Chapter Twenty-Six
A WORLD WITHOUT CANCER
Areas of need for further research with vitamin B17; how the
Laetrile controversy differs from medical controversies of the past;
an analogy of biological and political cancer; and a scenario in
which both will be conquered together. |
Areas of need for further research with vitamin B17; how the
Laetrile controversy differs from medical controversies of the past;
an analogy of biological and political cancer; and a scenario in
which both will be conquered together.
Considering the lack of beneficial results obtained by orthodox
medicine, it has been said that voodoo witchcraft would be just as
effective - and perhaps even more so - for at least then the patient
would be spared the deadly side effects of radiation and chemical
poisoning.
Just as we are amused today at the primitive medical
practices of history, future generations surely will look back at
our own era and cringe at the senseless cutting, burning, and
poisoning that now passes for medical science.
The advocates of vitamin B17 are the first to admit that there is
yet much to learn about the natural mechanisms involved in the cause
and control of cancer and that there is need for continued caution
and understatement. For one thing, there is a growing suspicion
among experienced clinicians that B17 in foods is more effective
than in the currently processed and concentrated forms.
They would
prefer their patients to obtain it in this natural state, except for
the fact that it is next to impossible to ingest sufficient
quantities that way to be therapeutically effective in the treatment
of advanced cancer. When the patient needs massive doses quickly,
the physician has only one recourse, and that is to administer B17
in the highly concentrated, purified, and injectable form.
But in
that form it is possible that other trace substances associated with
B17 as it occurs in the natural state may have been
eliminated - substances which either act directly against cancer
themselves, or which may serve as catalysts causing either the B17
to function more efficiently or stimulating still other mechanisms
of the body into action.
Many nutritionists believe that organic
vitamins obtained from real foods are superior to man-made or
synthetic vitamins because of the trace substances found in one but
not in the other. So, too, there is a growing respect for B17 in the
natural state.(1)
1. If recent FDA rulings are allowed to stand, it will be illegal to
claim or even imply that vitamin supplements derived from organic
sources are superior to those that are synthesized. They will even
forbid the manufacturer to identify the source on the label. Thus,
truth in packaging is declared illegal by the FDA!
At any rate, even though the basic truths have
been unlocked, there is still much to learn, and Laetrile advocates
humbly admit the need for additional research.
There have been many other medical controversies centered around
cancer therapy. Perhaps the best publicized of these was Dr. Andrew
Ivy's chemical formula known as Krebiozen and the Hoxsey Treatment
developed in the 1920s by Harry Hoxsey.
The Laetrile controversy is
different from these, however, in that the formula has not been kept
a secret. Its chemical composition and its action have been openly
described and willingly shared with all who express an interest.
There are no enforceable patents on its manufacture and,
consequently, no profits to its discoverer. Dr. Krebs had no
proprietary interest in Laetrile, never received payment for the
formula, and never refused to share his technical knowledge with
anyone who desired to manufacture it.
His standard reply to all such
inquiries was:
"Laetrile is the property of all mankind."
A significant aspect of the Laetrile controversy, therefore, is
that the proponents have nothing to gain, while the detractors
have much to lose.
Admittedly, as long as Laetrile is forced by the
FDA into a black-market operation, those who manufacture and
distribute it can be expected to derive substantial profits. These
profits, however, merely will reflect the necessary and fair price
paid by those who are not willing to run the risk of imprisonment
to those who are. When public opinion forces the legalization of
Laetrile, the price will plummet.
After that, there will be a
transition period of a few years in which vitamin B17 will be
manufactured in various concentrated forms in order to treat
existing cancer victims. This, too, will be a source of income, but,
in the absence of government restrictions favoring any single
manufacturer, others will be attracted into the field and the
resulting competition will bring the cost of injectable B17 even
lower - perhaps to less than one-tenth of present levels.
The cost
of low dosage tablets for routine, daily use probably will drop to
about the same as that of any other vitamin.
The most encouraging part of all, however, is that, even if
government were to succeed in totally stopping the supply of
Laetrile, we still could obtain all the vitamin B17 we need to
maintain normal health, and we could do so quite legally by
selecting the appropriate food. It is abundant in the seeds of
apricots, peaches, plums, nectarines, cherries, berries, and apples.
It is found in lima beans, bean sprouts, millet, and many other
foods. It may take a little effort to obtain it, but no government
action - short of imprisonment itself - can stop us from doing so.
Once the story of vitamin B17 is widely known, once
nitriloside-bearing seeds are ground up and sprinkled over our foods
as a routine seasoning, the battle against cancer finally will be
won. In the wake of that battle, unfortunately, there will be many
casualties: men and women who learned the truth too late.
Some,
mercifully, may be brought back from the edge of the grave for an
uncertain time, but they will bear the disfiguring scars of their
wounds from surgery and radiation.
They may be relieved from pain,
but no amount of B17 can repair their bodies or return them to total
health. Others more fortunate, who are treated sooner and who escape
the damage of orthodox therapy, will return to a normal and
productive life, fulfilling their expected years. In all such cases,
however, maintenance doses will be required to prevent the body's
metabolic barrier from breaking once again at the weak spot of its
old rupture.
In time, the generation so affected will die off, and, with it, the
last vestiges of the twentieth century's greatest medical
catastrophe will disappear into the history books.
But what of the other cancer - the malignancy that is now spreading
through the body-politic and destroying its substance -what of that?
Are we to save our health only so that we and our children can
become more productive serfs?
There are many parallels that can be drawn between cancer and
totalitarianism. Government, for example, is much the same as
trophoblast. Like its counterpart in our bodies, government is both
normal and necessary. No civilization could come to birth without
it. It is a vital part of the life cycle.
Government, however, just like the trophoblast, must be held in
check to prevent it from growing, feeding upon, and ultimately
destroying its host - the civilization itself.
Every dead civilization
of the past either has been killed quickly by physical trauma - the
military force of invading conquerors - or has died the slow death of
cancer as the internal trophoblast of government grew to monstrous
proportions and gradually consumed all there was. In the end, the
civilization and the cancerous government were buried together in a
common grave.
In biological terms, the trophoblast cell is held in check by the
intrinsic action of the pancreatic enzymes and by the extrinsic
action of vitamin B17. If either is deficient, the body is in
danger. If both are weak, the trophoblast will grow and tragedy is
certain. In terms of society, government is held in check by the
intrinsic action of constitutional safeguards such as the division
of political powers and other built-in checks and balances.
It is
restrained also by the extrinsic action of public awareness and
vigilance over elected officials. If either is deficient, the
civilization is in danger. If both are weak, government will grow
and the civilization will die.
The analogy is devastating. It is obvious that both our intrinsic
and extrinsic defenses are in bad repair, if functioning at all.
Supreme Court decisions have toppled the constitutional restraints
against federal centralism, and the public now appears to be
mesmerized by the dazzling crystal pendant of collectivism swinging
from the fingers of Big Brother. And the totalitarian trophoblast is
running wild.
Can our civilization be saved? Or has the cancer progressed too far?
That is the urgent question asked by every cancer victim.
And the
answer is the same:
"We won't know until we try."
In all honesty, the prospects do not look good.
The disease is far
advanced and, as of right now, there is little chance of an
immediate halt to the process. Our only course of attack is to begin
to build up the natural defenses as rapidly as possible,
particularly the extrinsic factor of public awareness and vigilance
over elected officials. The intrinsic task of rebuilding
constitutional safeguards will take a little longer but will follow
as consequence of our efforts in the primary field.
What we must do, therefore, is to manufacture the vitamin of
an aroused public opinion and inject it as rapidly and in as large
doses as possible into the body-politic. The heaviest doses should
be injected directly into the tumor itself. Let the federal government - particularly the FDA - feel the powerful surge of this
substance. It will be like selective poison to the malignant cell.
Specifically, the FDA must be cut back to size.
There is no logic in
granting our servant government the power to tell us what medicines
or foods we may use. The only legitimate function of government in
this field is to police labeling and packaging to insure that the
public is correctly informed on what it buys. If the substance is
dangerous, then it should be labeled as such but not withheld. In
other words, give the people the facts and let them decide for
themselves.
Ninety percent of the present function of the FDA should
be abolished!
After the tumor has begun to wither at the primary site of the FDA,
our vitamin of public opinion then must be injected into the
bloodstream of Congress and allowed to circulate freely into every
other agency and bureau of government as well. All of them are just
as riddled with the growing malignancy of despotism as is the FDA,
and each of them needs to be brought back under control.
With sufficient effort and sacrifice, the patient can be saved.
Whether or not our freedoms can be fully restored is another matter.
They probably cannot. The cancer of collectivism already is too far
advanced, and the damage is too great to permit it. Our people have
lost the spirit of independence and self-discipline that are
prerequisites for full recovery.
They have grown soft and dependent
upon government subsidies, welfare payments, health care, retirement
benefits, unemployment compensation, food stamps, tax-supported
loans, price-supports, minimum-wage laws, government schools, public
transportation, and federal housing.
Realistically, it is too much
to expect that they will voluntarily give up any of these even if
they know that, in the long run, it would be better for the system
and for them. They still will not do it.
Conditions in America today were clearly seen almost two hundred
years ago by the French philosopher, de Tocqueville. Viewing the
seeds of centralism sown into our infant government even then, de
Tocqueville predicted that the proud and defiant American would, in
time, come to view government intervention in his daily life, not as
acts of "despotism" which would drive him to another rebellion, but
as "benefits" bestowed by a kind and paternalistic state.
Describing
the effect of such a system upon any people who embrace it, he
wrote:
The will of man is not shattered, but softened, bent and guided. Men
are seldom forced by it to act, but they are constantly restrained
from acting. Such a power does not destroy but it prevents
existence; it does not tyrannize, but it compresses, enervates,
extinguishes and stupefies a people, till each nation is reduced to
nothing better than a flock of timid and industrious animals, of
which the government is the shepherd.(1)
1. Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America, Vol. II (New York:
Alfred Knopf, 1945), p. 291.
With the reading of these lines from out of the past, one is
forcibly reminded of the words of Fred Gates, the original genius
behind Rockefeller's tax-exempt foundations: "In our dreams we have
limitless resources, and the people yield themselves with perfect
docility to our molding hands."
The cancer of collectivism can be halted, but the damage it has
already done cannot be repaired. Our civilization can be restored to
a high degree of political health and vigor. Nevertheless, we will
have to live with our wounds and our scars.
But that is not so bad as it may seem at first. Like any cancer
patient, we come eventually to the realization that it could be a
lot worse. Instead of bemoaning the fact that we may never regain
the vigor of our past, we can rejoice over the opportunity just to
retain life.
Considering the alternative of a lifeless existence in
the dull, collective monotone of Orwell's 2984, we should thank God
for this opportunity to salvage as much of our freedoms as we still
have. Instead of giving up in despair and surrendering our bodies
and our minds to the ravages of a progressive and painful end, we
should leap at the chance - any chance - to isolate the tumor of
totalitarianism and rebuild what we can of our natural defenses
against its spread. Any other course is unconscionable and stupid.
Let us, therefore, get down to specifics. All the rhetoric in the
world is useless unless it is coupled with a tangible and realistic
plan of action. Let us close this study by outlining at least the
main features of that plan.
As mentioned previously, the FDA should be knocked down
to size. Perhaps it should be abolished altogether. If its function
were merely to guarantee honest labeling and packaging, there is
no reason why some other agency such as that in charge of
standards, weights, and measures couldn't handle the job.
Would this result in a new wave of drug tragedies, another
crop of thalidomide babies? Of course not.
Let us suppose that
the FDA had only the power to require the label and literature of
thalidomide to state that,
"this drug is dangerous for use by women
during periods of potential pregnancy and may result in deformed
infants."
Thalidomide is available only through the prescription of
a licensed physician. No physician would prescribe such a drug
without first considering this warning, and it is likely that he
would not prescribe it to any woman of child-bearing age.
But the
decision would be his based upon full knowledge of the facts, which
is the way it should be. Thalidomide received a great deal of
publicity, but it is no different than hundreds of other drugs that
may now be obtained through prescription. If one is banned, they all
should be banned. The FDA, however, does not need the power to ban
these drugs in order to protect our health. Honest labeling is
adequate.
Nicholas von Hoffman, commentator for the Washington Post, confirmed
this point when he wrote: It would be very hard to show that the
FDA's power to ban or regulate the sale of a compound has worked to
protect the public. Even in a celebrated case like thalidomide, what
was important was warning pregnant women they'd jeopardize their
babies if they took
it. The power to insist on proper labeling so doctor and patients
are adequately warned about the properties of drugs is what's
decisive.
But the power to forbid something's use, to stop research,
why
should the government have such power? To protect us? But we're not
wards of the state, we're citizens.(1)
Nor is Mr. von Hoffman alone. Writing in Newsweek, Milton Friedman
says:
The 1962 amendments to the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act should be
repealed. They are doing vastly more harm than good. To comply with
them, FDA officials must condemn innocent people to death. In the
present climate of opinion, this conclusion will seem shocking to
most of you - better to attack motherhood or even apple pie. Shocking
it is - but that does not keep it from also being correct. Indeed,
further studies may well justify the even more shocking conclusion
that the FDA itself should be abolished.(2)
1. "And if it Works...," The Washington Post,] June 4,1971.
2. "Frustrating Drug Advancement," Newsweek, Jan. 8,1973, p. 49.
Abolish the FDA? But who would enforce standards of sanitation in
preparation of food and drugs?
Since when do free men need government to tell them how to be clean?
To start off, the FDA's performance in that field has been far from
a paragon of excellence. But more important, any
manufacturer in his right mind would naturally seek the highest
possible sanitation standards if for no other reason than to avoid
lawsuits from customers.
One can be sure also that inspectors from
companies that underwrite the manufacturer's product liability
insurance have more than a casual interest in their client's
sanitation record. Since violation of the underwriter's standards
can result in higher premiums or in cancellation of the insurance,
the manufacturer would be a fool to ignore them.
At any rate, local
health agencies are more than adequate for the job of maintaining
sanitation standards. Federal inspectors are no more proficient than
state, county, or city inspectors, and there is no need for such
wasteful duplication.
Contamination and adulteration of food-and-drug products undoubtedly
would occur from time to time. But they also occur under the present
system of FDA guardianship. The truth is that the FDA serves no
reasonable or necessary function in this field and should be
withdrawn from it completely.
It is time to stop this nonsense about humbly petitioning the FDA to
grant us permission to test Laetrile, to sell apricot kernels, to
take high-potency vitamins, or to do any of a hundred other specific
things which it prohibits. Asking the FDA to approve these is like
asking the wolf to okay the lunch in Little Red Riding Hood's
basket. It is time we realize that the FDA has no business in this
field at all.
We must stop asking meekly for permission and close
the outfit down!
How is this to be accomplished? Returning again to the trophoblast
analogy, our first task is to manufacture and inject the extrinsic
factor which is the vitamin of public opinion.
The intrinsic factor
will be the re-building of legislative, judicial, and constitutional
safeguards. Within this category, our most immediate work is in the
courts. We must provide legal defense for those physicians and
distributors who have the courage to risk their reputations and
their livelihoods (to say nothing of a jail sentence) by standing
against the bureaucracy. Of necessity, however, the legal battles
fought on their behalf initially must be on narrow grounds and
defensive in nature.
The primary thrust of most of these cases will
be merely to prove that the use of vitamin B17 does not in fact
violate the law.
The objective here is not to change the law, (for laws are not
changed in court) but merely to keep the defendant out of jail. Even
if these cases are successful, however, they do not really
solve the problem, for the FDA is still fully operable and free to
rewrite its rulings, to tighten them up so as to override the
court's decision. Sooner or later, the doctor or the distributor
will be under arrest again.
Ultimately, the law must be changed. At the very least, that means
legislation specifically aimed at removing the FDA from jurisdiction
over vitamins. Another approach might be a lawsuit on behalf of
cancer victims challenging the constitutionality of the infringement
upon their rights. Both lines of attack should be launched.
The final contest, however, will be fought on the larger
battleground of whether the government should have any power over
our food, medicine, or health. It will be only around this question
that the many issues will lose their fuzzy edges and a chance for a
real victory will become possible. In order to abolish the FDA, or
at least to restrict its operation, we will need either legislation
or a constitutional amendment. We should pursue
both.
The possibility of a constitutional revision is not as extreme as it
may sound. In fact, Dr. Benjamin Rush of Philadelphia - one of the
signers of the Declaration of Independence, a member of the
Continental Congress, Surgeon-General of Washington's armies, and
probably the foremost American physician of his day - had urged his
colleagues to include "medical liberty" in the First Amendment at
the time it was drafted.
He wrote:
Unless we put medical freedom into the Constitution, the time will
come when medicine will organize into an undercover dictatorship...
To restrict the art of healing to one class of men and deny equal
privileges to others will constitute the Bastille of medical
science.
All such laws are un-American and despotic ... and have no
place in a republic... The Constitution of this Republic should
make special provision for medical freedom as well as religious
freedom.(1)
1. As quoted by Bealle, The New Drug Story, op. tit., p. 188, and by
Dr. Dean Burk in The Cancer News Journal, May/June, 1973, p. 4.
There are more human beings alive right now than the sum total of
all those born from the beginning of time to the beginning of this
century.
If we fail to heed Dr. Rush's advice; if we fail to realize
that medical freedom is just as important as the other freedoms
guaranteed by the Bill of Rights; then, before this century is over,
more human beings will have died of cancer than
the total of all men who have ever lived on this earth prior to that
time. And this will happen in a century during which the solution
was known and written in the scientific record.
In the days ahead, the controversy over medical freedom will
intensify. Let it come. The reputations of honest men will be
tarnished by the medical establishment and the media, and
respectable business ventures will be ruined. So be it. Innocent men
will be tried before corrupt or intimidated judges and thrown into
prison.
It is maddening but it cannot be helped, for the battle is
not of our choosing. Our only alternatives are to resist or not to
resist - to fight back with all we have or to surrender and perish.
Yes, the battle is grim, but the stakes are high. We must not be
intimidated by the strength of the opposition and, above all, we
must not fail. Someone has to stand up against the bureaucracy.
And
we are the ones who must do it!
You and your family now may become secure from the threat of cancer.
But that is only because someone else has taken the time to bring
these facts to your attention. Can you do less for others?
Join with us in this gigantic undertaking. Make this your personal
crusade. Dedicate yourself to freedom of choice, not just in cancer
therapy, but in all spheres of human activity.
Once the government
is off our backs, then all things become possible. The biological
and political trophoblasts will be conquered together and man, at
last, will inherit the bountiful world of health and freedom that is
his birthright - a world without cancer.
If you would like to locate a doctor who is experienced in the use
of alternative cancer therapies - including Laetrile - you are invited
to contact The Cancer Cure Foundation. The Foundation is a
non-profit organization created in 1976 by the author of this book
for the purpose of research and education in the field of cancer
therapy.
Donations and bequests to the Foundation are
tax-deductible.
The Cancer Cure Foundation
Phone: (800)
282-2873 or (805) 498-0185
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