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 ( (    )__           A CULTURAL RESURRECTION PUBLICATION         __(    ) )
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鄢�  The Cunning Circumvention of Imposed Limitations by the Distribution 叱�
鄢   to the Public of Suppressed Information...    Disclaimer in Is�00     驰
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鄢                                                                         驰
鄢 Authored by:     [鮮m]                   Release Dates:  [Monthly]    驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢 Edited by:       [Demented Pixie]          Issue           [Is�03]      驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢 Released by:     [Cultural Resurrection]   Language:       [English]    驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢 Distribution by: [City of Angels]          Issue Content:  [Cancer Cure]驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢         ~~~Plz View Ezine in Fixed Width Font such as Courier~~~        驰
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鄢Is�03                                                                    驰
鄢                               Cancer Cure                               驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢 This material...as issue Is�02...is an attempt to open your eyes on     驰
鄢 suppressed issues within our medical community. We tend to worship our  驰
鄢 doctors as gods who will save us from diseases. If these false gods let 驰
鄢 us down, isn't it then time we ourselves take back the responsibility   驰
鄢 for our lives and well-being? As the public begins to learn of promising驰
鄢 healing technology, they should demand to know why it is being withheld.驰
鄢 Dr Sam Chachoua has developed a safe, effective treatment for healing   驰
鄢 cancer, AIDS and other related terminal illnesses years ago, but medical驰
鄢 authorities ignore his work and try to prevent his treatments & Reseach 驰
鄢 from becoming widely known. If you believe things of this nature doesn't驰
鄢 happen in our society, you are simply misinformed. It is not, nor ever  驰
鄢 will be TEOAS's intentions for the public to believe in any published   驰
鄢 information blindly. Only to open there eyes to some documented fact and驰
鄢 possibly gain enough public interest so more questions are asked and    驰
鄢 there answers demanded. You've seen this phrase so often "Knowledge is  驰
鄢 Power". With knowledge comes a certain responsibility. Knowledge isn't  驰
鄢 Power in itself...Applied knowledge is Power. Lets make it a point and  驰
鄢 goal of our underground culture to distribute suppressed information to 驰
鄢 the public, then let them judge for themselves what the truth is. At    驰
鄢 least develop enough of an interest to start asking the right questions 驰
鄢 to the correct people. Learn and be aware of what goes on in the world  驰
鄢 around you.                                                             驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢                                                         鮮m           驰
鄢                                                                         驰                                                     
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%%T%%%H%%%E%%%%%%%%E%%%Y%%%E%%%%%%%%O%%%F%%%%%%%%A%%%%%%%%S%%%T%%%O%%%R%%%M%%                                                                          
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鄢 Extractions directly from his book, The Challenge, The Promise & The    驰
鄢 Cure, published in 1998. by Sam Chachoua, MB, BS, �1997 All Rights      驰
鄢 Reserved of course...                                                   驰
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%%T%%%H%%%E%%%%%%%%E%%%Y%%%E%%%%%%%%O%%%F%%%%%%%%A%%%%%%%%S%%%T%%%O%%%R%%%M%%                                                                          
鄢圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹圹鄢�
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢                         Cancer Cure/Part I, History                     驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢                         TRUTH, LIES AND CONSPIRACIES                    驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢 Cancer, AIDS, heart disease: three faces of death that devastate so many驰
鄢 lives. Many believe that modern medicine will someday develop effective 驰
鄢 therapies. Those afflicted, their friends, family, lovers, pray that the驰
鄢 breakthroughs will come one day soon.                                   驰
鄢 Imagine that the world was offered new treatments and even real cures.  驰
鄢 Newspaper, television, radio and magazines would carry images of medical驰
鄢 triumph supported not only by hard data but by living, walking, healthy 驰
鄢 miracles. Imagine the impact this gift would have on millions of lives: 驰
鄢 the fulfillment of dreams, the awakening of hope. Try to imagine that   驰
鄢 the announcement was made and the world slept through it. Try to picture驰
鄢 a public reception with indifference and a medical society charged not  驰
鄢 to embrace but to destroy all embers of this success.                   驰
鄢 If the scenario is hard to picture, then don't try to imagine it but try驰
鄢 to remember. It happened. I know. I developed the technology. I made the驰
鄢 announcement.                                                           驰
鄢 I had always known that the medical system would take time to change, to驰
鄢 develop, but I could not have believed that the public announcement     驰
鄢 would fall on the deaf ears of victims, nor that any of my peers would  驰
鄢 challenge me not on the science of my achievements but with baseless    驰
鄢 rumours, lies and personal attacks. I could never have anticipated that 驰
鄢 in answering the dreams of so many, my life would turn into a nightmare.驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢                        A THREAT TO THE STATUS QUO                       驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢 Summer of 1995 was the proudest in my life. Fifteen years of research   驰
鄢 and medical trials had been building up to this one moment: the         驰
鄢 triumphant return to my adopted homeland Australia, and the fulfillment 驰
鄢 of a promise I had made to myself as I watched my father die of cancer  驰
鄢 so many years before.                                                   驰
鄢 Investigating three previously overlooked phenomena-organ resistance,   驰
鄢 organism resistance and spontaneous remission-I had developed effective 驰
鄢 vaccines for the prevention and treatment of many killer diseases. The  驰
鄢 genesis of what I call..."Induced Remission Therapy"...had begun in     驰
鄢 Australia more than a decade earlier, but I had spent five years touring驰
鄢 the world, lecturing and training doctors in hospitals and institutes. I驰
鄢 was returning with independent proof: dramatic and overwhelming evidence驰
鄢 that a new age of health was being ushered in. I was returning home to  驰
鄢 present my discoveries and to fund all research and development in this 驰 
鄢 field.                                                                  驰
鄢 Armed with X-rays, blood tests, preliminary data from the Colorado      驰
鄢 University Medical School, UCLA, Cedars Sinai Medical Center and        驰
鄢 undoubtedly the strongest proof: patients in remission from cancer, AIDS驰
鄢 and heart disease-rescued after all other options had been exhausted.   驰 
鄢 This should have been the realisation of my life's goals. Via the media,驰
鄢 millions would meet the success stories and hear of my grant offer,     驰
鄢 $100,000 to initiate investigations in Australia of this new therapy.   驰
鄢 Then, suddenly, silence. All research institutes were eligible for the  驰
鄢 $100,000 grant, but none came.                                          驰
鄢 I found myself suddenly in the vacuum of a media blackout. Interviews   驰
鄢 were cancelled, news stories were not run. The public returned to its   驰
鄢 comfortable staple of cancer "breakthroughs" that may come to be in the 驰
鄢 next 10 years, the weekly announcements from the familiar research      驰
鄢 institutes. Soon, to the public, I became a forgotten memory. To other  驰
鄢 interests, however, I was a threat that needed to be destroyed.         驰
鄢 A direct frontal assault on Australian soil was not the way, though. I  驰
鄢 am a medical doctor in Australia; that gives me certain powers and      驰
鄢 rights. I had offered money to have my therapies proved or disproved,   驰
鄢 and I had reached out to the public. Attacking me overtly would have    驰
鄢 raised too many questions. Backed by data from some of the world's most 驰
鄢 prestigious research institutes, I was offering my technology with no   驰
鄢 strings attached.                                                       驰
鄢 Australian Medical Board representatives attempted to chastise me for   驰
鄢 what they believed were obvious lies and deception. They demanded to    驰
鄢 know who had evaluated my data and where. They accused me of falsely    驰
鄢 raising hope in poor, dying individuals. It seemed okay to announce that驰
鄢 you can cure an occasional rat and raise millions in public donations if驰
鄢 you are an institute; however, to say that you can help people and not  驰
鄢 ask for, but offer money to prove your point was not quite the done     驰
鄢 thing. Interestingly, the Medical Board enquiry into my "unprofessional"驰
鄢 behaviour was the first time I had divulged details of the contacts and 驰
鄢 institutes investigating my technology. Incredibly, within days, these  驰
鄢 centres would not only cancel their collaboration with me but also,     驰
鄢 paradoxically, begin to deny that one had ever existed.                 驰
鄢 In the USA and Mexico clinics opened up, offering my therapy but        驰
鄢 delivering heaven-knows-what to unsuspecting patients. I initiated legal驰
鄢 action to shut them down, but then became a victim of intense personal  驰
鄢 and professional attacks as well as physical attempts on my life. I was 驰
鄢 disgusted to learn that members of UCLA and Cedars Sinai took part in my驰
鄢 denigration, but I was in for an even greater shock. When the names of  驰
鄢 individuals from the Australian Medical Board were used against me, I   驰
鄢 asked them to intervene; they would not. It seemed that my own Medical  驰
鄢 Board was supporting the attacks, even if only by inaction.             驰
鄢 What is even more incredible is that amongst all the lies were claims   驰
鄢 that my MB, BS (the Australian medical degree) was not that of a doctor 驰
鄢 but rather of a nurse or undergraduate. In court, American expert       驰
鄢 witnesses testified to that and the Australian Medical Board seemed to  驰
鄢 go along for the ride. Despite incredible resistance and bias, I won the驰
鄢 court battle-but the war to save lives still rages.                     驰
鄢 Unlike stories of conspiracies and cover-ups from long ago, this is     驰
鄢 happening now. I am still alive; the dream need not be lost, then       驰
鄢 mourned. The proof is there if you would only look.                     驰
鄢 I would never have imagined that the hardest part of healing cancer and 驰
鄢 AIDS would be to get people to listen.                                  驰
鄢 This is my story and our dream. Please read; read and remember.         驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢                             ACCELERATED DREAMS                          驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢 Every child has dreams and aspirations, major contributions to make,    驰
鄢 marks to be left, fame to be found-and what feels like an eternity in   驰
鄢 which to accomplish these objectives. Curing cancer, growing up to be a 驰
鄢 hero, saving mankind-these must be some of the commonest fantasies of   驰
鄢 the young. Impossible tasks seem achievable because there is so much    驰
鄢 time-time to study, time to grow, time to prepare. Time allows for      驰
鄢 attainable fantasies, for pleasant dreams. When time is shortened by age驰
鄢 or situation, when there is a need for rapid realisation of the dream,  驰
鄢 reality destroys fantasies and dreams are either abandoned or are often 驰
鄢 transformed into tangible despair that mourns with its loss by cutting  驰
鄢 harsher than reality ever could.                                        驰
鄢 My father was first diagnosed with cancer in 1975. He was aware of the  驰
鄢 multiple myeloma (a cancer of the bone marrow) several months prior to  驰
鄢 submitting to investigations and therapy. Multiple myeloma at the time  驰
鄢 was treated only when symptomatic, as therapy was felt to decrease      驰
鄢 lifespan, so he felt no rush to confirm his diagnosis.                  驰
鄢 He also felt no rush in informing me of his condition. My brother and   驰
鄢 sister had already entered medical school; I had entered puberty. My    驰
鄢 father worried that the news would devastate me and affect my studies.  驰
鄢 Even when faced with death, his concerns were for my life and future.   驰
鄢 So much changed in the next few years. My father, the workaholic, became驰
鄢 much more the family man; always my hero, now my best friend.           驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢                     STEPPING STONES, ALTERED PERCEPTION                 驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢 Cancer is a disease that has repeatedly thwarted a cure. To defeat it,  驰
鄢 surely one did not simply need to understand current teachings, one     驰
鄢 needed to excel. Curing cancer, was not within current knowledge,       驰
鄢 therefore one needed not only to master existing technology but to      驰
鄢 surpass it.                                                             驰
鄢 When seen as stepping stones to achieving my dream, teachings were      驰
鄢 devoured. I top-marked in several exams and received the T. F. Ryan     驰
鄢 Roentgen Prize in physics. I tried to apply every new nugget of         驰
鄢 information to my father's situation. Biochemistry taught of new agents 驰
鄢 that could increase the efficacy of chemotherapy and radiotherapy, and  驰
鄢 of cellular toxic agents that were presented in other contexts. Review  驰
鄢 of old and new medical research often showed that these agents had been 驰
鄢 used, and failed to demonstrate efficacy. Chemical therapy of cancer was驰
鄢 receiving such intense worldwide scrutiny that it was virtually         驰
鄢 impossible to generate an original thought or concept from within the   驰
鄢 field.                                                                  驰
鄢 Perhaps the answer then lay in the application of unrelated technology  驰
鄢 to the cancer problem. In physics we were taught that ultrasonic waves  驰
鄢 would have different heating coefficients depending on the density of   驰
鄢 the target; that is, the harder something was, the hotter it would      驰
鄢 become when exposed to ultrasonic frequencies. Cancer was usually denser驰
鄢 than normal tissue, and my father's cancer, being surrounded by bone,   驰
鄢 could be heated up much more so than surrounding soft tissue. Perhaps   驰
鄢 such preferential heat damage could kill the cancer.                    驰
鄢 I approached several cancer researchers. They seemed as excited as I was驰
鄢 but cautioned me to check past publications on the subject. Thirty years驰
鄢 previously, someone had applied that effect to cancer with marginal and 驰
鄢 occasionally harmful responses.                                         驰
鄢 Preferential attacks on cancer were not the answer, perhaps protection  驰
鄢 of normal structures against toxic agents would allow for more savage   驰
鄢 attacks against cancer. I discovered entire fields of science on the    驰
鄢 topic of radioprotective and chemoprotective agents. It was almost      驰
鄢 impossible to generate an original thought within the confines of       驰
鄢 chemotherapy and radiotherapy, yet despite continued failure these      驰
鄢 modalities seemed so powerful, alluring. Cancer was killing my father;  驰
鄢 I wanted to hit back, hard!                                             驰
鄢 Searching for metabolic weaknesses; poisoning some pathway essential to 驰
鄢 cancer but not to normal cells; combining modalitie of chemotherapy with驰
鄢 each other, with radiation, with hormones-everything had previously been驰
鄢 done and had failed.                                                    驰
鄢 Cancer was seen as a disease of excess (too much smoking, radiation,    驰
鄢 pollution etc.); the generation of an evil, foreign life-form which     驰
鄢 battles and invariably destroys its host. Excess must be cut down, taken驰
鄢 away, burned or poisoned. This logic, combined with the frustration and 驰
鄢 hatred generated by this invulnerable nemesis, had locked us into the   驰
鄢 mindset that dominates current therapies-therapies that have failed us  驰
鄢 for so long, yet which we refuse to abandon.                            驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢                          STANDARD CONCEPTS OF CANCER                    驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢 I would like to outline the concepts that have dominated cancer research驰
鄢 and therapies over the past few decades. Understanding failure is a     驰
鄢 useful tool in attaining success.                                       驰
鄢 By definition, cancer is a rogue cell which multiplies without respect  驰
鄢 for normal systems of cellular control and develops into a mass that    驰
鄢 invades and destroys normal tissue and structures. It is a powerful,    驰
鄢 mindless beast that spreads, grows more rapidly than normal tissue and  驰
鄢 ultimately leads to the death of the host.                              驰
鄢 Cancer growth rate may be slowed or accelerated by a mass variety of    驰
鄢 infections. Even in its natural history, cancer growth is not constant, 驰 
鄢 for during the life of the patient the disease often grows in spurts. It驰
鄢 is not uncommon for some cancer metastase to shrink, while most increase驰
鄢 in size.                                                                驰
鄢 Cancer, the "mindless beast", starts in a localised area, invades       驰
鄢 circulatory and lymphatic systems, then spreads throughout the body.    驰
鄢 Certain cancers exhibit specific patterns of spread, long held by       驰
鄢 conventional teachings to be dictated by the pattern of circulatory     驰
鄢 distribution of micro-tumour emboli. This belief furthers the concept   驰
鄢 that cancer is a rampaging monster, cast by chance to spread its deadly 驰
鄢 seeds. Passively carried by blood and lymph to their new targets, cancer驰
鄢 cells are undifferentiated, nonspecific parcels of destruction that care驰
鄢 not where they lodge and are not part of the decision-making process in 驰
鄢 their travels to new organs.                                            驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢                       SEARCHING FOR MISSING DEFENCES                    驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢 A few observations regarding cancer, its population and age distribution驰
鄢 are cited repeatedly in immunotherapy literature. Essentially, increased驰
鄢 cancer incidence occurs with immunodeficiency and age, particularly past驰
鄢 puberty, also appears to be a promoting factor.                         驰
鄢 If one considers only these observations, one can conclude that after   驰
鄢 puberty theres a loss of some vital immune-protective agent. If only we 驰
鄢 could identify it and replenish it, perhaps we could then triumph over  驰
鄢 this living nightmare.                                                  驰
鄢 The most likely candidate for our source of white blood cells in shining驰
鄢 armour seemed to be the thymus gland, a master immune- cell generator   驰
鄢 which atrophies by early teenage years. Its degeneration seemed to      驰
鄢 correlate with increased appearance of cancer.                          驰
鄢 Therapies have proliferated over the years where part or all of the     驰
鄢 thymus, its products and hormones were used to treat cancer patients.   驰
鄢 Results were marginal to non-existent, yet, of all the borderline       驰
鄢 alternative therapies, thymus supplementation persists most stubbornly. 驰
鄢 Propelled by a romantic notion, hope does not fade-even when it is a    驰
鄢 false hope. This restricted logic may have been sound. Perhaps we had   驰
鄢 fixated on the wrong atrophied organ.                                   驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢                              ORGAN RESISTANCE                           驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢 A common observation, even in the most advanced of malignancies, is that驰
鄢 some organs and tissues appear resistant to cancer spread and invasion. 驰
鄢 The small intestine not only resist spread but also very rarely develops驰
鄢 primary cancer. Perhaps there is specific immunologic capacity in the   驰
鄢 small intestine that prevents cancer from developing and protects it    驰
鄢 from tumour spread.                                                     驰
鄢 A quick search of anatomy and immunology books revealed that the small  驰
鄢 intestine is blessed with its own immune protection in the form of      驰
鄢 lymphoid aggregates called "Peyer's patches". Much of the function of   驰
鄢 this line of defence is restricted to the small intestine and does not  驰
鄢 circulate. This could account for the cancer resistance being local.    驰
鄢 Studies of lower animals, particularly birds, indicated that their main 驰
鄢 immune-processing organ was not the thymus but was located in their     驰
鄢 embryonic and foetal intestine. Could this part of human immunology have驰
鄢 been delegated an unfairly low status? In the animals, their capacity to驰
鄢 transfer immune resistance to the entire body is optimal early in life. 驰
鄢 What if human correlation exists whereby there is transfer of resistant 驰
鄢 factors between Peyer's patches (and immune responses localised to the  驰
鄢 small intestine in later life) and the rest of the body early in life?  驰
鄢 In view of the logic supporting thymic supplementation and the hope that驰
鄢 restoration of an atrophied organ would destroy disease, there was      驰
鄢 another interesting observation with relation to Peyer's patches.       驰
鄢 Intestinal lymphoid aggregates atrophied with age. We had been so       驰
鄢 obsessed with the thymus that perhaps we overlooked the real saviour.   驰 
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢                             THOUGHT TO ACTION                           驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢 I had yet to start medical school but spent a good deal of time at the  驰
鄢 Peter McCallum Cancer Institute in Melbourne where my father was        驰
鄢 receiving treatment. He had introduced me to several oncologists and I  驰
鄢 approached them with my ideas. The general response was condescending   驰
鄢 but usually polite. Dr Ian Cooper, chief haematologist, was not only    驰
鄢 supportive but also advised me to formulate my ideas as an experimental 驰
鄢 protocol and present it to Dr Jose of the Immunology Department.        驰
鄢 The reply to my preliminary correspondence was surprisingly encouraging:驰
鄢 I was invited to address the weekly group meeting of the immunology     驰
鄢 research team. I prepared theory, protocol and an experimental design.  驰
鄢 The presentation was informal and pleasant. Researchers from around the 驰
鄢 world had submitted protocols for review by this unit. Immunostimulants,驰
鄢 interferon, interleukin, lymphocyte harvest pre-chemotherapy: the       驰
鄢 suggestions were complicated but the themes familiar. I had heard or    驰
鄢 read about all these concepts before; worse yet, the experiments had    驰
鄢 been done and repeated years previously. I felt encouraged; my protocol 驰
鄢 was the only original idea being presented on that day. Surely a new    驰
鄢 concept would be more appealing to a research unit on the cutting edge  驰
鄢 of technology than simple repetition of prior failures?                 驰
鄢 To demonstrate that Peyer's patches could be stimulated to produce anti-驰
鄢 cancer activity, I proposed that lymphocytes isolated from these        驰
鄢 aggregates be tested against those taken from the spleen and other      驰
鄢 sources for efficacy against cancer. For obvious reasons I chose        驰
鄢 multiple myeloma as the cancer system to attack. An important design    驰
鄢 feature was the testing of ordinary extracts to check for inherent      驰
鄢 activity and the evaluation of lymphocytes exposed to the cancer during 驰
鄢 the animal's life to search for induced activity.                       驰
鄢 I was aware that the members of the unit had not been previously exposed驰
鄢 to this approach; it was new to them. I was also aware that they were   驰
鄢 not in the least interested.                                            驰
鄢 The first question I was asked was by Dr Jose, requesting the sources   驰
鄢 and literature supporting this concept as well as data on previous      驰
鄢 trials and their conclusions on this issue.                             驰
鄢 "This experiment hasn't been done before!" I claimed proudly.           驰
鄢 "But we need to see prior work in this field," he countered. "That is a 驰
鄢  key factor in our accepting experimental protocols!"                   驰
鄢 In that instant, I understood an intrinsic flaw in the cancer research  驰
鄢 industry. In order to realise easy acceptance of ideas and receive      驰
鄢 grants, it was important to show that you were travelling down the same 驰
鄢 well-worn path of prior investigations.                                 驰
鄢 "I don't understand," I replied. "Are you telling me that you won't do  驰
鄢 this because it hasn't been done before?"                               驰
鄢 "It is hard for me to allocate funds to work lacking prior experimental 驰
鄢 and data references." (In essence, he meant "yes".)                     驰
鄢 "We have no cure for cancer; we aren't even close. How will we find it  驰
鄢 if we don't explore new avenues?" I did not mean to sound cocky, but all驰
鄢 of my hope and courage were suddenly dissipating. I was being rejected. 驰
鄢 "We are on a strict budget and have defined guidelines."                驰
鄢 I would not be dismissed; my chance to save my father demanded their    驰
鄢 acceptance.                                                             驰
鄢 "Okay, I'll pay for it!" (The first of many times that this phrase would驰
鄢 pass my lips, and about the only time that I would not regret it.)      驰
鄢 Dr Jose smiled and relented. "We'll see," he said. "Go do an intensive  驰
鄢 literature search; we'll start arranging things next week. Your ideas   驰
鄢 are interesting and worth exploring."                                   驰
鄢 My father, Isaac, was by now confined to a wheelchair and my mother,    驰
鄢 Catherine, catered to his every need and whim. He had been a whirlwind, 驰
鄢 an active workaholic who delighted in helping the ill. Now confined to  驰
鄢 a chair and to bed, he exhibited a spirit and attitude that I have since驰
鄢 come to realise is far from common. Isaac wasted no time cursing his    驰
鄢 debility but would focus on how long he was able to stay in his garden, 驰
鄢 tending to his plants, or on how active and pain-free he could be on a  驰
鄢 particular day.                                                         驰
鄢 That day, my father and mother awaited my return from the conference    驰
鄢 with anticipation. That night, my home was filled with intense happiness驰
鄢 hope and prayer.                                                        驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢                               SIMPLE MIRACLES                           驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢 The experiment I had proposed was amateurish in its simplicity. The     驰
鄢 small intestine dealt with foreign challenges from ingested food on a   驰
鄢 continuous basis. Mechanisms for immunologically dealing with harmful   驰
鄢 agents had to be dramatic, rapid and effective. Every time an organism  驰
鄢 entered our intestine, we did not have the luxury of mounting a slow    驰
鄢 response with temperature, lethargy and all the normal physiologic and  驰
鄢 metabolic features of an immune response. It had to be eliminated with  驰
鄢 prejudice and finality.                                                 驰
鄢 Neighbourhood lymphocytes in the blood and other organs would never meet驰
鄢 such overwhelming numbers of challenges, as several barriers needed to  驰
鄢 be passed first.... their response therefore could afford to be more    驰
鄢 delayed. Immune cells from respiratory passages would also be expected  驰
鄢 to act rapidly, but they did not appear resistant to the spread and     驰
鄢 appearance of cancer. Peyer's patches would protect the small intestine 驰
鄢 against direct invasion from the large bowel cancers as well as blood-  驰
鄢 borne metastases. I reasoned that their cancer-killing ability should   驰
鄢 be visible within minutes.                                              驰 
鄢 Others in the laboratory were sceptical, and with reason. Data repeated 驰
鄢 from decades of studies indicated that it would take the incubation of  驰
鄢 50,000 to 100,000 white blood cells for three days with cancer cells    驰
鄢 and immunostimulants for some of these cells to kill one cancer cell.   驰
鄢 The effect was often so subtle that radio-uptake and leakage studies    驰
鄢 had to be undertaken to detect differences. This involved incubating    驰
鄢 cancer cells with radioactive isotopes of an agent such as caesium, to  驰
鄢 allow the cancer cells to absorb it. When damaged, cancer cells would   驰
鄢 then leak the radioactive caesium and that leakage can be measured to   驰
鄢 indicate cell damage. I reasoned that the effect would be easily seen   驰
鄢 on light microscopy with oesin uptake. This technique is one where a    驰
鄢 red dye is added to the cells. Living cells have an active pump system  驰
鄢 and patent membranes that stop dye entry, whereas damaged and dying     驰
鄢 cells would be coloured by the oesin.                                   驰
鄢 Control studies using cells from Peyer's patches that had not been      驰
鄢 exposed to cancer, showed cancer viability close to 95 per cent. Spleen 驰
鄢 cells from unexposed animals did the same. Spleen cells from animals    驰
鄢 that had been carrying the cancer gave me a surprising finding of 100   驰
鄢 per cent viability of cancer and an actual increase in cancer count     驰
鄢 after short-term incubation. It appeared that spleen extract from a     驰
鄢 diseased animal was actually promoting tumour growth. I did not pay much驰
鄢 attention to that finding at the time; I was searching for a cure, not  驰
鄢 riddles.                                                                驰
鄢 Cells from Peyer's patches of mice that had been carrying the cancer    驰
鄢 surpassed my expectations. As opposed to the 50,000 to 100,000 cells    驰
鄢 destroying one cancer cell as previously mentioned over a three-day     驰
鄢 period, it took one lymphocyte from sensitised aggregates to kill 400   驰
鄢 cancer cells in a one-hour-or-less time period. The cancer cells would  驰
鄢 uptake the red oesin dye and soon collapse.                             驰
鄢 The experiment would be repeated over and over before I would let myself驰
鄢 believe it, before I would show others. Exposed to a very small amount  驰
鄢 of Peyer's patch extracts, the cancer cells would turn red with         驰
鄢 embarrassment, then shrivel and die. Mass slaughter of an invulnerable  驰
鄢 enemy-it was intoxicating and delicious.                                驰
鄢 I beckoned for Dr Jose to review the carnage. With just a hint of       驰
鄢 excitement he exclaimed, "They're all dead!" He then added in standard  驰
鄢 clinical "Vulcan" coldness: "Interesting."                              驰
鄢 The following weeks were filled with more magic. Tests confirmed no     驰
鄢 toxicity to healthy cells from my lymphocyte extracts. They were able to驰
鄢 protect animals against cancer inoculations, and single low-dose        驰
鄢 treatment was able to keep the animals living longer once they had the  驰
鄢 disease. Other cancer systems were tested, including the hepatoma rat   驰
鄢 model, with identical successes.                                        驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢                             FADING DREAMS                               驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢 I asked when this discovery could be put to use in terminally-ill       驰
鄢 humans. "Not for a long, long time," I was told condescendingly.        驰
鄢 None of my colleagues or superiors in the laboratory seemed to share my 驰
鄢 excitement; worse yet, they seemed to resent my success-and me, too, for驰
鄢 that matter. Perhaps their egos were bruised. I was often reminded that 驰
鄢 I had no formal training or education in the field, whereas they had    驰
鄢 Hospital) and the Ludwig Institute became more and more isolated.       驰
鄢 Other affiliates and collaborators who had donated animals and lab space驰
鄢 to me included the Department of Biochemistry at Melbourne University.  驰
鄢 Dr Schreiber, the department head, called me in to advise me personally 驰
鄢 that in the few days I had been there I had created friction as I was   驰
鄢 not qualified, paid or a member of their 'group' and that structurally  驰
鄢 they could not support another worker. I had not fought with anybody,   驰
鄢 or argued or insulted anyone. I was unpaid and, above all, my work was  驰
鄢 yielding incredible results. How could they terminate investigation on  驰
鄢 such a promising avenue? These extracts were killing cancer more        驰
鄢 effectively and more safely than anything else in history! "It doesn't  驰
鄢 matter," Dr Schreiber replied.                                          驰
鄢 Dr Jose reminded me that publication was the only way for a scientist   驰
鄢 to achieve recognition, and offered me a poster presentation at the     驰
鄢 Clinical Oncology Society of Australia (COSA) annual meeting in 1981.   驰
鄢 Hopes rekindled; I prepared for the big time. Perhaps amongst doctors,  驰
鄢 the idea of an effective therapy would be better received than in the   驰
鄢 sterile field of research.                                              驰
鄢 A few months later I was standing proudly by my poster; the youngest-   驰
鄢 ever presenter of an original project at the prestigious COSA meeting.  驰
鄢 Few people stopped by my exhibit and most did so only to advise me to   驰
鄢 leave research and concentrate on my medical studies. I was simply too  驰
鄢 young and na飗e, they said. "What about the work?" I asked. "Interesting驰
鄢 ," they replied, and moved on.                                          驰
鄢 Most people spent their time around a diagnostic antibody exhibit. The  驰
鄢 attractive researcher's mini-skirt and plunging neckline were also on   驰
鄢 exhibit. Hell, even I found myself distracted by her monoclonals!       驰
鄢 I had come with aspirations of recognition, of encountering someone who 驰
鄢 would carry the investigation where I could not: in the human field. If 驰
鄢 I had harboured any illusions of discovery, fame or acceptance, they    驰
鄢 were quickly shattered. Scientists and doctors alike had greeted me and 驰
鄢 my discoveries with the same warmth one reserves for an acute attack of 驰
鄢 haemorrhoids or outbreak of herpes.                                     驰
鄢 While I found the displays worthwhile, the conferences themselves were  驰
鄢 electrifying. I learned of new techniques being used and the latest     驰
鄢 trials of hormonal agents, immunostimulants and chemotherapy.           驰
鄢 Immunotherapy remained an exciting field, whereas the latest            驰
鄢 chemotherapy evaluations were delivered in gritty, realistic and        驰
鄢 defeatist manner. Hormones were finding increasing application in       驰
鄢 general disease management. Bone damage and pain in cancer such as      驰
鄢 multiple myeloma were shown to be preventable and treatable with        驰
鄢 anabolic hormones. Just that tidbit of information was worthwhile. It   驰
鄢 represented a concrete, usable way to help my father.                   驰
鄢 During the presentations I was to strike a friendship with an oncologist驰
鄢 who would later do his best to destroy me. It would be a recurring theme驰
鄢 of my life. My greatest enemies would always start as respected friends.驰
鄢 When I suggested to my father's oncologist that anabolic hormones be    驰
鄢 added to strengthen his bones and diminish his pain, he became annoyed. 驰
鄢 I had stepped on his toes by daring to suggest a therapy. Had I hurt his驰
鄢 ego? Was there a better way to ask him? Who cares? I just wanted the    驰
鄢 best for my father. He refused to recommend it and my father refused to 驰
鄢 try anything his specialist did not recommend.                          驰
鄢 In one presentation I managed to offend my father's doctor and be       驰
鄢 ignored by virtually all others. I had presented a technology for curing驰
鄢 cancer, and no one cared.                                               驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢                       EGOS AND LIES IN THE HEALING ARTS                 驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢 One of modern medicine's greatest achievements is the claim that no one 驰
鄢 needs to suffer, for there is supposedly no pain that cannot be elimin- 驰
鄢 ated by modern pharmaceuticals. That is perhaps true even in severe     驰
鄢 terminal pain, if one does not mind existing instead of living; existing驰
鄢 with clouded perceptions, blunted emotions, a drug-induced stupor; a    驰
鄢 waking coma where you struggle to comprehend the world racing around    驰
鄢 you, where you try to communicate but mouth gibberish, where you dig    驰
鄢 deep, searching for the spark, the joy, the will to continue but find   驰
鄢 not even a memory of it.                                                驰
鄢 This desperation, this depression, this torment, this torture is often  驰
鄢 the price paid for physical comfort. "We can prevent suffering in       驰
鄢 terminal disease" is a statement often made by a medical fool more      驰
鄢 concerned with perpetuating and reaffirming his illusions of godhood    驰
鄢 without any regard for reality.                                         驰
鄢 Cancer is nothing if not relentless. Chemotherapy and radiotherapy had  驰
鄢 failed to arrest the progress of my father's disease. As the multiple   驰
鄢 myeloma spread its physical domination, shattered my father's skeleton  驰
鄢 and destroyed his immune function, fractures, recurrent infections and  驰
鄢 pain, constant pain, became features of his life. As he lay bedridden   驰
鄢 with bone compression, multiple rib breaks and a disintegrating pelvis, 驰
鄢 my father refused painkillers except at night so that he could sleep.   驰
鄢 He would not permit any loss of mental clarity during his waking hours: 驰
鄢 time was short and he wanted to live it, experience it fully. With his  驰
鄢 body deteriorating, his mind remained the only undesecrated sanctuary,  驰
鄢 haven, drive to continue. He would not allow this most cherished        驰
鄢 possession to be tainted; he would not allow his loved ones to see him  驰
鄢 as anything less than the best he could be.                             驰
鄢 I was beginning to have major problems at medical school. I could not   驰
鄢 see the relevance of many topics, nor fathom the time-wasting techniques驰
鄢 in teaching other subjects. We learned, for example, how to launch a    驰
鄢 projectile into orbit around Jupiter (useful knowledge if your practice 驰
鄢 caters for outer-space aliens and you wish to post them a prescription; 驰
鄢 of course that would necessitate a pharmacy on Uranus, which could prove驰
鄢 uncomfortable). Plutonium purification in the manufacture of nuclear    驰
鄢 warheads was another priceless inclusion in our study of the healing    驰
鄢 arts. Important topics were noted by their absence. Preventive medicine 驰
鄢 was never discussed. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, when I undertook驰
鄢 my formal medical studies-diet and nutrition were considered alternative驰
鄢 heresy.                                                                 驰
鄢 The study of anatomy was done in a particularly inefficient manner. We  驰
鄢 were given cadavers to dissect for two years. A group of eight students 驰
鄢 would spend hours, scalpels in hand, digging at a corpse, hoping to find驰
鄢 and trace nerves and arteries to their origins and distributions. Dead  驰
鄢 bodies do not handle the same as living tissue, and rarely look the same驰
鄢 as in book illustrations. I studied my anatomy from a book. Much more   驰
鄢 could have been learned had each group been assigned one person who was 驰
鄢 well-trained and who could have guided and educated us. My memories of  驰
鄢 these sessions are ones of the stench of formalin, of a student eating  驰
鄢 someone's biceps on a dare, and of others skipping rope using a corpse's驰
鄢 small intestine or playing football with a hardened lung. This abhorrent驰
鄢 lack of respect for men and women who had donated their bodies to       驰
鄢 science and medicine sickened me.                                       驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢                 MEDICAL RESEARCH: STAGNANT, DIRECTIONLESS               驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢 In this era of genetic engineering and daily promises of medical marvels驰
鄢 it is hard to imagine a period where innovative thought seemed to be at 驰
鄢 a standstill; yet back then, as now, in the playing fields of clinical  驰
鄢 trials, one finds some variations of intricate protocols and slight     驰
鄢 modifications of some rules and tools to search for slightly improved   驰
鄢 responses from the same tired players: surgery, radiation and           驰
鄢 chemotherapy. This points to the stagnant nature of real options        驰
鄢 available to the public.                                                驰
鄢 As a medical student, I was now becoming exposed to rigid, inhumane     驰
鄢 insanity often associated with clinical trials and questionable measures驰
鄢 of success. Only in cancer, for example, would a chemotherapeutic agent 驰
鄢 being evaluated be considered a success if it shrank a cancer mass, even驰
鄢 if it shortened patient survival.                                       驰
鄢 Decades ago hospitals had carried out unethical and repulsive procedures驰
鄢 in the name of science. Pregnant women were injected with high doses of 驰
鄢 radioactive isotopes to gauge the effect on embryos; prisoners'         驰
鄢 testicles were irradiated to study changes; relatives were inoculated   驰
鄢 with patients' cancers to study their response (at least one case of    驰
鄢 cancer transfer and death of a patient's mother occurred).              驰
鄢 Modern-day inhumanity was present, but not quite as overt. It lay in    驰
鄢 protocol objectives and structures.                                     驰
鄢 I remember the case of a patient, a 22-year-old mother, who entered a   驰
鄢 monitored trial situation where she was slotted into the hormone-blocker驰
鄢 evaluation group. This breast cancer study was designed to evaluate     驰
鄢 survival with various treatment options: surgery alone (localised),     驰
鄢 surgery alone (extensive), with radiation, with chemotherapy, with      驰
鄢 hormonal blocker therapy, with combinations of the preceding.           驰
鄢 This data had already been gathered to reasonable precision from studies驰
鄢 too numerous to mention worldwide, and with certain guidelines for      驰
鄢 combinations had been enforced for many years. This particular design   驰
鄢 protocol did not allow for such flexibility. How could we achieve       驰
鄢 accurate readings if we contaminated one group with the therapy of      驰
鄢 another group?                                                          驰
鄢 The cruelty of the last statement could be seen in the plight of the    驰
鄢 patient referred to above. Having been assigned to the hormone group,   驰
鄢 other therapy was withheld-even when it became obvious that it was not  驰
鄢 working, and spreading cancer had broken several bones in her spine.    驰
鄢 (This was not an unusual occurrence in breast cancer. The standard      驰
鄢 therapy of the time, which remains to this day, is the use of radiation 驰
鄢 to allow for fracture-healing and to resolve the associated pain. This  驰
鄢 was denied her; actually, never offered, for the 'sake' of the trial.)  驰
鄢 The insanity of this situation must be restated: this trial was         驰
鄢 confirming many others which had already outlined the relative merits   驰
鄢 of therapy. Why this theme of repetitive rediscovery of the known,      驰
鄢 regardless of human consequence? Because it gives the illusion of work, 驰
鄢 progress and motion in a stagnant cesspit of medical impotence.         驰
鄢 In Australia, the natural health revolution had only just begun and was 驰
鄢 struggling for acceptance. The adamant claims of this new field of      驰
鄢 medicine were both inspiring and confusing. The response from all the   驰
鄢 conventional medicine was cutting. Alternative medicine was deemed      驰
鄢 fraudulent and rejected outright, its practitioners shunned and         驰
鄢 persecuted. Disgrace and deregistration awaited doctors who preached or 驰
鄢 practised its beliefs.                                                  驰
鄢 Supporters of this emerging field dealt in an inexact science, yet the  驰
鄢 detractors refused to carry out investigations to disprove the claims   驰
鄢 of alternative medicine. What resulted was a slinging match with a      驰
鄢 confused public as the victim. Patients were often punished if they saw 驰
鄢 a naturopath or asked a doctor advice on supplements; they would be     驰
鄢 treated curtly, and it was not unusual for the doctor to refuse their   驰
鄢 ongoing care. New options had been thrust onto patients, yet proof of   驰
鄢 efficacy was as lacking as proof of inefficacy.                         驰
鄢 My mother and I had been searching constantly for anything in research, 驰
鄢 folklore or overseas programs. The sudden influx of claims from natural 驰
鄢 medicine brought a range of new modalities to try: mind power, herbs,   驰
鄢 vitamins, vegetarianism, macrobiotics. My father tried them all, to no  驰 
鄢 avail.                                                                  驰
鄢 Fasting, juices, meditation, simple do-it-yourself techniques with a    驰
鄢 universal appeal could restore a person's capacity to help themselves   驰
鄢 against a condition so foreign, so overwhelming that grown adults would 驰
鄢 revert to child-like dependency on their doctors. Even if only of       驰
鄢 marginal efficacy in the physical long-run, the psychological advantage 驰
鄢 of regaining some measure of control of one's life was a feature        驰
鄢 conventional medicine could not compete with. There was also a link that驰
鄢 had only been hinted at previously. Alternative medicine heavily        驰
鄢 promoted the concept that proper activation of immune function could    驰
鄢 eliminate cancer-again, an empowering concept.                          驰
鄢 Perhaps in an effort to compete with the new challenger, or perhaps     驰
鄢 finally disgusted with the toxic failures called "standard therapy",    驰
鄢 the powers-that-be launched a major thrust into immunotherapy. I was    驰
鄢 part of the "IF" generation. Conventional medicine brought out a new    驰
鄢 warrior, an immunostimulant called "interferon"-the "IF" drug. I cannot 驰
鄢 claim to know or understand what changes the emphasis of investigative  驰
鄢 pathways in modern medicine, only to say that the industry is           驰
鄢 particularly well tuned to public views and needs. In the 1970s it was  驰
鄢 immune function, so interferon and interleukin occupied the forefront   驰
鄢 of research for a decade or so. In the 1980s the public cried out for   驰
鄢 natural medicine, so Taxol, a natural extract, was released.            驰
鄢 If the above passage alluded to a sinister, manipulative arm to the     驰
鄢 industry, it is because I believe it to be inherent in this field.      驰
鄢 Interferon, hailed as the new champion in the 1970s, had actually been  驰
鄢 discovered at least 50 years previously and then shelved. Why turn to   驰
鄢 it now unless the above were true? Public manipulation and public       驰
鄢 gullibility are extreme in many areas; cancer, however, leads the       驰
鄢 field.                                                                  驰
鄢                               STOLEN HOPE                               驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢 The interferon onslaught was savage. Newspapers, magazines, television  驰
鄢 and radio programs were at saturation levels with details of miraculous 驰
鄢 cures. Like a well-oiled machine, the Cancer Institute announced it     驰
鄢 would commence interferon trials; then... soon after... hospital        驰
鄢 fundraising events were commenced. This '''dance''' of announcing       驰
鄢 breakthroughs, then a program for implementation followed by appeals    驰
鄢 for public donation, was monotonous and obvious, year after year.       驰
鄢 Many controversial figures have been accused of preying on desperate    驰
鄢 victims and profiting from false hope. With decades of failure behind   驰
鄢 them but excellent marketing and publicity, with daily announcements of 驰
鄢 breakthroughs and assurances of imminent success, with billions raised  驰
鄢 within this format, could the cancer industry not also be accused of the驰
鄢 same? Yesterday's heroes fade into oblivion and new hopeful contenders  驰
鄢 are found to blaze in glory for a time, then fail. They may fail in     驰
鄢 living up to therapeutic expectation but always succeed in maintaining  驰
鄢 the illusion of dynamic progress and in raising phenomenal income.      驰
鄢 Interferon was showing initial remarkable activity in several cancer    驰
鄢 types; most importantly, and repeatedly, cases of advanced multiple     驰
鄢 myeloma were shown recovering with this new therapy. My father's        驰
鄢 hospital had announced that it would investigate its efficacy in the    驰
鄢 treatment of multiple myeloma. A dream come true, a hope reignited!     驰
鄢 Institute and was on first-name basis with most of the specialists      驰
鄢 there. He was also one of few long-term survivors of multiple myeloma   驰
鄢 at that hospital, so surely he would be one of those enrolled in the    驰
鄢 trial now that all other therapies were failing him.                    驰
鄢 Reality hardly ever fulfils all your dreams and prayers. It is also not 驰
鄢 usually as needlessly cruel as it was to my father. Following months of 驰
鄢 anticipation and planning into what had seemed a bleak future, we       驰
鄢 awaited notification of the interferon trial. My father was not         驰
鄢 accepted.                                                               驰
鄢 In medical trials, patient selection is very often optimised for        驰
鄢 demonstrating good results. The healthier the patient, the more likely  驰
鄢 they are to survive the trial (no point investing in someone who may    驰
鄢 die prior to accumulation of data), and the more likely they are to make驰
鄢 the product look good. My father was a risk. Death loomed closer; cancer驰
鄢 laughed and marched on, its progress accelerated by a weary body and    驰
鄢 a spirit shattered not by disease but by hope that was taken away.      驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢                             Part II-Lecture                             驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢 My name is Sam Chachoua and I'm an MD from Melbourne, Australia. What   驰
鄢 I'm going to talk to you about now is something quite new and           驰
鄢 revolutionary. It's called Induced Remission Therapy and it's a         驰
鄢 treatment that is based on three natural phenomena: organ resistance,   驰
鄢 organism resistance, and spontaneous remission.                         驰
鄢 I first got into cancer research at an early age when my father was     驰
鄢 diagnosed with multiple myeloma, and I basically tried to see whether   驰
鄢 I could find something that could help him where conventional therapies 驰
鄢 were failing. One thing that I noted in all the studies I had was that  驰
鄢 there are parts of the human body-for example, the small intestine-which驰
鄢 are consistently resistant to cancer. Regardless of how far and wide    驰
鄢 cancer usually spreads, it usually leaves the small intestine alone.    驰
鄢 There's also something known as "organism resistance", which means that 驰
鄢 most other animals that we try to give human cancer to are able to      驰
鄢 reject it. So I set about designing an experimental protocol where I was驰
鄢 going to find out what it was about the small intestine that made it    驰
鄢 resistant to cancer, and I was going to find out what it was about      驰
鄢 horses, cats and dogs and other animals that made them resistant to     驰
鄢 human cancer.                                                           驰
鄢 To cut a long story short, I managed to isolate the immunological       驰
鄢 factors which I used in experimental protocols at the Peter McCallum    驰
鄢 Cancer Institute. At age 18 I'd written my first paper, and the         驰
鄢 following year I presented it before the Clinical Oncology Society of   驰
鄢 Australia. Let me tell you, I was pretty proud of myself. I thought:    驰
鄢 "Kid, you've got it made; you've helped your dad now, and this therapy  驰
鄢 is going to be adopted soon." And I could just see it. I was going to   驰
鄢 walk into the Clinical Oncology Society of Australia. Everybody's going 驰
鄢 to cheer and get on the phone and say: "Hey, we've got a young kid here;驰
鄢 give me the Nobel Committee." Na飗e! I was actually greeted with all the驰
鄢 warmth one usually reserves for a venereal disease or an acute attack of驰
鄢 haemorrhoids!                                                           驰
鄢 Let me just jump to how this form of therapy can apply to AIDS. We've   驰
鄢 known for a very long time that it's impossible to give animals AIDS by 驰
鄢 injecting them with HIV. Now there are two possibilities: either animals驰
鄢 are inherently resistant, i.e., they don't have receptor sites for HIV; 驰
鄢 or maybe, just maybe, they have an immune system which is capable of    驰
鄢 fighting and destroying the virus. Well, hey, let's check it out!       驰
鄢 So the initial data all showed promise that you could raise an immune   驰
鄢 response out of a horse, for example, that would selectively destroy    驰
鄢 HIV. What intrigued and amazed me was seeing the thought processes or,  驰
鄢 rather, not being able to see the thought processes in the AIDS         驰
鄢 researchers who for years now have tried to find some way of developing 驰
鄢 an immune system resistant to AIDS. They sit there and say: "Well, we   驰
鄢 need to make an animal model. Once we have an animal model, once we've  驰
鄢 made an animal sick with AIDS we can find a way to cure it." So they get驰
鄢 their little test animals; they get their rats, their dogs, their horses驰
鄢 and cats; they inject them with HIV-and they can't give them AIDS! They 驰
鄢 get really upset about that: "How am I supposed to find a cure for AIDS 驰
鄢 if I can't give this animal AIDS? I'm injecting it with HIV to try to   驰
鄢 find an immune response that will kill HIV, and it won't take it. How   驰
鄢 am I supposed to do my job?" Are you following the thought pattern      驰
鄢 here? It's looking right at them.                                       驰
鄢 It would seem a bit of an anticlimax if I were to tell you that one of  驰
鄢 the easiest ways to deal with the greatest plague today is to use an    驰
鄢 animal system that's resistant to the plague, and treat and cure the    驰
鄢 people suffering from the disease. A hundred years ago, before we had   驰
鄢 antibiotics, the only therapy we had for pneumonia, smallpox and polio  驰
鄢 was horse serum. They'd get a horse, shoot it with a disease, draw the  驰
鄢 horse serum out, shoot that into the person and cure them. If that      驰
鄢 therapy was good enough to deal with the plagues a hundred years ago,   驰
鄢 why isn't it being applied now?                                         驰
鄢 But what happens if you do apply it now? Here's the case of a young man 驰
鄢 with AIDS. He's 32 years old. He's got a pneumocystis pneumonia, he's   驰
鄢 short of breath, he's got a T-cell count of 80 and a T4/T8 imbalance.   驰
鄢 So, essentially, his blood, his virus, is extracted out; an animal, such驰
鄢 as a horse, is vaccinated with his blood; the antiserum from the animal 驰
鄢 is then purified against this patient's blood so it doesn't cause       驰
鄢 allergic reactions; and the patient is treated with the horse's serum.  驰
鄢 And we see that within 24 hours, the pneumocystis pneumonia clears up.  驰
鄢 That's pretty remarkable considering that the best that antibiotics can 驰
鄢 do, if they can clear it, is take days to weeks. This patient's symptoms驰
鄢 resolved; his T-cell count went up to 780 within 10 days from a low of  驰
鄢 80, and his T4/T8 ratio became normal.                                  驰
鄢 Now what I've just told you is pretty dramatic, but doesn't it make some驰
鄢 sense to you? Isn't it common sense? We have a disease that can ravage  驰
鄢 our immune systems but can't ravage a horse's, can't ravage another     驰
鄢 disease?                                                                驰
鄢 So, off I went to the big hospitals in the US, and I said, "Hey, guys,  驰
鄢 look at this!" I showed them the case study and the patient I brought   驰
鄢 with me. I showed them 'befores' and 'afters' which were done on US     驰
鄢 soil, and they said: "Inject a person with horse serum? Are you insane? 驰
鄢 We'd never do that."                                                    驰
鄢 A few months later, some of the people whom I was speaking to from a    驰
鄢 related centre-friends of theirs, actually-came out with the            驰
鄢 announcement that they're going to give a baboon's bone marrow to an    驰
鄢 AIDS patient because baboons are resistant to HIV!                      驰
鄢 At that stage, feeling dejected and rather silly, I set about trying to 驰
鄢 investigate as much in the way of alternative therapy and conventional  驰
鄢 therapy as I could-and believe me, I investigated just about everything,驰
鄢 down to laughter therapy!                                               驰
鄢 Now one thing that really struck me very quickly on in the piece when I 驰
鄢 was reviewing all the alternative, natural and conventional therapies   驰
鄢 is that there are two misnomers that exist in this world. One of them   驰
鄢 is "natural therapy".                                                   驰
鄢 Please, don't take me the wrong way. There's a lot of good in           驰
鄢 alternative therapy, there's a lot of good in vitamins and diet, but    驰
鄢 what on Earth is natural about shoving 50,000 units of vitamin C        驰
鄢 intravenously? What's natural about injecting ozone into somebody's     驰
鄢 backside? What's natural about cappuccino enemas?                       驰
鄢 The other great misnomer in the medical field of conventional therapy   驰
鄢 are the terms "radiotherapy" and "chemotherapy". How the world "chemo"  驰
鄢 ever got side by side with the word "therapy" is beyond me. Never before驰
鄢 has a therapy repeatedly failed for 80 years, caused the most hideous   驰
鄢 side effects known to man, and continued to prosper and flourish. It    驰
鄢 amazes me that chemotherapy has spread its wings without people knowing.驰
鄢 For example, how many people know that the commonest therapy for        驰
鄢 aggressive psoriasis these days is chemotherapy? Teenagers and people of驰
鄢 child-bearing age will go to the doctor, and their doctor will say:     驰
鄢 "I'll give you a folic acid antagonist called Methotrexate." You see,   驰
鄢 "folic acid antagonist" sounds better than "chemotherapy", doesn't it,  驰
鄢 but it's chemo. These kids are swallowing poison, and they and their    驰
鄢 kids will suffer the consequences.                                      驰
鄢 Did you hear about the latest breakthrough, a new form of contraception 驰
鄢 that's now on the market? It's a one-shot abortion injection. Well, the 驰
鄢 abortion injection is a folic acid antagonist. It's chemotherapy.       驰
鄢 Let's be blunt about something. Alternative therapy is great, and we can驰
鄢 probably extend and improve the quality of life of people who are ill,  驰
鄢 and, heaven knows, we can prevent a lot of diseases from happening; but 驰
鄢 when you cut down to the chase, conventional therapy and alternative    驰
鄢 therapy are joined by one thing.                                        驰
鄢 Over the past hundred years in the war against cancer, we've failed     驰
鄢 abysmally. Let's be frank here: if a hundred people were to do the most 驰
鄢 arduous alternative therapy available, we would not cure a hundred      驰
鄢 cancer patients; we would not cure a hundred AIDS patients.             驰
鄢 There are only three reasons why we're failing in our war. One large    驰
鄢 possibility is that the weaponry isn't powerful enough. Now, in         驰
鄢 chemotherapy and radiotherapy we have weaponry that can cremate a       驰
鄢 person! So, it can't be that one; rule that one out. The second         驰
鄢 possibility is that the target is invisible. Now we know that to be     驰
鄢 true; we know that cancer cells are immunologically invisible. The third驰
鄢 possibility is that there's another target.                             驰
鄢 The one thing I found depressing about alternative and conventional     驰
鄢 therapy is that they both totally ignored the phenomenon of "spontaneous驰
鄢 remission" which is perhaps the most natural phenomenon which repeatedly驰
鄢 tells us how to cure terminal disease. "Spontaneous remission" is a term驰
鄢 given to miraculous healings, where people on their death bed 'rise from驰
鄢 the dead' within two to three days without a trace of their disease.    驰
鄢 It's a phenomenon that's been reported in the literature but hardly ever驰
鄢 investigated.                                                           驰
鄢 The data on spontaneous remission strongly suggest that just before a   驰
鄢 person with cancer, heart disease, arthritis or any of the other        驰
鄢 terminal diseases has a spontaneous remission or a cure of their        驰
鄢 disease, they suffer what seems to be a viral or bacterial or some form 驰
鄢 of severe infection.                                                    驰
鄢 This was noticed by a Dr Didot, in France, who noted that the existence 驰
鄢 of syphilis precluded the appearance of cancer. If prostitutes had      驰
鄢 syphilis, they were very unlikely to develop cancer. This doctor        驰
鄢 actually treated 20 cancer patients with syphilis and, of those 20, 14  驰
鄢 went into total remission. As the syphilis grew, it munched up the      驰
鄢 cancer; the cancer went away. Another three patients did pretty well,   驰
鄢 and a couple of them died of the syphilis. But this was a few hundred   驰
鄢 years ago, and given the choice between "the Big C" and "the Big S"-well驰
鄢 , today we can cure syphilis with a couple of shots of penicillin, or so驰
鄢 I've been told!                                                         驰
鄢 Late last century, Dr William Coley had a patient who had bone cancer   驰
鄢 and developed a severe syphilis or skin infection. As the skin infection驰
鄢 grew, it munched on the bone cancer and the bone cancer disappeared. Dr 驰
鄢 Coley went on to develop what he called "Coley's toxins" and used them  驰
鄢 for many years as a therapy that got quite good results.                驰
鄢 The trouble here is that Dr Coley succumbed to what I call "macho       驰
鄢 medicine". The infection he isolated from the patient, and which cured  驰
鄢 the patient, had remarkable successes in subsequent patients treated    驰
鄢 with the same infection, but he wasn't happy with that. Coley wanted    驰
鄢 something that would do better, so he found a more toxic infection.     驰
鄢 Instead of using the specific Streptococcus strain which he'd isolated  驰
鄢 from the patient, he found a Streptococcus that kills people, reasoning 驰
鄢 that it's more toxic, therefore it will kill more cancer, and therefore 驰
鄢 the chances of cure are better.                                         驰
鄢 It's been long known that in areas where malaria exists, there's no     驰
鄢 cancer; and when you get rid of malaria, drain the swamps, kill the     驰
鄢 mosquitoes, the cancer rate rises. People who have cancer and who catch 驰
鄢 malaria have a chance of going into remission. Just recently, Dr Henry  驰
鄢 Heimlich [who developed the Heimlich manoeuvre for preventing choking]  驰
鄢 injected a few AIDS patients with malaria and managed to get them into  驰
鄢 some form of remission where they improved and stayed stable at the     驰
鄢 improved level.                                                         驰
鄢 All these observations led me to come up with something I call "nemesis 驰
鄢 theory", which states that for every disease there's an antidisease     驰
鄢 organism which will specifically attack and destroy it.                 驰
鄢 This then led to the development of "nemesis therapy", where I make     驰
鄢 extracts of these "nemesis organisms" with which to treat specific      驰
鄢 diseases.                                                               驰
鄢 And how do you find nemesis organisms? Well, you look around. Where     驰
鄢 there's a disease and there's less of another disease, the chances are  驰
鄢 that they're antagonistic to each other. Or, you work on basic levels,  驰
鄢 as I like to do, and do test after test after test to check.            驰
鄢 What I did in the laboratory was get thousands of bottles and place     驰
鄢 leukaemia lymph node tumour biopsies in them. Each bottle had a         驰
鄢 particular organism growing inside it. The one with affinity for the    驰
鄢 cancer actually grabbed hold of the cancer and ate it. This protein     驰
鄢 'web'-actually, a fungus-shot up and encapsulated the tumour. Within a  驰
鄢 few days, there was a little bit of the cancer left. A couple of weeks  驰
鄢 later, no cancer-just the fungus!                                       驰
鄢 So what this does is it gives us this new therapeutic modality. This    驰
鄢 nemesis organism can now give us highly specific chemicals that it used 驰
鄢 to kill the cancer, but which can be made so they do not attack any     驰
鄢 other sort of tissue. Two, it can give us tagging complexes which stick 驰
鄢 to the outside of the cancer and make the cancer highly visible to the  驰
鄢 immune system. And three, it can give us a complete range of digestive  驰
鄢 enzymes which are specific for digesting the cancer and the cancer      驰
鄢 alone. So this little baby not just kills the disease, it also cleans up驰
鄢 after itself!                                                           驰
鄢 With use of the tagging system, if the immune system looks at this      驰
鄢 fibrillary network of protein stuck onto the outside of the cancer, it  驰
鄢 doesn't see cancer; it sees a bug and it wants to go after the bug. Now,驰
鄢 you don't inject the bug; you purify the protein extract that sticks to 驰
鄢 the cancer and you inject that. That then sticks to the cancer in the   驰
鄢 body. The body can then see it and recognise it because it's tagged with驰
鄢 bacterial, fungal or viral protein.                                     驰
鄢 You and I have no trouble getting rid of a cough or a cold in a week or 驰
鄢 two. We can get rid of cancer: make the cancer look like a cough or a   驰
鄢 cold by sticking cough or cold particles on it, and the body will attack驰
鄢 it, destroy it and remove it.                                           驰
鄢 However, there were instances where patients had a regression several   驰
鄢 months or years after treatment of their tumours with a tagging complex.驰
鄢 This suggested that tagging the cancer was not the be-all and end-all,  驰
鄢 that tagging the cancer cell still didn't cure cancer the disease. There驰
鄢 was another factor at work.                                             驰
鄢 An interesting observation was made about 20 years ago when leukaemia   驰
鄢 patients were treated by wiping out their bone marrow and then giving   驰
鄢 them somebody else's bone marrow. It was found that the leukaemia would 驰
鄢 invariably recur. And you know how they say how cancer comes back? Well,驰
鄢 the doctor says: "Sorry, Mr Jones; it seems that when I was operating   驰
鄢 on you and I was giving you the chemo and the radio, one cell spilt, and驰
鄢 this one cell hid and then went all over the place and grew again-just  驰
鄢 this one cell, the spilt cell." One cell or a few cells get loose and   驰
鄢 the disease comes back. This may account for some of the cancer         驰
鄢 recurrences, but to try to explain all cancer recurrences that way, the 驰
鄢 medical term for that is "crap"!                                        驰
鄢 What we know from those leukaemia trials is that they wiped out the     驰
鄢 patient's bone marrow. There was nothing left! They gave him someone    驰
鄢 else's bone marrow. Six months later, the leukaemia came back. Now, if  驰
鄢 it was a leftover cell, then when you check that leukaemia cell you     驰
鄢 should find that it's the same as the leukaemia you treated before the  驰
鄢 patient went into remission, true? It should be the same cell come back.驰
鄢 However, when they ran DNA checks, they found that not only wasn't it   驰
鄢 the same cell, but it belonged to the donor. It was the donor's bone    驰
鄢 marrow that had turned into leukaemia cells!                            驰
鄢 This finding has been published in the conventional medical literature, 驰
鄢 and it means that cancer the disease is not cancer the cell. There is   驰
鄢 something in the body of a patient which regenerates and augments cancer驰
鄢 , the cancer cell. And if you don't address that, then you won't get rid驰
鄢 of the disease.                                                         驰
鄢 So there I was, with all these little bottles, cooking up these nemesis 驰
鄢 organisms and tagging them, but something kept showing up over and over 驰
鄢 and over again which was driving me nuts. I would incubate the cancer   驰
鄢 with another organism-say, an E. coli-and I'd find other organisms      驰
鄢 growing when the cancer cells died, that I hadn't put in there. They    驰
鄢 would usually be staphylococcal or streptococcal in appearance. Acid-   驰
鄢 fast bacilli sometimes would show up, depending on what culture medium  驰
鄢 was used and for how long I cultured them.                              驰
鄢 Now this is really interesting. What you notice is what some people     驰
鄢 would call "pleomorphism" in progress. A couple of elements would       驰
鄢 develop these elongated rodlike structures, and you could actually see  驰
鄢 a coccal form changing into a rodlike form. Pleomorphism in action.     驰
鄢 I went to my colleagues and said: "Look, why do I keep getting these    驰
鄢 bugs? It's a sterile cancer I'm putting into the bottle, for goodness   驰
鄢 sake. I'm incubating with something completely different, and these bugs驰
鄢 keep showing up." And they said: "Well, Sam, you know what you're like. 驰
鄢 You probably sneezed and contaminated the whole lot!" Then I said: "It's驰
鄢 happened over and over and over again. So it's contamination?" "Yes,    驰
鄢 yes, absolutely."                                                       驰
鄢 A hundred years ago, everybody blamed this contamination as the cause of驰
鄢 cancer. I have the literature. There were thousands of articles written 驰
鄢 on bacteria-bacterial and fungal organisms-being the cause of cancer.   驰 
鄢 But, as technology gets more and more advanced, we have to reject what's驰
鄢 obvious; and when we reject what's obvious, the truth becomes very hard 驰
鄢 to find.                                                                驰
鄢 So how could I prove to these people that these organisms are actually  驰
鄢 intricately involved in the cancer process or in the AIDS process?      驰
鄢 The first thing to do is to grow a bunch of them out of some cancer     驰
鄢 cells, inject them into a few animals and see how many animals get      驰
鄢 cancer-and a lot of them do. Because the bug does not kill the animal,  驰
鄢 the animal develops cancer. In a strange way, it actually appears that  驰
鄢 developing the cancer makes the animal live longer.                     驰
鄢 Now, let me warp your minds a little bit here. Believe me, what I'm     驰
鄢 about to say to you is just a theory, and it has no bearing at all on   驰
鄢 the efficacy of the therapy, but what if these bugs can't entice an     驰
鄢 immune response? They are contained in the middle of the cancer; the    驰
鄢 body is not doing anything to fight them, and yet they're not spreading.驰
鄢 What's containing them? What if cancer isn't really the enemy? What if  驰
鄢 it's the body's last-chance attempt at getting these bugs and           驰
鄢 localising them in an area so they don't spread and kill us in a hurry? 驰
鄢 What if cancer is actually doing us a favour? Is that why every time we 驰
鄢 fry a cancer lesion with radiotherapy and chemotherapy, the whole thing 驰
鄢 then comes back and explodes all over the place because we're actually  驰
鄢 releasing the cause from its entrapment? Just a theory!                 驰
鄢 This therapy at the very least can control the disease, and at best can 驰
鄢 cause dramatic, rapid improvement. There are many cases of cancer tumour驰
鄢 reducing to half its size within a week or two.                         驰
鄢 For example, fig. 1a shows the mammogram of a breast cancer in a 65-year驰
鄢 -old woman. After 10 days of treatment, the breast is normal (fig. 1b). 驰
鄢 Fig. 2a shows a case of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in a 32-year-old woman.  驰
鄢 After two weeks of treatment, her lymphoma was considerably reduced in  驰
鄢 size (fig. 2b). ["Note" No fig's available].                            驰
鄢 It's unheard of to be able to do that and not have significant die-off  驰
鄢 or toxic effects-and yet they don't exist with this treatment. When you 驰
鄢 follow nature and follow the guidelines of what happens in spontaneous  驰
鄢 remission, Induced Remission Therapy can achieve cures with minimal side驰
鄢 effects.                                                                驰
鄢 I didn't choose the public forum to come here and speak to you today.   驰
鄢 Please understand me: I would much rather be addressing medical         驰
鄢 practitioners, peers, and getting this out not as an alternative        驰
鄢 therapy but as a conventional therapy. I've spent 12 years trying to    驰
鄢 get my research published in the conventional literature, and 12 years  驰
鄢 going from hospital to hospital and being treated like something they'd 驰
鄢 stepped in.                                                             驰
鄢 In light of what I read in the paper today-somebody wrote an article    驰
鄢 condemning this conference-it appears that the message being sent by    驰
鄢 that person is that if the conventional medical establishment in all    驰
鄢 its holiness doesn't agree with a concept or a therapy, then the public 驰
鄢 is just too stupid to be able to understand it fully and evaluate it for驰
鄢 themselves. The attitude is that the public is just so dumb that they   驰
鄢 shouldn't be given the opportunity. Well, my apologies to the author,   驰
鄢 but the greatest fool I know is a blind fool who'll say opinions about  驰
鄢 things he hasn't even bothered experiencing or investigating himself.   驰
鄢 In this "Kevorkian age", as I call it, where people champion the concept驰
鄢 of death with dignity when faced with suffering, pain and disease, I'm  驰
鄢 offering a technology that can end suffering, pain and disease; and I   驰
鄢 pray that the emphasis will shift now from trying to support death with 驰
鄢 dignity to championing life with dignity.                               驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢                              Part III-Update                            驰
鄢                 (Charts not available referenced in text)               驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢 After years of lectures, presentations to peers and public appearances  驰
鄢 as well as numerous radio, television, newspaper and magazine           驰
鄢 appearances, I find that conventional medicine still has little         驰
鄢 awareness of the efficacy of my therapies-as evidenced, for example, in 驰
鄢 the advances achieved using IRT in AIDS remission (see table 1).        驰
鄢 Any doctor can make amazing claims, but independent, unbiased testing is驰
鄢 a credible way to determine the efficacy of a treatment. It would not   驰
鄢 only document the effectiveness of my vaccines but would also stir      驰
鄢 interest in any promising new therapy.                                  驰
鄢 So I brought case studies of AIDS patients I'd treated to Cedar Sinai   驰
鄢 Medical Center for evaluation. Dr Shlomo Melmed was impressed with the  驰
鄢 results, and at his suggestion I sent samples of my vaccine to the AIDS 驰
鄢 and Immune Disorders Center's Division of Infectious Diseases for an    驰
鄢 vitro analysis. The clinical analysis performed by Dr. Eric Daar        驰
鄢 indicated that out of the 22 samples tested, 20 of them showed 99%      驰
鄢 efficacy in neutralising HIV-1.                                         驰
鄢 This analysis was followed up with an independent evaluation by         驰
鄢 University of Southern California clinical laboratories. This involved  驰
鄢 the electron microscopy of blood samples taken by a control group       驰
鄢 infected with HIV. This group yielded over 100 photos that demonstrate  驰
鄢 the attack, death, disintegration and purge of the HIV virus. The PhD   驰
鄢 who conducted this test remarked that "the number of intact viral       驰
鄢 particles has declined for each patient following vaccine administration驰
鄢 at a level approximating 50%".                                          驰
鄢 Examples of this progression from attack to purge are shown in figures  驰
鄢 3a to 3d. The first electron microscope photograph (fig. 3a) shows the  驰
鄢 fragmenting cell full of HIV particles. The next photo (fig. 3b) shows  驰
鄢 the cell three days later, with improved stability and decreased viral  驰
鄢 particle count. The third photo (fig. 3c) was taken six days after      驰
鄢 vaccine treatment and shows fewer viral particles per cell. The final   驰
鄢 photo (fig. 3d), taken nine days after therapy, shows no intracellular  驰
鄢 viral particles and the now-visible cell nucleus.                       驰
鄢 This evidence from the cellular level demonstrates that AIDS and cancer 驰
鄢 can be attacked genetically without causing significant damage to the   驰
鄢 healthy, fast-multiplying cells needed to maintain a healthy life.      驰
鄢 You'd think that the media, the medical community and others would be   驰
鄢 alerted to the fantastic results of this treatment.                     驰
鄢 It's hard to imagine that institutes entrusted with the public faith and驰
鄢 public funds to discover and research new therapies would delay the     驰
鄢 application of life-saving technology and treatments. It was my hope    驰
鄢 that knowledge of IRT would be disseminated and the FDA would allow the 驰
鄢 practice of this therapy upon the countless AIDS and cancer victims who 驰
鄢 had little hope otherwise. But these doctors and medical institutes     驰
鄢 denied having any affiliation with me. They denied the impressive test  驰
鄢 data and even denied knowing me-until forced to declare otherwise before驰
鄢 a judge in a civil legal action in San Diego, CA (case no. 700406). It  驰
鄢 was their incomprehensible behaviour that led me to bring a lawsuit, if 驰
鄢 for no other reason than to make these test results a record of the     驰
鄢 court, but I had to pursue these medical organisations so as to have    驰
鄢 access to further laboratory evidence.                                  驰
鄢 I've always resented my work being associated under the catch-all phrase驰
鄢 "alternative medicine". My treatment involves an extremely focused      驰
鄢 hybrid of what is considered "conventional medicine". However, in my    驰
鄢 pursuit of any form of therapy that could augment or even supersede my  驰
鄢 own findings, I've always been interested in alternatives as opposed to 驰
鄢 conventional, toxic and often barbaric treatments.                      驰
鄢 Although there is hope of finding other practitioners who have medical  驰 
鄢 information to offer, I have yet to find any breakthroughs that would   驰
鄢 complement my own.                                                      驰
鄢 I've been appalled to find alternative health organisations that sell   驰
鄢 juice drinks, vitamin C shots and laetrile powders to desperate patients驰
鄢 -products costing hundreds and often thousands of dollars yet only      驰
鄢 costing a few cents to make.                                            驰
鄢 It was in this spirit that I made this offer: US$100,000 to any         驰
鄢 "alternative" therapy that can prove 10 cases of full cancer remission. 驰
鄢 Additionally, I made this offer to the sceptical world of conventional  驰
鄢 medicine: US$100,000 to any reputable medical organisation that will    驰
鄢 test and publish the results of my AIDS and cancer vaccines.            驰
鄢 No one has yet come forward to make a claim on these offers.            驰
鄢 With the realisation that Induced Remission Therapy can offer favourable驰
鄢 results now, and with the assistance of additional resources, medical   驰
鄢 industry professionals who are truly dedicated to curing disease, and   驰
鄢 have the ability to catalogue, store and culture autogenous vaccines on 驰
鄢 a large scale, could and would alter medical treatment as recognised    驰
鄢 today. Historically, institutions are resistant to change. Change comes 驰 
鄢 slowly. So for any promising therapy to be accepted into the mainstream 驰
鄢 of medical practice, this would require a paradigm shift in medical     驰
鄢 science as we know it today.                                            驰
鄢 IRT deals with maladies at the genetic level. Indeed, it is the only    驰
鄢 therapy now in application that concentrates on disease at this level.  驰
鄢 The matrix of many diseases is at the genetic level, so many types of   驰
鄢 illness can be treated with IRT.                                        驰
鄢 Genetic correction is the only hope for achieving a cure in such disease驰
鄢 conditions as AIDS and cancer, and starkly contrasts the available toxic驰
鄢 and inferior modalities that attack disease mechanisms and symptoms     驰
鄢 while leaving a damaged blueprint.                                      驰
鄢 The best demonstration of this remarkable ability can be seen in the    驰
鄢 cases where HIV virus is genetically removed from the cell nucleus. Not 驰
鄢 only is the body purged of the disease, but it is able to repair damage 驰
鄢 suffered during the course of the illness. This opens up a new field of 驰
鄢 cellular regeneration never before possible.                            驰
鄢 The capacity to reverse age-and disease-related DNA damage opens a new  驰
鄢 world of therapeutic opportunity and almost limitless application.      驰
鄢                                                                    ...  驰
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%%T%%%H%%%E%%%%%%%%E%%%Y%%%E%%%%%%%%O%%%F%%%%%%%%A%%%%%%%%S%%%T%%%O%%%R%%%M%%                                                                          
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鄢                                                                         驰
鄢                             Reference Notes:                            驰
鄢                                                                         驰
鄢 � For further details, information, Lecture tapes, etc, on Dr Chachoua's驰
鄢 Induced Remission Therapy, phone (213) 655 0271.                        驰
鄢 � Dr Chachoua's book, The Challenge, The Promise & The Cure             驰
鄢 � Contact Independent Medical Research, Suite 401, 135 Macquarie Street,驰
鄢 Sydney NSW 2000, Australia, phone +61 (0)2 9247 5366, fax +61 (0)2 9247 驰
鄢 5453.                                                                   驰
鄢                                                                         驰
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%%T%%%H%%%E%%%%%%%%E%%%Y%%%E%%%%%%%%O%%%F%%%%%%%%A%%%%%%%%S%%%T%%%O%%%R%%%M%%                                                                          
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