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			Chapter Ten 
			"PROVEN" CANCER CURES 
			
			  
			
				
					
						| 
						 
						The effects of surgery and radiation in the treatment of cancer 
			patients; a comparison showing that those who receive no treatment 
			at all live just as long, if not longer, than those who are treated.  | 
					 
				 
			 
			
			 
			
			The effects of surgery and radiation in the treatment of cancer; a 
			comparison showing that those who receive no treatment at all live 
			just as long, if not longer, than those who are treated. 
			 
			The advocates of Laetrile therapy have always emphasized that there 
			is no cure, as such, for cancer. Since it is essentially a 
			deficiency disease, one can only speak of prevention or control but 
			not cure. Among the advocates of orthodox therapies, however, there 
			is no such restraint. Official spokesmen for the cancer industry 
			tell the American public, without batting an eyelash, that they have 
			proven cures for cancer, and that anyone who resorts to such 
			nostrums as Laetrile is merely wasting valuable time in which he 
			would be far better off availing himself of these proven cures.  
			
			  
			
			
			What 
			are these cures? They are surgery, radiation, and drugs. 
			 
			The following report carried in a Los Angeles paper is typical: 
			
				
				Warnings of a mounting scale of cancer quackery activity affecting 
			the San Fernando Valley were issued today by the American Cancer 
			Society. 
				  
				
				Mrs. Stanley Grushesky, Education Chairman of the Society's Valley 
			area, said she is concerned over the possibility that some local 
			residents have been deceived in recent weeks by propaganda issued on 
			behalf of unorthodox practitioners with claims of unproven cancer 
			''cures"... which could easily lure unsuspecting victims into a 
			quackery mill...
  Mrs. Grushesky said that, 
				
					
					... "Cancer quackery kills many 
			unsuspecting patients because time wasted on phony devices and 
			treatments delays effective treatment until it is too late to save 
			the Patient's life."1 
				 
			 
			
			
			1. "Amer. Cancer Soc. Warns of Valley Quacks," The Valley News (Van 
			Nuys, alif.), Dec. 10,1972. 
			 
			Echoing the same theme, Dr. Ralph Weilerstein of the California 
			Department of Public Health declared: 
			
				
				The use of Laetrile in early cancer cases to the exclusion of 
			conventional treatment might well be dangerous since treatment with 
			acceptable, modern curative methods - surgery or radiation - would 
			thereby be delayed potentially until such time as metastases had 
			occurred and the cancer, therefore, might no longer be curable.(1) 
			 
			
			
			Public Library references on cancer often contain bookmarks 
			distributed by the American Cancer Society. One of these depicts an 
			ace of spades along with the slogan: THE UNPROVEN CANCER CURE. DON'T 
			BET YOUR LIFE ON IT.  
			
			  
			
			
			On the back it says:  
			
				
				"For more information on 
			proven cancer cures, write or phone the American Cancer Society."
				 
			 
			
			
			In 
			response, the author sent a letter expressing surprise at the 
			assertion that any cancer therapy is successful enough to warrant 
			being called a proven cure.  
			
			  
			
			
			This is the reply: 
			
				
				To Mr. G. Edward Griffin: 
				Thank you for your note. There are proven cures - if detected in
			time - surgery and /or radiation and, more and more, chemotherapy
			is playing its part.(2) 
			 
			
			
			By 1996, the American Cancer Society was claiming millions of
			cures. In their release of statistics for that year we find this:
			It is estimated that over 10 million Americans alive today have a
			history of cancer, 7 million diagnosed five or more years ago.  
			
			  
			
			
			Most
			of these 7 million can be considered cured.(3) 
			
			  
			
			
			1. As quoted in College of Marin Times (Kentfield, Calif.), April 
			26,1972. 
			2. Letter from Mabel Burnett dated Dec. 18,1972; Griffin, Private 
			Papers, op-cv 
			3. Cancer Facts & Figures - 1996, p. 1. 
			 
			This is the position of orthodox medicine.  
			
			  
			
			Therefore, let us
			take a look at the results and benefits of the so-called cures
			obtained through surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy.
			Surgery is the least harmful of the three. It can be life-saving,
			particularly where intestinal blockages must be relieved to
			prevent death from secondary complications.  
			
			  
			
			
			Surgery also has
			the psychological advantage of visibly removing the tumor and
			offering the temporary comfort of hope. However, the degree to
			which surgery is useful is the same degree to which the tumor is
			not malignant, The greater the proportion of cancer cells in that
			tumor, the less likely it is that surgery will help. The most
			malignant tumors of all generally are considered inoperable. 
			 
			A further complication of surgery is that cutting into the 
			tumor - even for a biopsy - does two things that can aggravate the 
			condition. First, it causes trauma to the area. That triggers the 
			healing process which, in turn, brings more trophoblast cells into 
			being as a by-product of that process. (See Chapter IV.) The other 
			effect is that, if not all the malignant tissue is removed, what 
			remains may become encased in scar tissue from the surgery. 
			 
			
			  
			
			
			Consequently, the cancer tends to become insulated from the action 
			of the pancreatic enzymes which are essential for exposing trophoblast cells to the surveillant action of the white blood 
			cells. 
			 
			Perhaps the greatest indictment against surgery is the fact that, 
			statistically, there is no solid evidence that patients who submit 
			to surgery have any greater life expectancy, on the average, than 
			those who do not.  
			
			  
			
			
			The first statistical analysis of this question 
			was compiled in 1844 by Dr. Leroy d'Etoilles and published by the 
			French Academy of Science. It is, to date, the most extensive study 
			of its kind ever released. Over a period of thirty years, case 
			histories of 2,781 patients were submitted by 174 physicians. The 
			average survival after surgery was only one year and five months - not 
			much different than the average today. 
			 
			Dr. Leroy d'Etoilles separated his statistics according to whether 
			the patient submitted to surgery or caustics, or refused such 
			treatment.  
			
			  
			
			
			His findings were electric: 
			
				
				The net value of surgery or caustics was in prolonging life two 
			months for men and six months for women. But that was only in the 
			first few years after the initial diagnosis. After that period, 
			those who had not accepted treatment had the greater survival 
			potential by about fifty percent.(1) 
			 
			
			
			1. Walter H Walshe, The Anatomy, Physiology, Pathology and 
			Treatment of Cancer, (Boston: Ticknor & Co., 1844). 
			
			  
			
			
			Recent surveys have produced similar results.  
			
			  
			
			
			Patients with breast 
			cancer used to have, not only their tumor removed, but the entire 
			breast and the lymph nodes as well. The procedure often removed the 
			ovaries also because cancer is stimulated by the hormones they 
			produce. Finally, in 1961, a large-scale survey was begun, called 
			the National Surgical Adjuvant Breast Project.  
			
			  
			
			
			After 
			seven-and-a-half years of statistical analysis, the results were 
			conclusive:  
			
				
				There was no significant difference between the 
			percentage of patients remaining alive who had received the
			smaller operation and those who had received the larger. 
			 
			
			
			It was to be expected that an effort would be made to discredit this 
			study. Teams of auditors combed over the records of 5,000 physicians 
			at the 484 medical centers which participated. In 1991 it was 
			announced that the study was not reliable. Why? Because one of the 
			doctors (out of 5,000) had falsified his data and two of the medical 
			centers (out of 484) could no longer locate all their patients' lab 
			tests or consent forms.(1) 
			 
			But the evidence could not be buried. 
			
			  
			
			
			 At the University of 
			California-Irvine College of Medicine, a similar study conducted 
			between 1984 and 1990 produced this conclusion:  
			
				
				"All other factors 
			being equal, there is no difference between BCS [breast-conserving 
			surgery] and total mastectomy in either disease-free or overall 
			survival."(2) 
			 
			
			
			One of the nation's top statisticians in the field of cancer is 
			Hardin B. Jones, Ph.D., former professor of medical physics and 
			physiology at the University of California at Berkeley.  
			
			  
			
			
			After years 
			of analyzing clinical records, this is the report he delivered at a 
			convention of the American Cancer Society: 
			
				
				In regard to surgery, no relationship between intensity of surgical 
			treatment and duration of survival has been found in verified 
			malignancies. On the contrary, simple excision of cancers has 
			produced essentially the same survival as radical excision and 
			dissection of the lymphatic drainage.(3) 
			 
			
			
			1. See Ravdin, R.G., et.al., "Results of a Clinical Trial Concerning 
			The Worth of Prophylactic Oophorectomy for Breast Carcinoma," 
			Surgery, Gynecology & Obsetrics, 131:1055, Dec, 1970. Also "Breast 
			Cancer Excision Less with Selection, Medical Tribune, Oct. 6, 1971, 
			p. 1. Also "Breast Cancer Research on Trial," Science News, April 
			30,1994, pp. 277, 282, 283, 286. 
			2. "Treatment Differences and Other Prognostic Factors Related to 
			Breast Cancer Survival: Delivery Systems and Medical Outcomes," by 
			Anna Lee Feldstein, Hoda Anton-Culver, and Paul ]. Feldstein, 
			Journal of the Amend Medical Association, ISSN:0098-7484, April 
			20,1994. 
			3. Hardin B. Jones, Ph.D, "A Report on Cancer," paper delivered to 
			the ACS's 11th Annual Science Writers Conference, New Orleans, Mar. 
			7,1969. 
			 
			That data, of course, related to surgery of the breast.  
			
			  
			
			
			Turning his 
			attention to surgery in general, Dr. Jones continued: 
			
				
				Although there is a dearth of untreated cases for statistical 
			comparison with the treated, it is surprising that the death risks 
			of the two groups remain so similar. In the comparisons it has been 
			assumed that the treated and untreated cases are independent of each 
			other. In fact, that assumption is incorrect. Initially, all cases 
			are untreated.  
				  
				
				With the passage of time, some receive treatment, and 
			the likelihood of treatment increases with the length of time since 
			origin
			of the disease. Thus, those cases in which the neoplastic process 
			progresses slowly [and thus automatically favors a long-term 
			survival] are more likely to become "treated" cases.  
				
				  
				
				For the same 
			reason, however, those individuals are likely to enjoy longer 
			survival, whether treated or not. Life tables truly representative 
			of untreated cancer patients must be adjusted for the fact that the 
			inherently longer-lived cases are more likely to be transferred to 
			the "treated" category than to remain in the "untreated until 
			death." 
				
				 The apparent life expectancy of untreated cases of cancer after such 
			adjustment in the table seems to be greater than that of the treated 
			cases. [Emphasis added] 
			 
			
			
			What, then, is the statistical chance for long-term survival of five 
			years or more after surgery?  
			
			  
			
			
			That, we are told, depends on the 
			location of the cancer, how fast it is growing, and whether it has 
			spread to a secondary point. For example, two of the most common 
			forms of cancer requiring surgery are of the breast and the lung. 
			With breast cancer, only sixteen percent will respond favorably to 
			surgery or X-ray therapy.  
			
			  
			
			
			With lung cancer, the percentage of 
			patients who will survive five years after surgery is somewhere 
			between five and ten percent.(1)  
			
			  
			
			
			And these are optimistic figures 
			when compared to survival expectations for some other types of 
			cancers such as testicular chorionepitheliomas.
			When we turn to cancers which have metastasized to secondary 
			locations, the picture becomes virtually hopeless - surgery or no 
			surgery.  
			
			  
			
			
			As one cancer specialist summarized it bluntly: 
			
				
				A patient who has clinically detectable distant metastases when 
			first seen has virtually a hopeless prognosis, as do patients who 
			were apparently free of distant metastases at that time but who 
			subsequently return with distant metastases.(2) 
			 
			
			
			1. See "Results of Treatment of Carcinoma of the Breast Based on 
			Pathological Staging", By F.R.C Johnstone, M.D., Surgery, Gynecology 
			& Obstetrics, 134:211, 1972. Also "Consultant's Comment," by George 
			Crile, Jr., M.D., Calif. Medical Digest , Aug 1972, p.893 Also 
			"Project at better Lung Cancer Survival," Medical tribune, Oct. 20. 
			1971. Also Statement by Dr. Lewis A. Leone, Director of the 
			department of Oncology at Rhode Island Hospital in Providence, as 
			quoted in " Cancer Controls Still Unsuccessful," LA. Herald 
			Examiner, June 6, 1972,
			p. c-12. 
			2. Johnstone , "Results of Treatment of Carcinoma of the Breast," 
			op. cit. 
			 
			An objective appraisal, therefore, is that the statistical rate of 
			long-term survival after surgery is, on the average at best, only 
			ten or fifteen percent. And once the cancer has metastasized to a 
			second location, surgery has almost no survival value.  
			
			  
			
			
			The reason
			is that, like the other therapies approved by orthodox medicine 
			surgery removes only the tumor. It does not remove the cause. 
			 
			The rationale behind X-ray therapy is the same as with surgery. The 
			objective is to remove the tumor, but to do so by burning it away 
			rather than cutting it out. Here, also, it is primarily the 
			non-cancer cell that is destroyed. The more malignant the tumor, the 
			more resistant it is to radio therapy. If this were not so, then 
			X-ray therapy would have a high degree of success - which, of course, 
			it does not. 
			 
			If the average tumor is composed of both cancer and non-cancer 
			cells, and if radiation is more destructive to non-cancer cells than 
			to cancer cells, then it would be logical to expect the results to 
			be a reduction of tumor size, but also an increase in the percentage 
			of malignancy. This is, in fact, exactly what happens. 
			 
			Commenting on this mechanism, Dr. John Richardson explained it this 
			way: 
			
				
				Radiation and /or radiomimetic poisons will reduce palpable, gross 
			or measurable tumefaction. Often this reduction may amount to 
			seventy-five percent or more of the mass of the growth. These agents 
			have a selective effect - radiation and poisons. They selectively kill 
			everything except the definitively neoplastic [cancer] cells. 
				 For example, a benign uterine myoma will usually melt away under 
			radiation like snow in the sun. If there be neoplastic cells in such 
			tumor, these will remain. The size of the tumor may thus be 
			decreased by ninety percent while the relative concentration of 
			definitively neoplastic cells is thereby increased by ninety 
			percent.
  As all experienced clinicians know - or at least should know -  after 
			radiation or poisons have reduced the gross tumefaction of the 
			lesion the patient's general well-being does not substantially 
			improve. To the contrary, there is often an explosive or fulminating 
			increase in the biological malignancy of his lesion. This is marked 
			by the appearance of diffuse metastasis and a rapid deterioration in 
			general vitality followed shortly by death.(1) 
			 
			
			
			1. Open letter to interested doctors, Nov., 1972; Griffin, Private 
			Papers, op. cit 
			
			  
			
			
			And so we see that X-ray therapy is cursed with the same drawbacks 
			of surgery. But it has one more: It actually increases the 
			likelihood that cancer will develop in other parts of the body. 
			 
			Excessive exposure to radioactivity is an effective way to induce 
			cancer. This was first demonstrated by observing the increased 
			cancer incidence among the survivors of Hiroshima, but it has been 
			corroborated by many independent studies since then. For example, a 
			recent headline in a national-circulation
			newspaper tells us:  
			
				
				FIND 'ALARMING' NUMBER OF CANCER CASES IN PEOPLE 
			WHO HAD X-RAY THERAPY 20 YEARS AGO.(1)  
			 
			
			
			The Textbook of Medical 
			Surgical Nursing, a standard reference for Registered Nurses, is 
			most emphatic on this point.  
			
			  
			
			
			It says: 
			
				
				This is an area of public health concern because it may involve 
			large numbers of people who may be exposed to low levels of 
			radiation over a long period of time. The classic example is of the 
			women employed in the early 1920's to paint watch and clock dials 
			with luminizing (radium containing) paints.  
				
				  
				
				Years later, bone 
			sarcomas resulted from the carcinogenic effect of the radium. 
			Similarly, leukemia occurs more frequently in radiologists than 
			other physicians. Another example is the Hiroshima survivors who 
			have shown the effects of low levels of radiation...
  Among the most serious of the late consequences of irradiation 
			damage is the increased susceptibility to malignant metaplasia and 
			the development of cancer at sites of earlier irradiation. Evidence 
			cited in support of this relationship refers to the increased 
			incidence of carcinoma of skin, bone, and lung after latent periods 
			of 20 years and longer following irradiation of those sites.  
				
				  
				
				Further 
			support has been adduced from the relatively high incidence of 
			carcinoma of the thyroid 7 years and longer following low-dosage 
			irradiation of the thymus in childhood, and from the increased 
			incidence of leukemia following total body irradiation at any 
			age.(2) 
			 
			
			
			1. National Enquirer, Oct. 7,1973, p. 29. 
			2. Brunner, Emerson, Ferguson, and Doris Suddarth, Textbook of 
			Medical-Surgical Nursing, (Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Co., 1970) 
			2nd Edition, p. 198. 
			
			  
			
			
			In 1971, a research team at the University of Buffalo, under the 
			direction of Dr. Robert W. Gibson, reported that less than a dozen 
			routine medical X-rays to the same part of the body increases the 
			risk of leukemia in males by at least sixty percent.(3)  
			
			  
			
			
			Other 
			scientists have become increasingly concerned about the growing 
			American infatuation with X-rays and have urged a stop to the 
			madness, even calling for an end to the mobile chest X-ray units for 
			the detection of TB.(4)  
			
			  
			
			
			3. "Too Many X-Rays Increase Risk of Leukemia, Study Indicates," 
			National Enquirer, Dec. 5,1971, p. 11. 
			4. "Top FDA Officials Warn: Chest X-Rays in Mobile Vans Are 
			Dangerous and Must be Stopped," National Enquirer, Sept. 10,1972, p. 
			8. 
			
			  
			
			
			And these "routine" X-rays are harmlessly 
			mild compared to the intense radiation beamed into the bodies of 
			cancer patients today. 
			 
			X-rays induce cancer because of at least two factors. First, they do 
			physical damage to the body which triggers the production of 
			trophoblast cells as part of the healing process. Second, they
			weaken or destroy the production of white blood cells which, as we 
			have seen, constitute the immunological defense mechanism the body's 
			front-line defense against cancer. 
			 
			When it comes to statistics, there is little or no evidence that 
			radiation actually improves the patient's chances for survival.  
			
			  
			
			
			The 
			National Surgical Adjuvant Breast Project, previously mentioned in 
			connection with surgery, also conducted studies on the effect of 
			irradiation, and here is a summary of their findings: 
			
				
				... the use of post-operative irradiation has provided no 
			discernible advantage to patients so treated in terms of increasing 
			the proportion who were free of disease for as long as five 
			years.(1) 
			 
			
			
			In August of 1998, Science News published a review of over 30 years 
			of data and reported that radiation can actually reduce a patient's 
			chances for survival: 
			
				
				Data from nine studies ... show that radiation treatments after 
			surgery actually hurt the survival chances of many patients, 
			particularly those whose cancer hadn't spread initially. The 
			findings appear in the July 25 Lancet... The survival rate 2 years 
			after surgery was 48 percent for those getting radiation treatments 
			and 55 percent for surgery-only patients.(2) 
			 
			
			
			1. Fisher, B., et. al., "Postoperative Radiotherapy in the Treatment 
			of Breast Cancer; Results of the NSAPP Clinical Trial," Annals of 
			Surgery, 172, No. 4, Oct. 1970. 
			2. "Lung Cancer Radiation Questioned," Science News, August 1,1998, 
			p. 68. 
			  
			
			
			This is an embarrassing fact for radiologists to face, for it brings 
			into question the justification for their existence in the medical 
			fraternity. Consequently, one does not expect to hear these issues 
			being discussed by radiologists or those whose livelihood depends on 
			the construction, sale, use, or maintenance of the 
			multi-million-dollar linear accelerators.  
			
			  
			
			
			It comes as a surprise, 
			therefore, to hear these truths spoken frankly by three radiologists 
			sharing the same platform at the same medical convention.  
			
			  
			
			
			They were 
			William Powers, M.D., Director of the Division of Radiation Therapy 
			at the Washington University School of Medicine, Phillip Rubin, 
			M.D., Chief of the Division of Radiotherapy at the University of 
			Rochester Medical School, and Vera Peters, M.D., of the Princess 
			Margaret Hospital in Toronto, Canada. Dr. Powers stated: 
			
				
				Although preoperative and postoperative radiation therapy have been 
			used extensively and for decades, it is still not possible to prove 
			unequivocal clinical benefit from this combined treatment... Even 
			if the rate of cure does improve with a combination of radiation and 
			therapy, it is necessary to establish the cost in
			increased morbidity which may occur in patients without favorable 
			response to the additional therapy.(1) 
			 
			
			
			What Dr. Powers means when he says "increased morbidity" is that 
			radiation makes people ill. In a study at Oxford University, it was 
			found that many women who received radiation died of heart attacks 
			because their hearts had been weakened by the treatment.(2) 
			 
			
			  
			
			
			1. Preoperative and Postoperative Radiation Therapy for Cancer," 
			speech
			ore the Sixth National Cancer Conference, sponsored by the Amer. 
			Cancer Society and The National Cancer Institute, Denver, Colorado, 
			Sept. 18-20,1968. 
			2. Breast Cancer Update/Q & A, by Ridgely Ochs, Newsday, December 
			19, 1995,p. B23. 
			
			  
			
			
			Radiation also weakens the immune system which can lead to death 
			from secondary causes such as pneumonia.  
			
			  
			
			
			Many patients whose death 
			certificates state heart failure or pulmonary pneumonia or 
			respiratory failure really die from cancer - or, to be more exact - from 
			their cancer treatment. Cancer statistics - based as they are on data 
			from death certificates -  conceal the truth about the failure of 
			orthodox cancer therapy. 
			 
			At the convention of radiologists previously mentioned, Dr. Phillip 
			Rubin reviewed the cancer-survival statistics published in the 
			Journal of the American Medical Association.  
			
			  
			
			
			Then he concluded: 
			
				
				The clinical evidence and statistical data in numerous reviews are 
			cited to illustrate that no increase in survival has been achieved 
			by the addition of irradiation. 
			 
			
			
			To which Dr. Peters added: 
			
				
				In carcinoma of the breast, the mortality rate still parallels the 
			incidence rate, thus proving that there has been no true improvement 
			in the successful treatment of the disease over the past thirty 
			years, even though there has been technical improvement in both 
			surgery and radiotherapy during that time. 
			 
			
			
			In spite of the almost universal experience of physicians to the 
			contrary, the American Cancer Society still prattles to the public 
			that their statistics show a higher recovery rate for treated 
			patients as compared to untreated patients.  
			
			  
			
			
			After all, if this were 
			not the case, why would anyone spend the money or accept the pain 
			and disfigurement associated with these orthodox treatments? But how 
			can they get away with such outright lies? 
			 
			The answer is that they are not really lying - just bending the truth 
			a little. In other words, they merely adjust the method of gathering 
			and evaluating statistics so as to guarantee the desired results.  
			
			  
			
			
			In 
			the words of Dr. Hardin Jones: 
			
				
				Evaluation of the clinical response of cancer to treatment by 
			surgery and radiation, separately or in combination, leads to the 
			following findings:
  The evidence for greater survival of treated groups in comparison 
			with untreated is biased by the method of defining the groups All 
			reported studies pick up cases at the time of origin of the disease 
			and follow them to death or end of the study interval. If persons in 
			the untreated or central group die at any time in the study 
			interval, they are reported as deaths in the control group. 
				 
				  
				
				In the 
			treated group, however, deaths which occur before completion of the 
			treatment are rejected from the data, since these patients do not 
			then meet the criteria established by definition of the term 
			"treated." The longer it takes for completion of the treatment, as 
			in multiple step therapy, for example, the worse the error... 
				 With this effect stripped out, the common malignancies show a 
			remarkably similar rate of demise, whether treated or untreated.(1) 
			 
			
			
			Such statistical error is significant, but it is doubtful if it 
			could account for the American Cancer Society's favorite claim that,  
			
				
				"there are on record a million and a half people cured of cancer 
			through the efforts of the medical profession and the American 
			Cancer Society with the help of the FDA."(2) 
			 
			
			
			1. Jones, "A Report on Cancer," op. cit. 
			2. Letter from Mrs. Glenn E. Baker, Executive Director, Southern 
			District, ACS, addressed to Mr. T.G. Kent, reprinted in Cancer News 
			journal, Jan./Feb., 1972
			p. 22. 
			
			  
			
			
			The answer lies in the fact that there are some forms of cancer, 
			such as skin cancer, that respond very well to treatment.  
			
			  
			
			
			Often they 
			are arrested or disappear even without treatment. Seldom are they 
			fatal. But they affect large numbers of people -  enough to change the 
			statistical tabulations drastically. In the beginning, skin cancers 
			were not included in the national tabulations. Also, in those days, 
			very few people sought medical treatment for their skin disorders, 
			preferring to treat them with home remedies, many of which, 
			incidentally seem to have worked just as well as some of the more 
			scientifically acceptable techniques today. 
			 
			At any rate, as doctors became more plentiful, as people became more 
			affluent and able to seek out professional medical help, and as the 
			old-time remedies increasingly fell into disrepute, the number of 
			reported skin cancers gradually increased until it is now listed by 
			the ACS as a "major site." So, all they had to do to produce most of 
			those million-and-a-half "cures," was to change their statistics to 
			include skin cancers - presto-chango! 
			 
			As Dr. Hardin Jones revealed: 
			
				
				Beginning in 1940, through redefinition of terms, various 
			questionable grades of malignancy were classed as cancer. After that 
			date, the proportion of "cancer" cures having "normal" life 
			expectancy increased rapidly, corresponding to the fraction of 
			questionable diagnoses included.(1) 
			 
			
			
			The American Cancer Society claims that patients are now
			surviving longer, thanks to orthodox therapy. But people are not
			living longer after they get cancer; they are living longer after 
			they
			are diagnosed with cancer. With modern diagnostic techniques,
			cancer can be detected at an earlier stage. The time between
			diagnosis and death is longer, but the length of life itself has not
			increased at all.(2)  
			
			  
			
			
			1.
			Jones, "A Report on Cancer," op.cit. 
			2. Robert N. Proctor, Cancer Wars: How Politics Shapes What We Know 
			and Don't Know About Cancer (New York: Basic Books, 1995), p. 4. 
			
			  
			
			
			This is merely another statistical deception. 
			 
			When X-ray therapy is used, the body's white blood cell count
			is reduced which leaves the patient susceptible to infections and
			other diseases as well. It is common for such patients to succumb
			to pneumonia, for instance, rather than cancer. And, as stated
			previously, that is what appears on the death certificate - as well
			as in the statistics.  
			
			  
			
			
			As Dr. Richardson has observed: 
			
				
				I have seen patients who have been paralyzed by cobalt spine 
			radiation, and after vitamin treatment their HCG test is faintly 
			positive. We got their cancer, but the radiogenic manipulation is 
			such that they can't walk... It's the cobalt that will kill, not 
			the cancer.(3) 
			 
			
			
			3. Letter from John Richardson, M.D., to G. Edward Griffin, dated 
			Dec. 2,1972; Griffen, Private Papers, op. cit. 
			
			  
			
			
			There is an old joke about the doctor who told the recent
			widow:  
			
				
				"You will be happy to know we cured your husband's
			disease just before he died."  
			 
			
			
			The death of U.S. Senator Paul
			Tsongas in January of 1997 was proof that this is no joke.  
			
			  
			
			
			His
			obituary stated:  
			
				
				"Hospitalized Jan. 3 with a liver problem because
			of cancer treatments, Tsongas was cancer-free at his death." 
			 
			
			
			If the patient is strong enough to survive radiation, then he
			stall faces a closed door.  
			
			  
			
			
			Once the cancer has metastasized to a
			second location, there is practically no chance that the patient 
			will
			live. In addition to an almost zero survival value, radio therapy
			Has the extra distinction of also spreading the very cancer it is
			supposed to combat. 
			 
			One of the most publicized claims by The American Cancer Society is 
			that early diagnosis and treatment increases the chance of survival. 
			This is one of those slogans that drives millions of people into 
			their doctors' offices for that mystical experience called the 
			annual checkup.  
			
				
				"A check and a checkup" may be an effective stimulus 
			for revenue to the cancer industry but its medical value is not as 
			proven as the hype would suggest.  
			 
			
			
			As Dr. Hardin Jones stated 
			emphatically: 
			
				
				In the matter of duration of malignant tumors before treatment, no 
			studies have established the much talked about relationship between 
			early detection and favorable survival after treatment... Serious 
			attempts to relate prompt treatment with chance of cure have been 
			unsuccessful. In some types of cancer, the opposite of the expected 
			association of short duration of symptoms with a high chance of 
			being "cured" has been observed.  
				  
				
				A long duration of symptoms before 
			treatment in a few cancers of the breast and cervix is associated 
			with longer than usual survival... Neither the timing nor the 
			extent of treatment of the true malignancies has appreciably altered 
			the average course of the disease. The possibility exists that
			treatment makes the average situation worse.(1)  
			 
			
			
			1. Jones, "A Report on Cancer," op. cit. 
			
			  
			
			
			In view of all this, 
			it is exasperating to find spokesmen for orthodox medicine 
			continually warning the public against using Laetrile on the grounds 
			that it will prevent cancer patients from benefiting from "proven" 
			cures.  
			
			  
			
			
			The pronouncement by Dr. Ralph Weilerstein of the California 
			Department of Public Health cited at the opening of this chapter is 
			typical. But Dr. Weilerstein is vulnerable on two points. First, it 
			is very rare to find any patient seeking Laetrile therapy who hasn't 
			already been subjected to the so-called "modern curative methods" of 
			surgery and radiation. In fact, most of them have been pronounced 
			hopeless after these methods have failed, and it is only then that 
			these people turn to vitamin therapy as a last resort.  
			
			  
			
			
			So Dr. Weilerstein has set up a straw-man objection on that score.
			But, 
			more important than that is the fact that the Weilersteinian 
			treatments simply do not work.  
			
			  
			
			
			Battling as a lone warrior within the 
			enemy stronghold, Dr. Dean Burk of the National Cancer Institute 
			repeatedly has laid it on the line. In a letter to his boss, Dr. Frank Rauscher, he said:  
			
				
				In spite of the foregoing evidence,... 
			officials of the American Cancer Society and even of the National 
			Cancer Institute, have continued to set forth to the public that 
			about one in every four
			cancer cases is now "cured" or "controlled," but seldom if ever 
			backed up with the requisite statistical or epidemiological support 
			for such a statement to be scientifically meaningful, however 
			effective for fund gathering.  
				  
				
				Such a statement is highly misleading, 
			since it hides the fact that, with systemic or metastatic cancers, 
			the actual rate of control in terms of the conventional five-year 
			survival is scarcely more than one in twenty...(1)
  One may well ask Dr. Weilerstein where are all the modern curative 
			methods to which he, the California Cancer Advisory Council, and 
			indeed so many administrators so glibly refer?... No, disseminated 
			cancer, in its various forms and kinds remains, by and large, as 
			"incurable" as at the time of the Kefauver Amendment ten years 
			ago.(2) 
			 
			
			
			1. Letter from Dean Burk to Frank Rauscher; Griffin, Private Papers, 
			op. cit., p. 3. 
			2.
			Letter from Dean Burk to Congressman Frey; Griffin, Private Papers, 
			op. cit., p. 5. 
			
			 
			 
			The statistics of the ACS are fascinating. They constitute many 
			pages of tables and charts showing cancer by location, sex, age, and 
			geography. But when it comes to hard numbers about those "proven 
			cures," there is nothing.  
			
			  
			
			
			There is only the unsupported statement:  
			
				
				"One out of three patients is being saved today as against one out 
			of five a generation ago."  
			 
			
			
			This may or may not be true, depending on 
			one's definition of the word saved. But even if we do not challenge 
			it, we must keep in mind that there also is a corresponding gain in 
			the number of those who are getting cancer.  
			
			  
			
			
			Why is that?  
			
			  
			
			
			Here is the 
			official explanation: 
			
				
				Major factors are the increasing age and size of the population. 
			Science has conquered many diseases, and the average life span of 
			Americans has been extended. Longer life brings man to the age in 
			which cancer most often strikes - from the fifth decade on. 
			 
			
			
			All of which sounds plausible - until one examines the facts: 
			
				
				First, the increasing size of the population has nothing to do with 
			it. The statistics of "one out of three" and "one out of five" are 
			proportional rather than numerical. They represent ratios that apply 
			regardless of the population size.
  Second, the average life expectancy of the population has been 
			extended less than three years between 1980 to 1996. That could not 
			possibly account for the drastic increase of the cancer death rate 
			within that time.
  And third, increasing age need not be a factor, anyway - as the 
			cancer-free Hunzakuts and Abkhazians prove quite conclusively. 
			 
			
			
			In May of 1986, the clouds of propaganda parted and a sun-ray of 
			truth broke through into the medical media.  
			
			  
			
			
			The New England Journal 
			of Medicine published a report by John C. Bailar, III, and 
			Elaine M. 
			Smith. Dr. Bailar was with the Department of Biostatistics at 
			Harvard School of Public Health; Dr. Smith was with the University 
			of Iowa Medical Center.  
			
			  
			
			
			Their report was brutal in its honesty: 
			
				
				Some measures of efforts to control cancer appear to show 
			substantial progress, some show substantial losses, and some show 
			little change. By making deliberate choices among these measures, 
			one can convey any impression from overwhelming success against 
			cancer to disaster.
  Our choice for the single best measure of progress against cancer is 
			the mortality rate for all forms of cancer combined, age adjusted to 
			the U.S. 1980 standard. This measure removes the effects of changes 
			in the size and age composition of the population, prevents the 
			selective reporting of data to support particular views, minimizes 
			the effects of changes in diagnostic criteria related to recent 
			advances in screening and detection, and directly measures the 
			outcome of greatest concern - death...
  Age-adjusted mortality rates have shown a slow and steady increase 
			over several decades, and there is no evidence of a recent downward 
			trend. In this clinical sense we are losing the war against 
			cancer... The main conclusion we draw is that some 35 years of 
			intense effort focused on improving treatment must be judged a 
			qualified failure.(1) 
			 
			
			
			In a follow-up report released eleven years later, Dr Bailar 
			revealed that the dismal picture had not improved.  
			
			  
			
			
			He said:  
			
				
				"We have 
			given it our best effort for decades: billions of dollars of 
			support, the best scientific talent available. It hasn't paid 
			off."(2) 
			 
			
			
			1. "Progress Against Cancer?" New England Journal of Medicine, May 
			8, 1986,
			p. 1231. 
			2. "$30 billion 'War on Cancer' a bust?" USA Today, May 29, 1997, p. 
			1. 
			
			  
			
			
			It is clear that the American Cancer Society - or at least someone 
			very high within it - is trying to give the American people a good 
			old-fashioned snow job.  
			
			  
			
			
			The truth of the matter is - ACS statistics 
			notwithstanding - orthodox medicine does not have "proven cancer 
			cures," and what it does have is pitifully inadequate considering 
			the prestige it enjoys, the money it collects, and the snobbish 
			scorn it heaps upon those who do not wish to subscribe to its 
			treatments. 
			  
			
			
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