by Mike Adams
the Health Ranger
May 11, 2010
from
NaturalNews Website
When a government panel of experts finds the courage to tell the
truth about cancer, it's an event so rare that it becomes
newsworthy.
Late last week, a report
from the President's Cancer Panel (PCP)
broke ranks with the sick-care cancer establishment and dared to say
something that natural health advocates have been warning about for
decades: That Americans are "bombarded" with cancer-causing
chemicals and radiation, and if we hope to reduce cancer rates, we
must eliminate cancer-causing chemicals in foods, medicines,
personal care products and our work and home environments.
In a directive to President Obama, the report states,
"The panel urges you
most strongly to use the power of your office to remove the
carcinogens and other toxins from our food, water, and air that
needlessly increase healthcare costs, cripple our nation's
productivity, and devastate American lives."
When I first read that,
I just about fell out of my chair. Government-appointed experts are
really saying that there are cancer-causing chemicals in our food
and water?
That simple fact has
been vehemently denied by the cancer industry, processed food
giants, personal care product companies and of course the fluoride
lobby - all of which insist their chemicals are perfectly safe.
ACS attacks
the report
The American Cancer Society (ACS),
not surprisingly, was quick to bash the report.
The ACS is one of the
sick-care cancer industry front groups that reinforces consumer
ignorance about both the causes and the solutions for cancer. The
ACS has, for decades, engaged in what can only be called a "cancer
chemical cover-up" with its denials that environmental chemicals
cause cancer. (Is
the American Cancer Society more interested in cancer profit than
cancer prevention?
and
American Cancer Society - Losing the War
Against Cancer)
Even as cancer experts like Dr Sam Epstein have been warning
about carcinogens in cosmetics,
personal care products and foods,
the ACS has ridiculously pretended such threats don't exist.
And just to top it off,
the ACS has been warning people to stay away from sunlight and
become more vitamin D deficient, thereby increasing cancer rates
even further.
So it's no surprise that the ACS doesn't like this PCP report that
dares to state the obvious: There are cancer-causing chemicals in
our food and water!
"The American people
- even before they are born - are bombarded continually with
myriad combinations of these dangerous exposures," the report
writes.
The great chemical
denial
Joining the ACS in criticizing the report is the American
Chemistry Council, the trade group representing the very same
chemical companies that are poisoning our world right now.
Remarkably, the ACS and
ACC are on the same side here, denying any link between chemicals
and cancer. They insist that all those chemicals in your processed
foods, cosmetics, antibacterial soaps, shampoos, fragrance products,
home cleaning solvents, pesticides, herbicides and other similar
products are all safe for you! Eat up, suckers!
Don't worry about the chemicals, they say. Cancer is just a matter
of bad luck. There's nothing you can do about it. So stop
trying.
That's their message, you see, and it's a message that plays right
into the hands of the cancer industry:
Don't prevent your
cancer and when you get sick, they'll make a fortune off your
disease and suffering.
The radiation threat
from medical imaging
The PCP report also takes a strong stand on the cancer risks caused
by medical imaging radiation.
It actually says,
"People who receive
multiple scans or other tests that require radiation may
accumulate doses equal to or exceeding that of Hiroshima atomic
bomb survivors."
I remember receiving
hate mail from cancer industry shills when I once made the same
statement in an
article about mammograms and CT scans.
And yet that statement
was factually quite correct: If you undergo several medical imaging
tests in a hospital today, you can very easily receive just as much
radiation as a person standing a few miles away from the nuclear
bomb dropped on Hiroshima during World War II.
This is not an
exaggeration. It is a simple fact of physics and the
law of inverse squares.
The
environmental dangers of pharmaceuticals
Here at
NaturalNews, I've been talking
about the environmental pollution of pharmaceuticals for years.
The fact that
pharmaceutical chemicals are flushed down the drain and end up in
the water supply is the "dirty little secret" of the drug industry.
The problem has gone virtually unrecognized by the entire mainstream
medical system... they just pretend it doesn't exist.
Yet this PCP report takes aim at it by saying: "Pharmaceuticals have
become a considerable source of environmental contamination. Drugs
of all types enter the water supply when they are excreted or
improperly disposed of; the health impact of long-term exposure to
varying mixtures of these compounds is unknown."
It's about time somebody in Washington stood up and challenged the
pharmaceutical industry on the environmental effects of its toxic
chemicals.
HRT drugs,
antidepressants, painkillers and many other types of drugs
are right now polluting our oceans and waterways. You can hardly
catch a fish near any major U.S. city now that isn't contaminated
with pharmaceuticals.
But don't expect anyone to give credence to this warning.
This entire PCP report
is being largely ignored in Washington (and attacked by
Big Business).
What the
report really says
The President's Cancer Panel is headed by:
LaSalle D.
Leffall, Jr., M.D., F.A.C.S., Chair
Charles R. Drew Professor of Surgery
Howard University College of Medicine
Washington, DC 20059
Margaret L. Kripke, Ph.D.
Vivian L. Smith Chair and Professor Emerita
The University of Texas
M.D. Anderson Cancer Center
Houston, TX 77030
These two people deserve
your support for having the courage to publish a report that
challenges the status quo of the corrupt cancer industry. So if you
wish, send them a thank-you email for their work.
The report is entitled, "REDUCING
ENVIRONMENTAL CANCER RISK - What We Can Do Now"
Here are some of the highlights from the report:
-
In 2009 alone,
approximately 1.5 million American men, women, and children
were diagnosed with cancer, and 562,000 died from the
disease. Approximately 41 percent of Americans will be
diagnosed with cancer at some point in their lives, and
about 21 percent will die from cancer. The incidence of some
cancers, including some most common among children, is
increasing for unexplained reasons.
-
The Panel was
particularly concerned to find that the true burden of
environmentally induced cancer has been grossly
underestimated. With nearly 80,000 chemicals on the market
in the United States, many of which are used by millions of
Americans in their daily lives and are un- or understudied
and largely unregulated, exposure to potential environmental
carcinogens is widespread. One such ubiquitous chemical,
bisphenol A (BPA), is still found in many consumer products
and remains unregulated in the United States, despite the
growing link between BPA and several diseases, including
various cancers.
-
However, the
grievous harm from this group of carcinogens has not been
addressed adequately by the National Cancer Program. The
American people -- even before they are born -- are
bombarded continually with myriad combinations of these
dangerous exposures.
-
Some scientists
maintain that current toxicity testing and exposure
limit-setting methods fail to accurately represent the
nature of human exposure to potentially harmful chemicals.
Current toxicity testing relies heavily on animal studies
that utilize doses substantially higher than those likely to
be encountered by humans. These data -- and the exposure
limits extrapolated from them -- fail to take into account
harmful effects that may occur only at very low doses.
-
Only a few
hundred of the more than 80,000 chemicals in use in the
United States have been tested for safety.
-
While all
Americans now carry many foreign chemicals in their bodies,
women often have higher levels of many toxic and
hormone-disrupting substances than do men. Some of these
chemicals have been found in maternal blood, placental
tissue, and breast milk samples from pregnant women and
mothers who recently gave birth. Thus, chemical contaminants
are being passed on to the next generation, both prenatally
and during breastfeeding.
-
The entire U.S.
population is exposed on a daily basis to numerous
agricultural chemicals, some of which also are used in
residential and commercial landscaping. Many of these
chemicals have known or suspected carcinogenic or
endocrine-disrupting properties. Pesticides (insecticides,
herbicides, and fungicides) approved for use by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
contain nearly 900 active ingredients, many of which are
toxic.
-
Many of the
solvents, fillers, and other chemicals listed as inert
ingredients on pesticide labels also are toxic, but are not
required to be tested for their potential to cause chronic
diseases such as cancer. In addition to pesticides,
agricultural fertilizers and veterinary pharmaceuticals are
major contributors to water pollution, both directly and as
a result of chemical processes that form toxic by-products
when these substances enter the water supply.
-
The use of cell
phones and other wireless technology is of great concern,
particularly since these devices are being used regularly by
ever larger and younger segments of the population.
-
Americans now
are estimated to receive nearly half of their total
radiation exposure from medical imaging and other medical
sources, compared with only 15 percent in the early 1980s.
The increase in medical radiation has nearly doubled the
total average effective radiation dose per individual in the
United States. Computed tomography (CT)
and nuclear medicine tests alone now contribute 36 percent
of the total radiation exposure and 75 percent of the
medical radiation exposure of the U.S. population.
-
Many referring
physicians, radiology professionals, and the public are
unaware of the radiation dose associated with various tests
or the total radiation dose and related increased cancer
risk individuals may accumulate over a lifetime. People who
receive multiple scans or other tests that require radiation
may accumulate doses equal to or exceeding that of Hiroshima
atomic bomb survivors.
-
Hundreds of
thousands of military personnel and civilians in the United
States received significant radiation doses as a result of
their participation in nuclear weapons testing and
supporting occupations and industries, including nuclear
fuel and weapons production, and uranium mining, milling,
and ore transport. Hundreds of thousands more were
irradiated at levels sufficient to cause cancer and other
diseases.
-
Numerous
environmental contaminants can cross the placental barrier;
to a disturbing extent, babies are born "pre-polluted."
There is a critical lack of knowledge and appreciation of
environmental threats to children's health and a severe
shortage of researchers and clinicians trained in children's
environmental health.
-
Single-agent
toxicity testing and reliance on animal testing are
inadequate to address the backlog of untested chemicals
already in use and the plethora of new chemicals introduced
every year.
-
Many known or
suspected carcinogens are completely unregulated.
Enforcement of most existing regulations is poor. In
virtually all cases, regulations fail to take multiple
exposures and exposure interactions into account.
-
Many known or
suspected carcinogens are completely unregulated.
Enforcement of most existing regulations is poor. In
virtually all cases, regulations fail to take multiple
exposures and exposure interactions into account.
Sources
|