/bureaucratic crime. At least don’t fry your child’s brain even if you don’t mind yours sunny side up