Margi, cancer survivor, with a beautiful copper pendant in the Ancient Egyptian st deyle, a gift from a loving and committed Italian lady comrade, wife and mother
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I mostly agreed with this oncologist — see interview below “RT interview with Dr. David Agus”– though he is an obvious Jew (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Agus).
After 18 months of Margi and me battling her throat cancer, suffering both together from this awful situation, reading tons of literature about it,
….and using many supplements and alternative anti-cancer meds,
…and, (as it seems), beating it with the help of the truly magnificent, very white and almost jew-free Mayo Clinic,
….I can say that chemotherapy and proton-beam radiation therapy do sometimes work.
Much of what Dr. Agus says below does ring true to me, based on lots of experience.
The interviewer, Sophie Shevardnadze, also asks many good, based questions that educated laypersons have.
Margi is taking both cancer meds and supplements in pill form, which thrice daily I cut up and crush and give to her via a feeding tube.
The tube goes right through the abdominal-wall muscles into the stomach.
Margi had such nausea and throat problems (by July she could only open her mouth 1/4 inch, when things got really bad, and chewing got to be such agony for her — 8 out of 10 on a pain scale) that her weight fell from 120 to 82 pounds.
Before:
After (note the pained expression, but also that she is dressed well as always, and I think doctors are also more impressed by a patient who makes a nice appearance, not wearing just slovenly blue-jeans):
So a tube-insertion surgery, and then tubal feedings and “meds” prepared by me, became unavoidable.
I am haunted by this pain-revealing photo from March 2019, when her pain was 8 out of 10. This was Margi trying to smile bravely again for the camera, and she usually has such a beautiful smile. At 9 out of 10 on the pain scale, many patients commit suicide. No pain med can alleviate the pain more than part-way when the tumor itself, the “neoplasm,” this GROWTH, is pushing, bulging and squeeing up against a pain nerve. More than once I heard Margi crying in the other room, though she is a proud and tough woman of German and Scots-Irish heritage, and both her parents were very distinguished, proud, dignified, accomplished, respected people, as is their daughter today. There is nothing harder than to die of cancer — except maybe hearing your beloved groan and quietly weep. When a strong woman cries, you know it hurts.
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Margi, compassionate sometimes even to a fault, had me stop the car to rescue a confused mother turtle on the highway and get her to her lake.
She also lent from a small inheritance $20,000 to onetime revisionist bigshot Fred Leuchter, who welshed with royal insouciance on the loan without compunction or apology, misleading her deliberately as to his ability to repay the loan. She needed those funds for the anti-cancer meds which she took and has always had to pay for out of her pocket, uncovered by insurance.
You bet he’s smiling — $20,000 in cool cash
I was furious then and am furious now over this — stealing from a woman with advanced cancer. Leuchter knew very well he had no ability to repay the loan. Thank God that so many caring comrades donated to her via two 2019 cancer fundraisers, and to me as well, who buys her many anti-cancer meds via my Amazon account, and so I really, deeply appreciate the Amazon gift cards!!!)
(My FBI harasser calls me a “parasite” for getting $20 a DAY as a State of Michigan authorized cancer-caretaker — along with tens of thousands of other Michiganians — to help her with her three daily feedings and three medication sessions, and I am a “moocher” for getting $62 a MONTH in food stamps. Yeah, two dollars a day!)
Horrible radiation burns on her throat just a month ago — gone now
I inject both meds and fresh water for a rinse via big syringes into the valves. On the left is a bottle of water from a natural spring, located 14 miles away, and behind is a container of organic feeding formula and a whole carton of it.
A Dutchman actually twice donated $500 –until PP closed her account.
A former Rockwell-party stormtrooper has donated $88 every week for months now. That is a real hero.
I think there is a closet Nazi in pricing at Walmart.
And if, with your prayers and gifts, Margi continues to recover, I will have more time to do MY thing – the new Aryan religion to change our people!
I want to especially thank Margi — for loving and living with me, one of the most persecuted, FBI- and White-House-harassed, defamed, reviled, and destitute WN activists in the white world — when many attractive and intelligent men have “come on” to her, yet she chose to share her life with me since 2005 and support my mission to save our race.
Margi left a vacation home in Spain to return to me in 2012 and to this miserable cottage in the impoverished Appalachian town of Apollo, Pennsylvania, a dump which took months to clean up from its filthy, greasy, smoky, bug-infested condition. This was my life of luxury after my multimillionaire father disinherited me for being a national socialist and an open enemy of the Jews. And yet the FBI (and the WN who is at their mercy, Carlos Porter, having stupidly renounced his US citizenship, making him stateless) call me a mooch! Yeah — my (our) life has been so easy. 😉
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…..the RT interview with Dr. Agus
[Source: https://www.rt.com/shows/sophieco-visionaries/480200-multivitamins-cancer-enable-oncologist/]
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[Bold, italics and photos added by me, JdN]
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Biomedical research and high-end technologies are completely transforming the way we see, understand and treat diseases, including the plague of our times — cancer. We talked to one of the world’s most renowned oncologists, a man who has many famous people amongst his patients, Dr. David Agus.
Follow @SophieCo_RT
Instagram Sophieco.visionaries
Podcast https://soundcloud.com/rttv/sets/sophieco-visionaries
Sophie Shevardnadze: David, it’s so great to have you with us on our program. So as you know, it’s called Sophie&Co Visionaries and you are a true visionary in your field. So I got a lot of questions. I’m not a professional. So I’m going to ask you a lot of things that actually lie on surface, because that’s what most people are interested in.
David Agus: I’m ready.
SS: Okay, cool. So I have the statistic from the World Health Organisation, the latest one. And it says that actually [cancer] cases and the deaths are rising. And I’m thinking, we have so many new technologies, so much research has been done… Are we still losing the battle?
DA: No question about it. We’re losing the battle for two big reasons. One is we’re continuing to smoke. So tobacco is still the leading cause of cancer death worldwide. And we’re doing it. More women are smoking than ever. And while some rates are going down, in many parts of the world they’re going up. Second is all the new treatments that we have, which are really amazing — we could turn off on-switches in cancer, we can have your own immune system attack the cancer— but that just delays things. It doesn’t cure. It buys time, and it’s quality time. So I’m optimistic that we can control it, but we’re not going to be able to cure it. And in the end, people will still die of this horrible disease. We have our ways to go.
SS: So you’re saying cancer is incurable?
DA: I’m saying cancer is not curable, it’s controllable. If I told you you had diabetes, you don’t jump off a bridge, you go, “I’ll manage it.” Cancer is going to be the same way. To me, cancer is a verb and not a noun. You’re cancering. It’s something the body does, not something the body gets. So my job as a cancer doctor is to change you from a cancer state to a health state. That’s radically different from the old way of targeting the cell and blowing it up. I want to change you.
SS: It is a very interesting verb, cancer. Why does your body start to behave like that?
DA: Well, that’s a million-dollar or a billion-dollar question. The answer is we don’t know. We know inflammation, for example. It’s a state that’s associated with cancer. If you have inflammation in a lung from smoking, if you have inflammation anywhere in the body, that raises significantly your risk of cancer. So one of the best preventive things we have is blocking inflammation. There is a pill that, if you take it every day, reduces not the incidence, but the death rate of cancer by 30 per cent. It’s called Baby Aspirin. So an aspirin a day reduces inflammation and dramatically lowers the death rate of cancer.
SS: Are there any side effects? If you take one aspirin a day, would it be bad for something else?
DA: Well, the only thing aspirin does is it can upset the stomach and it slightly prolongs bleeding time. So in most people, that’s not an issue, but it’s something to discuss with your doctor. But in general, it’s remarkably safe. In the United States, if everybody does take a Baby Aspirin or should be doing it, 900000 excess people are alive in 10 years and we save 600 billion dollars in health care costs. The problem is we don’t do prevention. If I told you, Sophie, do something today that’s going to help you 10 or 20 years from now, you’ll roll your eyes on me.
SS: I will do it. What should I do? Take aspirin every day?
DA: Well, take your aspirin. You should think about taking a statin, which is the Lipitor-like drugs. And there are a lot of behavioural things.
SS: I don’t smoke. But what about secondhand smoking? Because I still get a lot of people around me who smoke.
DA: No question about it. I mean, we’re in a city now, in Russia, where people still smoke. And like it or not, you’re gonna get secondhand smoke here. There’s air pollution here. And, you know, so we are all at risk for cancer. I mean, cancer is still the number one or number two killer, no matter what country in the world you’re in.
SS: There’s this notion I’ve heard, which I thought was really interesting, that cancer is sort of like a living creature that fights for survival. What do you think of that?
DA: It’s an amazing thing if you think about it. This creature is out there trying to take all your nutrients. And in the end, the paradox is, if it kills you, it dies. But we can learn a lot from evolution on cancer. And that’s where we have to start to think. There are creative new ways that actually try to take advantage of that. You know, we can block new blood supply. That’s a way we treat cancer now. So we’re not targeting the cancer. We’re actually changing that. In breast cancer, one of the greatest advances in treatment isn’t a drug that targets the cancer, it’s a drug that changes the bone. It was meant for osteoporosis because breast cancer goes to bone. And if you change the soil, the seed doesn’t grow. Changing the soil stops it from growing. So we give a drug for osteoporosis. We dramatically prolong breast cancer. It’s an amazing finding.
SS: Also, like, logically, if you think about it, from what I understand, cancer cells are those that don’t die, and eventually that’s why people die.
DA: Right.
SS: But then a healthy person —he or she dies because their cells die out eventually when they get old. So if you study cancer, could we maybe find a key to immortality?
DA: Damn straight. I mean, that’s what we’re looking for and we’re learning. This is old adage: in order to understand peace, you have to go to war. And going to war with cancer has taught me a tremendous amount about other diseases and the human body and longevity. And it’s powerful. You know, there’s an amazing finding where if I walked through the streets of Moscow now and drew blood on a hundred people I would find eight of them would have the changes of leukaemia in the blood, yet they don’t have leukaemia. Because in order for them to have leukaemia, they need the DNA changes, but they also need an environment that’s receptive. And one of the biggest areas of growth in medicine in the future is to be targeting the environment, changing you so that cancer doesn’t want to happen.
SS: So has cancer itself always been around, and we just didn’t know what it was, or is it something that has appeared over the past century, two or three ago? Does it come with pollution? What everyone’s saying right now, “It’s all because we’re so polluted and we’re eating all those GMO’s, and that’s why we’re getting cancer,” apart from smoking and other reasons.
DA: If you look at the Egyptian mummies, most of them died of cancer. So cancer has always been there.
SS: How do you know?
DA: These mummies actually were preserved and we can see the cancer in their bodies. So we see they had breast cancer. They had lung cancer. They had prostate cancer. We have cases that are three, four thousand years old.
We look in nature at other animals and animals that live in the wild, many of them are dying from cancer also. So cancer’s there. What’s interesting is that cancer was made to knock us off.
Through evolution, we had our children by age 30 or 35. And cancer actually knocks us off and gives more resources to the next generation. So cancer is part of us. It was meant to happen.
*** JdN – I have to sort of agree
From a purely materialistic point of view, the telomers prove we are programmed to die.
From a spiritual and reincarnational point of view, we also need to die — to review our life, discuss it with angels, and then try again. Because most people refuse to be honest with themselves and change, and blame others for everything, they need up to one hundred lives (which means one hundred deaths, too) to graduate off this Wild West planet. 😉
https://johndenugent.com/?s=reincarnation
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And you and I have this crazy inflammatory system because we also died of infectious disease. Well, now we have antibiotics and antivirals and vaccines so we can tamper down that inflammation and live much longer and delay cancer significantly.
SS: So can you live with cancer, like you said in the beginning, in foreseeable future, like people live with diabetes now or with HIV? 20 years ago, if you had HIV, you thought you were going to die for sure. Now people live with this virus and they live normal lives. They’re active. They’re going to work. They have families. Can you do that with cancer, like live a long life?
DA: Four years ago, President Jimmy Carter in our country announced that he had melanoma, skin cancer that went to the brain.
(Talking about Trump voiding the 1980s Russian nuclear-arms deal)
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That’s a death sentence. He was put on a drug to block the “don’t-eat-me” signal on his cancer, allowing his own immune system to attack it. Now he’s still out preaching in church, educating children, building houses for the poor because his cancer is under control. And I think that’s an achievable goal.
You know, my life changed in the late 90s. I was a doctor at Sloan Kettering and I was with the head of the hospital, one of the great doctors, and I was his trainee. And into the room walked a twenty-five year old with germ cell tumor in the brain, the lung and the liver. And this kid, the doctor told him, “Hey, listen, you have months to live. I want you to spend your last couple of months with your mother, because you’re the son of a single mother and chemotherapy is only going to make you sick.”
This kid went and he did research (this was before Google) and he found out a doctor did an experiment where he put two platinum electrodes and put it in a gel and sent it to cancerous cells like electricity. But they didn’t care about electricity, but some of the platinum, the same thing in my wedding band, leeched off and killed some of the cells. So he said, “I want platinum.” So we gave him intravenous platinum. A year and a half later, he won his first of seven Tours de France. That was Lance Armstrong.
So, you know, Lance was given a death sentence and he’s alive today. Why? I’m not sure how platinum work, but it changed his body so the cancer didn’t want to grow. So yes, I think we can live long, healthy lives with cancer, not die from it right away.
SS: There are still so many ways I think that we still don’t know. Like you said about platinum. Who would have thought?
DA: It’s a complex system, you know. Anybody who tells you, “I can predict the weather and I know exactly what’s going to happen,” you know, they’re crazy. Well, the same is true in medicine. And so the great climate modellers look at the shape of the cloud, and from that, they can infer what’s going to happen. They don’t go up and measure 50 thousand variables. I think doctors are going to be more like climate modellers going forward than biologists. They’re going to look at these trends. You know, when you were a child, your mother would go like this and she would know if you were sick. She didn’t draw your blood and look at your lymphocytes and your cytokine levels and all of those. She just went like this. We have to get more ways like that. And I think in a sense, by looking at it as a system is how we’re gonna change things.
SS: You’ve mentioned President Carter and his immune system. I don’t know if it’s a myth or not, but I’ve been told by various doctors and patients that it is possible to cure and kill cancer itself. But the fact is that with many alternative ways of treatment, you have to put one’s immune system to almost zero in order to actually try that treatment on a person so that the person’s organism doesn’t resist whatever treatment they are getting. And then the cancer dies but the person’s immune system is so destroyed that that’s why they don’t survive and die. Is it true?
DA: No. You know, chemotherapy came about because in WWI they used nitrogen for the bombs, and the people who were actually handling those bombs, their white count went to zero. They said, “Oh, my gosh, let’s use those same chemicals to treat leukaemia.” And they did. And that was the first chemotherapy.
So the old generation of chemotherapy, the 1950s, 60s and 70s, basically hit the cancer and any rapidly dividing cell — the cancer cells and the immune cells. The newer forms of therapy are targeted. They hit an on-switch within the cancer and they don’t suppress the immune system. So we’re in a new era where we can actually power the immune system, like with Jimmy Carter, or we can target the on-switches, which are very tolerable and which buy many years of quality life.
SS: I wonder also what does it depend on when someone gets cancer or not? Well, obviously, the pollution, right? What about when you’re saying that plastic pollution really causes cancer or 5G [wireless] will cause cancer? Do you believe in that?
DA: There certainly are associations between certain things and cancer. So certain types of plastic, if you drink from them every day, they can disrupt your endocrine system and raise your risk of certain cancers. If you look at the biggest causes of cancers today, no, it’s not necessarily from our environment. You know, people said cell phones cause cancer. They cause brain cancer because you’ve talked on your phone while the incidence of brain cancer from 1970 till today hasn’t changed at all. So if cell phones were causing brain cancer, it should go up and they’re not. So if you look at the trends in cancer, the only real trend we see that’s different over the last two decades is colon cancer in young people is going up. That’s because there’s more obesity. And colon cancer is associated with obesity.
So in general, while environment is a contributor, unfortunately, cancer just happens. It’s part of us. So our job is to prevent it, which a lot of which we can do. And if it’s identified early, so it’s curative at that point. And that’s where we have to focus on in the medical community and for the average patient.
SS: Does cancer somehow depend on where you come from geographically? I mean, a race or ethnicity? I don’t know if it’s crazy to ask things like that, but I’ve read somewhere that, for instance, Ashkenazi women are prone to get 10 per cent more breast cancer than other nationalities and ethnicities.
DA: It’s interesting. There’s certainly a gene for breast cancer called BRCA. That’s very common for Ashkenazi Jewish women.
Benjamin Netanyahu, wife and sons. all Ashkenazim
And so that gives them a higher risk. In general though, most cancer is not genetic. In fact, Google bought the ancestry.com dataset and they tried to find the genes for longevity. What they found is only 6 per cent of longevity is genetic, 94 per cent is behaviour. It’s what you do.
So while there are some associations between genes and cancer, it’s rather rare. Most cancers just happen. And so we can do whatever we can to prevent. You could be active all day. You could be lean body mass, which works, do the preventive anti-inflammatory things. All of those work. But in general, you know, you’re not going to get it from what’s going on in your environment for most people.
SS: So when someone tells you, “You have breast cancer in your family or any cancer in your family, so, therefore, you must do regular checkups,” I shouldn’t listen to them?
DA: No, you should listen to them. So certainly, you know, first of all, behaviour travels in families. Your behaviour is similar to your mother’s and your grandmother’s ones. So many times those risk factors are behavioural.
And the other is, I mean, there certainly is some genetic component to it. Certain families have a gene where if you have a BRCA mutation like Angelina Jolie did, you almost have a 90 per cent chance of breast cancer in your lifetime. Breast cancer is one of those diseases that are very common in women. I mean, one in six women will get this cancer. So it is very common. So we have to practice prevention no matter who you are, no matter what your family history, getting a mammogram, doing a self-exam. They work. They identify early and make it much more curative.
SS: And once again going back to President Carter’s example, tailor-made medicine, is it something that is the future now? What do you think of that?
DA: I don’t think it’s the future. I think it’s the present. I think we’re there. So I think now any patient with cancer, we now can look at genes. There are now over a dozen molecularly targeted drugs on the market that can control lung cancer. So this is a pill a day that can put the cancer asleep. We can unblock the immune system, block that “don’t-eat-me” signal in kidney cancer, in skin cancer, in lung cancer… Dramatic results we’re seeing in patients that were deadly and now people live with the disease. So we’re in a new era. We’re not curing this disease, people are still dying, but there’s a lot more hope and optimism.
SS: What about all those vitamins? Is this a big myth? Because like 10 years ago, everyone was saying, “Oh, you’ve got to drink Omega; it’s going to support your body; it’s going to prevent cancer.” And then right now, people are saying it really doesn’t help, it doesn’t do anything. And we used to be, like, if our immune system is down, OK, let’s take this vitamin every morning and we’re going to get better. Is this true or it has nothing to do?
DA: No. It has nothing to do with it. First of all, you know, a vitamin is something the body can’t synthesize enough of. Period. That’s all it is. So taking a large amount of it, there’s no benefit. In fact, if a man takes vitamin E, he increases the risk of prostate cancer by 17 per cent. Women who take multivitamins have higher cancer rate than women that don’t. The problem is your body makes free radicals to get rid of bad damaged cells. If you take high-dose antioxidants and these vitamins, you actually block your natural processes and many times you enable cancer to happen. So there’s yet to be a positive study in the history of man- or womankind showing a benefit to a vitamin or supplement. It’s amazing. Multi-billion dollar business, yet no benefit. I’m going to save you some money.
SS: So there’s no benefit at all for taking — what am I taking? I’m taking vitamin D because there’s no sun in Russia. Should I stop that?
DA: Women who take vitamin D have an increased rate of bone fracture than women who don’t. You know the human body has a way so we don’t get too much vitamin D at once, it’s called tanning. The reason we tan is to block vitamin D. When you take so much vitamin D in a pill, you actually down-regulate the sensor and you screw up signalling. You don’t have rickets, which is clinical lack of vitamin D; we haven’t seen it for a long time in this country. And so there’s no question that supplemental vitamins and supplements have no benefit right now for the average individual.
SS: What about all these new technologies? For instance, the nanorobots? They blow my mind — this little thing that you let into your blood and that sort of cleans your organism of any virus — can that help with cancer?
DA: There’s a lot of potential for technology. Two years ago, October 1st, I’m sure you remember, was one exciting day of the year. You know, it’s when they announced “Molecule of the Year.” It’s kind of our Academy Awards. And that year, it was CRISPR. This is an enzyme that can change one letter of the three billion letters of the DNA code.
So we have the ability of editing things, to couple that with a nanorobot that can actually go places and change things. There’s crazy potential. You know, a scientist in China changed embryos and three children were born through this technology. And unfortunately, he didn’t do it right. He didn’t do it with ethics, and these children are going to have issues as they get older.
But now under the right science, the right governance and the right ethics, I think the potential is there to really have an enormous impact on human health. I could change your own immune cells to attack your cancer and they only attack your cancer.
SS: Does it have to happen once someone’s an embryo — changing the genes while…?
DA: These for the cancer? No. We can take your immune cells out now and do it. In fact, there’s an FDA-approved technology now. It’s approved in the United States. If there’s a child with leukaemia who has failed everything, they take their white cells out, they ship them to New Jersey, which is where the plant is, and they put in a gene that enables those white cells to target the child’s leukaemia. And 85 per cent of those children who literally have two to three weeks to live go into full-time remission. This is a remarkable nutricell therapy called CAR-T.
This therapy is curing kids of leukaemia that were literally dying. So it’s a new era and it’s a very exciting era. Still, it’s a lot easier to prevent a disease than it is to treat it. And so I still focus on the prevention. And by the way, we’re getting better at things. So the longer you delay or prevent, the better these technologies will treat everything from cancer to Alzheimer’s to heart disease.
SS: But just one more question about the gene-editing. For instance, if you detect cancer cell in an embryo and you take that out and you replace it with a healthy cell, does it mean that if that becomes a widespread practice, then we’re going to have just a healthy population with no cancer at all in the future?
DA: Well, you can either be born with a defective gene that can lead to cancer or it could just happen during your lifetime. Whether you’re exposed to sunlight which can cause cancer in the skin or smoking, or it just happens. So those cancers will still happen.
But we can get rid of the sickle-cell anaemia [which affects blacks], of Tay–Sachs disease [which affects Jews], of inborn DNA errors that can lead to cancer like that BRCA, the Angelina Jolie gene. Yes, we can eliminate them.
SS: You know, there is this new method when you starve your body basically, and then somehow that makes your cells get rid of all the toxins and unnecessary things and you become healthy and look young. Is this something that could also help, you know, battling, if that’s the right word, cancer? Maybe you can also attack the cancer cells that are right in your body or maybe prevent cancer?
DA: It’s certainly the dream to tell your body, “Let’s do a quick restart.” You know, your computer crashes, you restart it, it works fine. And so the dream is we can be able to do that. You know, autophagy was thought to be that. And there’s been some people talking about that. But that really hasn’t worked in that regard. And so, you know, cancer is within us. It’s part of us. It’s not without us. And so, unfortunately, I don’t know of any data that it could be used to actually fight disease today.
There’s a lot you can find on the Internet. But when it’s been proven in clinical trials, it didn’t work. That being said, you know, time-restricted eating has a benefit. So I’m a believer that you want long periods without eating. So you want to not snack in between dinner and breakfast, breakfast and lunch. In those periods don’t eat so insulin, cortisol, the stress hormones go all the way down. When your body doesn’t know what’s going to happen those hormones stay up and that’s stressful. So just having an apple in between lunch and dinner actually changes your metabolism for two to three days. You gain weight. You don’t think as well and you don’t exercise as well. So we were made to actually have periods without food in between meals. We have to go back to that.
SS: Well, there is this new tendency right now. Everyone’s doing it at least around here where you don’t eat for 16 hours. That’s like an interval that, for instance, you ate last time at 8:00 in the evening and then you don’t eat until like 12:00 or 2:00 in the afternoon. And people usually do that to lose weight. But a lot of doctors also have said that it’s such a good thing for preventing a lot of diseases — not eating for a long period of time.
DA: Right. I think that the data show is that whether that interval is 16 hours or 12 hours, there’s no real difference in the data. But you need to have meals the same time every day and nothing in between meals. I mean, that’s the simplest data and that’s what we were actually made for, right? We would make our kill in the wild, we would have it for dinner, and we have the leftover in the morning. We never had a kitchen cabinet till a hundred years ago. So the notion that food is plentiful is rather a modern invention. And when we eat all the time, basically our stress hormones stay up. So if you eat the same amount of calories, three meals a day versus whenever you want, 81 per cent more diabetes when you eat whenever you want, even though it’s the same amount of calories.
SS: So there is this tendency for people right now to become health freaks. From one extreme to another, we’re not paying attention at all to how we eat, when we eat, what we do with our body, like smoking and drinking a lot of alcohol, or we’re becoming complete freaks. And to be quite honest, I don’t know which one is better, because when you’re such a health freak, I feel like it’s such a stress on your brain that that actually may cause other diseases. What do you think?
DA: I agree with you. I think somewhere in the middle is that you want to pay attention to you. You want to collect your own data, but not in a crazy way. You know, going to your doctor once a year and having him or her check your blood pressure makes no sense. You want to check it multiple times during the day when you relax, when you’re upset after a phone call, and bring that data to your doctor. You want to pay attention to what you eat. You want to take a look at your body and look at the changes. You want to know your data, but not to an extreme. It won’t help. I mean, moderation is the key to almost everything in health. And every extreme has been shown not to work.
SS: Do you believe in psychosomatics? Because 50 per cent of the really great doctors that I’ve spoken to, they’re saying, “No, it’s complete B.S. There’s no such thing.” Others are saying, “You can actually cure diseases if you have this sort of healthy mindset, where you are going to overcome a disease, you’re going to be healthy and you’re gonna live.” Where are you at?
DA: It’s not where we are at, it’s where the data are at. The data show the latter is right. Optimism in a belief system actually has 30 per cent better results across the board in every clinical trial. So the data are there. If you’re optimistic and you have a belief system, you do better. I mean, that’s not what I think. That’s the data.
SS: Can you explain that scientifically as a doctor? How does what you think actually change your body molecules and cells in your body?
DA: Your body talks to itself all the time. You know, in one second you could feel good or you could feel nauseous. Your GI tract, your brain talk to each other. That connection we can’t explain and we can’t model. I don’t know how your brain works. I have no idea. But what I do know is that a belief system works. I see it when you’re optimistic, you do better. Period. And so we have to support each other to have that. And we’re going to do better as a society and as a whole. But no, I can’t explain that. I wish I could. It’s a complex emergent system. I can understand the brain.
SS: David, thank you so much for this insight. Thank you for your work and good luck with all your future endeavours. Have fun in Moscow.
DA: Oh, thank you. It’s a privilege to be here. And I’m so excited to be in the city.
SS: Pleasure talking to you. Thank you.
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….A reaction
Mark Calvin
I don’t doubt that stress, caused by a broken society, broken trust, and broken hope, can break down a person mentally so much that their body gets out of order, resulting in clinical disorders or worse.
1
John De-Nugent
Mark, yes indeed. People have no tools or training in how to process their feelings, especially anger and grief. One of the saddest things I ever read was that parents of a murdered child very often get divorced. They get into a permanent funk and shut down emotionally, then drift far apart, each in their own little grief bubble, instead of comforting each other. Tragedy COULD have brought them closer together!
……Recent gifts
Part of the immense power of the Aryan swastika is it seems to be in motion. Here you can see it literally spin — a wheel that is going places!
AND I PROVE EVERYTHING I SAY! 🙂
Digging out every day, and loving the exercise and fellowship with other white snow-warriors
From
–6 February 2020 $50 Amazon gift card from T in Utah
check for $88 from J in Cicero, Illinois
check for $25 from C in North Dakota
–31 January 2020
Book on the Dreyfus Affair from M in Florida
Amazon gift card for $25
–30 January 2020 20 euros, a one-ounce silver coin from Degussa, two letters and a book catalog from “Der Schelm” (German for “The Rascal” 😉 ) from S in Germany
–29 January 2020:
check for $10 from J in Maryland
check for $88 from J in Illinois
two books from R in Minnesota, the Bhagavad Gita with comments by Sri Aurobindo, and Living in a Mindful Universe by fmr Harvard Medical School professor and brain surgeon Eben Alexander, MD, who had a dramatic NDE which ended forever his atheism
200 euros in cash, two interesting books (speculating on Jesus as a part-Roman and as a married man), photos and a beautiful pendant from E in Italy
THANK YOU! MILLE GRAZIE (A THOUSAND THANKS)!
–27 January 2020 $125 via MoneyGram from R in Canada
–23 January 2020 $20 Australian in cash (wrapped de rigeur in aluminum foil) from “Oz” from repeat-donor J with a beautiful card, thinking of Margi 🙂
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Margi was touched by this greeting, and mustered the best smile she could, despite the then Stage-III cancer in her mouth and throat having weakened her jaw and facial muscles. Thanks, comrade! And her smile and voice are making a big comeback!
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–24 January 2020 check for $150 from G in Michigan
–23 January 2020 Amazon gift card for $84.81 from J
–20 January 2020 Amazon gift card for $84.81 from CC in Florida
–18 January 2020 Amazon gift card for $25 from T (location unknown)
–14 January 2020 generous donation via PayPal to a friend for my webhosting and webmaster fees
–14 January 2020 $50 Australian from P in Oz
–13 January 2020 Amazon gift card for $50 from T (location unknown)
Thank you, TJ, for the newest Amazon.com Gift Card, the third! 🙂 🙂 🙂 I also mentioned it on my website article (on Australia) for today! It has been a hard 18 months dealing with Margi’s undeserved cancer and almost losing her in January and July, but now, with the help of generous supporters like you, everything is on track again to me to have the time and energy to start a credible new faith that will enable us to beat the evil religions of Judaism, Islam and Masonry — and finally change this agonizing world!Thanks again!— John de Nugent
–12 January 2020 50 euros in cash and a warm New Year’s card from M in France
Dear John
Cher John,
You’re back home [from two months at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota for Margi’s successful cancer battle]!
De retour chez vous!
That’s great news for the both of you.
C’est une merveilleuse nouvelle pour vous deux.
Thanks for sharing your views and analyses.
Merci de partager vos émotions et réflexions.
It’s full of knowledge for your followers.
C’est riche d’enseignements pour vos lecteurs.
I wish you all the best for 2020!
Tous mes meilleurs voeux pour l’année 2020!
M
–12 January 2020, 20 euros in cash from C in Germany
–11 January 2020 $130 via PP from T in Australia
–10 January 2020 check for $88 from G in Cicero, Illinois
–8 January 2020 $77 Amazon gift card from T
–5 January 2020 $50 Australian and a lovely card from T in Tasmania
–4 January 2020 Amazon gift card for $50 from TJ
–3 January 2020 check for $40 for Margi’s cancer recovery from J in Tennessee
–2 January 2020 check for $88 from G in Cicero, Illinois
–20 December 2019 $100 via PayPal from D in Australia, sent to a WN friend
–19 December 2019 $88 by check from G in Nevada
–12 December 2019 $88 by check from G in Nevada
–7 December 2019 $88 by check from G in Nevada
–26 November 2019 $88 by check from G in Nevada
–21 November 2019 $40 cash from L in North Carolina
–19 November 2019 check for $100 from P in Maryland
–16 November 2019 5o euros in cash and wrapped in aluminum foil, with an interesting bilingual letter, from France
–15 November 2019 50 euros in cash and wrapped in aluminum foil from Bavaria, Germany
–14 November 2019 two checks for $88 each from an Old Fighter from the NSWPP, G in Cicero, Illinois (forwarded to me in Rochester, Minnesota from Ontonagon Michigan)
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–23 October 2019 40 euros from regular donor A in Germany
–22 October 2019 25 British pounds (US$32) via PayPal from A in Scotland
–21 October 2019 $20 Australian and a very nice card from J in “Oz” (Australia)
–19 October 2019 $88 from G in Cicero, Illinois and $20 from K in California
–11 October 2019 $88 from G in Cicero, Illinois
–9 October 2019 $50 in cash from S in Florida
–6 October 2019 loan of $88 forgiven
https://www.facebook.com/donate/578479056023514/
–4 October 2019 $75 from G in Cicero, Illinois
–3 October 2019 $100 PayPal via a friend from J in Texas
–28 September 2019 $75 from G in Cicero, Illinois
–26 September 2019 check for $20 from J in Maryland
–24 September 2019 $100 Amazon gift card from V in USA
–21 September 2019 loan via PayPal of $100 from M in California
–20 September 2019 loan via PayPal of $88 from B in New York State
–20 September 2019 check for $75 from G in Cicero, Illinois
–10 September 2019 $50 via PayPal from P in New England
–6 September 2019 check from G in Cicero, Illinois
–5 September 2019 $20 Australian, and a very nice card
–30 August 2019 $75 check from G in Cicero, Illinois
–30 August 2019 supportive letter and 20 Euros from C in Germany
–21 August 2019 book by Joseph Goebbels (the last one he wrote — in 1945, a brilliant collection of short essays given to the frontline troops called “The Law of War”) and 20 euros from C in Germany
–20 August 2019 five Australian silver dollars and a kind greeting to me and Margi from M in Ohio
–19 August 2019 $20 cash from P in Florida
–16 August 2019 check for $75
–14 August 2019 $150 from J in New Hamshah 😉 (New England pronunciation of “New Hampshire”)
Siete voi la nostra forza, il nostro coraggio, la nostra lotta più grande, contro noi stessi prima di tutto, la nostra Ultima Speranza, il nostro esempio di Vita e di Amore.
Si piange davvero di fronte a tutto questo, di fronte a voi! Qualcuno si sentirà anche una M***..perché? Perché avrà pianto per cose inutili; per una macchina costosa che non può avere, una villa, gioielli, soldi!
Così gli Ebrei hanno lucrato sull’egoismo umano.
Ci sentiamo così piccoli in confronto a voi..irradiate LUCE e AMORE!!
Siete il nostro MIRACOLO Vivente!
Transl:
You two are our strength, our courage, our greatest strugglers — first against our own weaknesses — and our Last Hope, our example of Life and Love.
You’re crying, [Jew], really, in front of all this, in front of John? Such people should feel like a [heap of shit]. What for? They cry for their useless things; for an expensive car that you can’t have, John, for a villa, for jewelry and money!
So the Jews took advantage of human selfishness.
We feel so small compared to you. Radiate to us, John, your light and your love!!
You two are our LIVING MIRACLE!
***
Into French:
Vous deux êtes notre force, notre courage, notre plus grande lutte, contre nous-mêmes d’abord, notre Dernière Espérance, notre exemple de Vie et d’Amour.
Tu pleures [Juif] vraiment devant tout ça, devant toi ! Un tel doit se sentir comme un [tas de merde]. Pourquoi? Il aura pleuré pour ses choses inutiles; pour une voiture chère que vous ne pouvez pas avoir, John, pour une villa, des bijoux, de l’argent!
Les Juifs ont donc profité de l’égoïsme humain.
Nous nous sentons si petits par rapport à vous. Rayonne, John, ta lumière et ton amour!!
Vous deux êtes notre MIRACLE VIVANT!
***
Into German:
Ihr seid beide unsere Stärke, unser Mut, unser größter Kampfgeist, zuerst für den Kampf gegen uns selbst — und unsere Letzte Hoffnung, unser Beispiel des Lebens und der Liebe.
Du weinst [Jude] wirklich vor all dem, vor John! Solche Leute müssten sich wie ein [Haufen Scheiße] anfühlen. Warum? Er beweint den Verlust seiner nutzlosen Dinge: für ein teures Auto, das Sie nicht haben können, John, für eine Villa, Schmuck, Geld!
So nutzten die Juden den menschlichen Egoismus aus.
Wir fühlen uns so klein im Vergleich zu Ihnen. Erstrahle, John, mit deinem Licht und deiner Liebe!!
Ihr zwei seid unser lebendiges Wunder!
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https://youtu.be/0dfO1rXLtSc
Questo video racchiude un po’ quello che penso..un grande messaggio di Eternità.
Io credo ci siano tante cure per il Cancro,ma più di tutto è importante avere un corpo alcalino!Questa teoria è stata sviluppata da alcuni medici tedeschi del 900.
L’alimentazione è così importante per mantenere questo stato!Il digiuno è importante per disintossicarsi,guardiamo ai Tibetani!La loro tranquillita'(Amore),il sorriso,la loro alimentazione,il rispetto per ciò che li circonda,nulla che può INACIDIRE la loro Vita!La Semplicità e la felicità del vivere come longevità!Dovremmo si cambiare il nostro comportamento.
Sono dimagrita anche io in questi mesi,ma non mi sono sentita debole neanche una volta,ho tanta energia e sono ricca di Amore.
I miei figli,mio marito.
Non ho bisogno di abbuffarmi per stare bene,anche se adoro la cioccolata!
Ci sono tante attività che possono allenare il nostro cuore a stare bene e a non essere ferito!Allontanare le persone negative e allenarsi ad essere Felici.
La felicità e l’amore non vengono di punto in bianco,si alimentano ogni giorno con il Giusto comportamento.
Guardiamo agli anni del Nazionalsocialismo..facciamo un confronto!
https://photos.app.goo.gl/myfLkE76DnssDV2G9
https://photos.app.goo.gl/7mgG2D7v61e9wTqW9
Porz-Goret(Autore Yann Tiersen)pezzo composto per le Rive della Bretagna,Ouessant.
Queste rive hanno fatto sognare tanti pittori francesi.
Questo pezzo ha colpito anche me ripensando alla luce del Faro,simbolo di queste coste ventose.
https://youtu.be/SNr5Zuncvbs
Per fortuna esistono questi Medici.
Ora capisco il Parkinson,comprendo la malattia che ha colpito il mio Fuhrer:”Le tue dimissioni da quella grande Battaglia.”
Ricevo sempre più risposte da quando sei nella mia Vita.
Le tue attenzioni a quella parte così complicata,per certi versi della mia Anima.
Spero che questa Vita,questa Luce che tu emani possa renderla più Semplice possibile.
Questo percorso mi fa pensare ai sette veli dorati(o le sette porte)che dovrò lasciar cadere,un po’ come le catene che mi hanno imprigionata quaggiù.Ma guarda caso è proprio Enki(John)a liberare questa povera fanciulla(Sono io che devo ringraziarti);qui ritorna il Mito di Brunilde e Sigfrido(Trovare Sigfrido e riportarlo su nel suo Regno).
https://nelboscodelladea.com/tag/discesa-negli-inferi/
Thanks for the update on Margi’s war.
I have found out something else about the fundamental nature of cancer. I haven’t heard anything more on this aspect, though I haven’t looked … but it’s so fundamental that I’m suspicious.
Proliferation is the natural, default programming of cells. Cancer isn’t a mass of cells gone mad. It is a failure of our body’s control system.
This doesn’t change anything for our personal health care strategies, but I would have thought that it should mean everything to cancer researchers. It means they should turn their attention to our control systems of cell proliferation.
Why haven’t I heard anything more about this?
Without me having to look, I would have thought I would be coming across various references to this shift of focus of cancer research.
My thoughts return to the cancer industry and the crisis that a medical breakthrough would precipitate … even just a fundamental advance in understanding cancer.
Back to your essay, my perception of the aimless waffling of that doctor … the specific vagueness that doesn’t lead anywhere except back to old ground we’ve been over.
Still, a good interview with usefull advice we need to be reminded of periodically.