Dragonslayer, was Re: CANCER: Can you help? / Gers

: In article <489156606.3283…@lamg.com>, P_Iann…@lamg.com (Paul
: Iannone) writes: |> Scott Ballantyne said:

: |>
: |> : In my friends case, the homeopath replaced a treatment which had a
: |> : 93% success rate with one that had absolutely no success rate,
: |> : because homeopaths have not performed clinical trials on their
: |> : treatments for cancer.
: |>
: |> No Scott, whatever homeopathy’s success rate may be in such cases, it is
: |> unaffected by whether or not clinical trials have been done. This is a
: |> logical error on your part, which I assume is inadvertent.
: |>
:
: Again, Paul makes a wrong statement. If I follow Paul Innane’s argument
: to it’s logical conclusion, then a patient should not consider the
: result of clinical trials when deciding whether a treatment is appropriate.

You haven’t got a logical bone in your body, Dragonslayer, 0000, Root, etc.
My post above is a polite logic point that others posted as well. By
persisting in spelling my name incorrectly, you are disrespecting my father,
and I see no reason to tolerate that. You have no credibility with me.

You’ve just gone into my filter, bud. Sorry about that.

P_Iann…@lamg.com (Paul Iannone, P.O.B. 66843, L.A., CA 90066).

3 Responses to “Dragonslayer, was Re: CANCER: Can you help? / Gers”

  1. admin says:

        The current medical system describes their current cancer treatment as
    "cures"  and is a lie.   The current definition of a "cure"  is that the
    patient survives five calender years after the date of discovery.   Thus
    if the patient lives five years and one day after discovery the now "dead"
    patient was "cured".
        The one honest statement made by the American Cancer Society is that
    earlier detection of cancer is leading to a higher rate of "cures".  The
    cancer that grows for years in the patient and has years to grow before
    the patient succumbs is now detected earlier.  Early detection increases
    the likelihood that the patient in question will live five years from the
    date of detection regardless of the treatment or lack of it.  This is not
    a cure.
          The truth is that the per capita number of cancer deaths in United
    States is rising.   That means that more people are dying from cancer, not
    less as the A.C.S.  would have you think.
         Another truth;  the only thing that DOES cure cancer is the patients’
    immune system.   Thus anything that weakens the immune system risks
    killing the patient.  It is ironic then that most "allopathic medicines"
    used to treat cancer are toxins.
        Gerson therapy and Homeopathic therapies may not kill cancer but they
    surely do not poison patients as the allopathic medicines do.  But if a
    patient is helped by these treatments the medical establishment refers to
    it as anectdotal evidence.
       There are not enough funds in the alternative medical community to fund
    the multi-million dollar studies the F.D.A. requires to approve a new
    drugs.  If there were there can be no profit for the funders because you
    cannot patent a plant.
        The truth is the American medical community extracts more money from
    U.S. citizens as a per capita expense than any other nation in the world
    pays and we live not a day longer.  
       I have personnally known 3 people who have achieved "cures" using the
    Gerson therapy.   I have also known about a dozen who suffered through
    chemotherapy only to die, weak and poisoned.

    Read: "The Great White Lie" by Walt Bogdanich isbn #0-671-79290-3

  2. admin says:

    In article <3h3ocb…@newsbf02.news.aol.com>,

    GRASSHPPR <grassh…@aol.com> wrote:
    >    The current medical system describes their current cancer treatment as
    >"cures"  and is a lie.   The current definition of a "cure"  is that the
    >patient survives five calender years after the date of discovery.   Thus
    >if the patient lives five years and one day after discovery the now "dead"
    >patient was "cured".

    Different studies use different statistical measures, but five year
    survival is not I believe the measure normally used. Five year *disease
    free* survival is the measure you are refering to. So the notion that the
    establishment is calling patients who are on their last legs, dying of
    recurrent cancer "cured" is in fact totally false.

    Now then, while it is absolutely true that one can relapse after more
    than five years, so that it is not in general true that five year disease
    free survival is equal to cure, many of these five year survivors have
    indeed been cured, and surely all have benefited. To claim that they have
    not is surely not reasonable. Give credit where credit is due.

    >     Another truth;  the only thing that DOES cure cancer is the patients’
    >immune system.   Thus anything that weakens the immune system risks
    >killing the patient.  It is ironic then that most "allopathic medicines"
    >used to treat cancer are toxins.

    I’m sorry to have to inform you of this, but there are plenty of
    documented long term survivals – cures if you will, with the standard
    conventional methods of surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy. What I
    object to so strenously is the tendancy of advocates for alternative
    medical approaches to claim that all conventional treatments for cancer
    don’t work. This is absurd nonsense. There is a lot of nonsense on the net
    (As well as a lot of solid information) but I don’t respond most of the
    time. This is different. You have to understand that cancer patients
    reading this group might see your message and forgo highly effective
    conventional treatments that are extremely well documented for unproven
    and ineffective remedies. For a cancer patient, the penalty for this kind
    of foolishness is death. On another forum a cancer patient signed her
    letter with the acronoym WITS – Whatever It TakeS. That is the attitude
    required for survival. If conventional therapy works – use it!

    >    Gerson therapy and Homeopathic therapies may not kill cancer but they
    >surely do not poison patients as the allopathic medicines do.  But if a
    >patient is helped by these treatments the medical establishment refers to
    >it as anectdotal evidence.

    You are correct about conventional medicine rejecting alternative
    successes because they are individual cases "anectdotes". In fact, I
    think a well documented anectdote does contain useful information, but
    unfortunately well documented cases are difficult to find.

    >   There are not enough funds in the alternative medical community to fund
    >the multi-million dollar studies the F.D.A. requires to approve a new
    >drugs.  If there were there can be no profit for the funders because you
    >cannot patent a plant.

    Again there is some truth in this – the average costs for a drug approval
    are in the neighborhood of a quarter billion dollars. Nonetheless, it is
    absolutely possible for alternative practitioners to meticulously follow
    and document cases and to publish them, and it would also be quite
    possible to conduct phase II clinical studies on their patients and to
    publish the results. Some have actually done these things – I wish more
    would.

    Your comment about plants is arrant nonsense – many pharmacutical
    companies are examining plants, and the anti-cancer drug TAXOL is plant
    derived as are several others.

    >   I have personnally known 3 people who have achieved "cures" using the
    >Gerson therapy.   I have also known about a dozen who suffered through
    >chemotherapy only to die, weak and poisoned.

    This is very interesting – I actually think the Gerson therapy may be
    effective in some cases, and I am always interested in hearing about cases
    where there was apparent benefit. I would be most interested in seeing you
    post details of these cases. What I’m looking for is measurable biopsy
    confirmed cancer where objective evidence for tumor shrinkage or extremely
    long survival without symptomatic evidence of disease were achieved by
    alternative methods alone (No concurrent conventional treatment). Do any
    of your three cases fit this description?

                             -Steve Dunn

  3. admin says:

    Re cancer, Steve Dunn posted an eloquent statement which all interested
    in alternative approaches should read.  My own comments follow.  Snipped
    away from the test he was responding to, Dunn wrote:

    In <3h4160$…@CUBoulder.Colorado.EDU> snyd…@ucsub.Colorado.EDU (The

    - Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -

    Snyder-Dunns) writes:

    >Different studies use different statistical measures, but five year
    >survival is not I believe the measure normally used. Five year *disease
    >free* survival is the measure you are refering to. So the notion that
    >the establishment is calling patients who are on their last legs, dying
    >of recurrent cancer "cured" is in fact totally false.

    >Now then, while it is absolutely true that one can relapse after more
    >than five years, so that it is not in general true that five year
    >disease free survival is equal to cure, many of these five year  
    >survivors have indeed been cured, and surely all have benefited. To
    >claim that they have not is surely not reasonable. Give credit where
    >credit is due.

    >I’m sorry to have to inform you of this, but there are plenty of
    >documented long term survivals – cures if you will, with the standard
    >conventional methods of surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy. What I
    >object to so strenously is the tendancy of advocates for alternative
    >medical approaches to claim that all conventional treatments for cancer
    >don’t work. This is absurd nonsense. There is a lot of nonsense on the
    >net(As well as a lot of solid information) but I don’t respond most of
    >the time. This is different. You have to understand that cancer
    >patients reading this group might see your message and forgo highly
    >effective conventional treatments that are extremely well documented
    >for unproven and ineffective remedies. For a cancer patient, the
    >penalty for this kind of foolishness is death.
    >On another forum a cancer patient signed her letter with the acronoym
    >WITS – Whatever It TakeS. That is the attitude required for survival.
    >If conventional therapy works – use it!
    >You are correct about conventional medicine rejecting alternative
    >successes because they are individual cases "anectdotes". In fact, I
    >think a well documented anectdote does contain useful information, but
    >unfortunately well documented cases are difficult to find.

    >Again there is some truth in this – the average costs for a drug
    >approval are in the neighborhood of a quarter billion dollars.
    >Nonetheless, it is absolutely possible for alternative practitioners to
    >meticulously follow and document cases and to publish them, and it
    >would also be quite possible to conduct phase II clinical studies on
    >their patients and to publish the results. Some have actually done
    >these things – I wish more would.

    >Your comment about plants is arrant nonsense – many pharmacutical
    >companies are examining plants, and the anti-cancer drug TAXOL is plant
    >derived as are several others.

    >This is very interesting – I actually think the Gerson therapy may be
    >effective in some cases, and I am always interested in hearing about
    >cases where there was apparent benefit. I would be most interested in
    >seeing you post details of these cases. What I’m looking for is
    >measurable biopsy confirmed cancer where objective evidence for tumor
    >shrinkage or extremely long survival without symptomatic evidence of
    >disease were achieved by alternative methods alone (No concurrent
    >conventional treatment). Do any of your three cases fit this
    >description?

    >                         -Steve Dunn

    As someone with a cancer patient in the family, I cannot sufficiently
    support the thrust of Steve Dunn’s statement.

    Because any reasonably educated human being is well aware of the
    resistence of established science to new science throughout recorded
    history, the endless arguments on that theme are worthless.

    What we’re interested in — everyone here — is what works?  Not what
    should work.  Not arcane philosophies.  Not unsubstantiated claims. Not
    impossible-to-follow pseudo-scientific explanations of why it should
    work. No.

    What works?  And what is the evidence that it does?  Real, genuine
    evidence — anecdotal, clinical, whatever.

    Any evidence.  Eye-witness accounts don’t meet the Dunn criteria, but
    it’s a start.

    That’s all we want to know.  What works?  How do you know that it does?

    Pretty simple, but 95% of the posts to this group don’t even approach
    responding to these two questions.

    And lots of us out here can use any help we can get.

    Joel Reingold