Health News Roundup #1
More incredible cancer stories, FDA settled in ivermectin lawsuit, a doctor admits she was wrong about COVID shots, a researcher who is aging at 2/3rds of the normal rate--world's slowest ager.
I’d like to do an occasional health news roundup since my queue of future posts has now reached over 60 and growing every day.
1. Cancer updates
It often feels scary to be a nobody taking on a billion-dollar industry using Substack. It took quite a bit of courage for me to post my “fenben may cure cancer” post over a year ago. But ever since I posted it, one confirmation after another has continued to roll in.
Exhibit A:
Celebrity Kevin Hennings, the host of a show called Florida Keys Fishing Guide, contracted stage 4 metastatic colon cancer. After surgery, radiation, and three years of chemo, he was put on hospice and told there was nothing more that could be done for him. Then his sister called and urged him to try fenbendazole. After six weeks on the drug, his tumor had shrunk to half its size. He had another scan eight weeks later that revealed no evidence of disease. His moving story is told in this Substack:
Exhibit B:
Paul Mann, a government intelligence analyst, was referred to hospice after ten rounds of radiation and six rounds of chemotherapy for metastatic cancer. Then he got a strange call from the friend of a friend, retired breast cancer oncologist Dr. Kathleen Ruddy. After talking for hours, she convinced Paul to try ivermectin for his cancer.
Before taking ivermectin, Paul was told the following by oncologists:
“You are completely full of cancer; you are well beyond any kind of surgery.”
“There’s no cure. We’re just trying to prolong things as much as we can.”
“We’ve done the best we can. That’s kind of all there is that can be done.”
After taking ivermectin, Paul is now in complete biological remission. Because of patients like Paul, Dr. Ruddy along with Dr. Paul Marik, have begun a clinical trial of over 500 cancer patients to test repurposed drugs such as ivermectin and fenbendazole.
You can read more about Paul’s story here:
Exhibit C:
John Ross was 51 when he was diagnosed with stage 3 colon cancer. He chose to do conventional chemo along with ivermectin and later fenbendazole. He also saw a functional medical physician named Dr. Molly James who gave him supplements. He is now in complete remission which is an unusual outcome since his type of cancer is normally incurable with chemo alone. John is now back to work full time overseeing a large construction crew.
Dr. James has another patient who chose not to do chemo and put his colon cancer into remission through ivermectin alone. You can read the full stories here:
Exhibit D:
Sometimes I envision my life as researcher as being on a continual scavenger hunt. One clue leads to another. It’s such an exciting life because every day I feel a little closer to understanding the miraculous, elusive human body.
Instead of following one researcher, I read as broadly as I possibly can. I do spend more time with some than others who prove themselves to be more reliable. But I never become too fixated on any one person, and that allows me to draw upon the strengths of many. As Proverbs says, “In the abundance of counselors there is wisdom.” I sometimes see surprising results that come from my wide reading.
This morning, a family member sent me a study from 2008 that I’d never seen before: Unexpected Antitumorigenic Effect of Fenbendazole when Combined with Supplementary Vitamins. It floored me. Researchers injected mice with a “well-established human lymphoma xenograft” in mice. In common language, this means that years of research have shown that when mice were injected with this kind of cancer, it behaves almost identically to a human with lymphoma.
The mice with this human-type lymphoma were divided into four groups and were given: 1) standard diet 2) standard diet plus fenbendazole 3) standard diet plus vitamins A, D, K, E, and B, and 4) standard diet plus fenbendazole plus vitamins A, D, K, E, and B.
The study’s abstract reads:
The group supplemented with both vitamins and fenbendazole exhibited significant inhibition of tumor growth.
This confirms my theory that I’ve become increasingly convinced of, that in order to beat cancer, you have to tackle it from two angles. First you have to weaken the cancer. This can be done through the ketogenic diet which starves the cancer of glucose, or from something such as ivermectin or fenbendazole. Then second, you need to strengthen the immune system to mount an attack against the cancer once it’s been weakened.
In case you missed this post a few months ago, Dr. Paul Marik just completed a free book compiling alternative cancer cures. He spent the last three years pouring over more than 1,200 peer-reviewed studies to compile the most comprehensive guide to fighting cancer without conventional chemo:
2. The FDA Settled in Ivermectin Lawsuit
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