Guest guest Posted February 5, 2006 Report Share Posted February 5, 2006 I would go to MSN and Google and see what you find under his name. B-17 is what I found when I looked up apricot kernals, interesting what they are capable of getting out of one thing. I bought a bag full and munch on some throughout the day. No clue how many would equal 2000mg of B-17 yet though. Anyone have any thoughts there? Good luck on your search, I actually found a clinic thats here in Az but the dr is affiliatiated with Hope down in Mexico also. I'm not going cause they're a little " out there " with their treatments. Keep us posted. Frann EHYPNOTISM wrote: I'm so new at all this... Isn't laetrile derived from apricot kernals?? Regarding Santa clinic- Coretta King.. Was all over the local news about this cancer clinic being shut down following Coretta King's death - from what I understand she was waiting for treatment to fight advanced ovarian cancer....so this gave the local news a chance to bash alternative cancer treatments.... I was talking to my mother about treatments in Mexico (i'm the one that had cancer, not her) and she was familiar with Dr. Donsbach's work there and as a chiropractor and she was on his mailing list... but does anyone have any information about any results he might have had? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 5, 2006 Report Share Posted February 5, 2006 Dr. Donsbach is no saint, but he and his clinic are being unfairly bashed over the Coretta King death. The conventional cancer industry is using this as an opportunity to attack all alternative cancer clinics. Under a one-party system such as we have in the US the mega-corporations have the power to enforce incremental increases in cancer rates through incremental increases in environmental pollution. Neocons scoff at pollution because they believe the concept is moot as the " Rapture " is just around the corner. They see cancer as a major growth industry and all alternative competition must be snuffed. This is why finding simple ways to prevent and to treat cancer is so very important. Methods must be found that the medical associations, the health insurers, the pharmaceutical cartels, and an imperial kleptocracy can't control. At 03:26 PM 2/5/2006, you wrote: > > >I'm so new at all this... >Isn't laetrile derived from apricot kernals?? > >Regarding Santa clinic- Coretta King.. >Was all over the local news about this cancer clinic being shut down >following Coretta King's death - from what I understand she >was waiting for >treatment to fight advanced ovarian cancer....so this gave the local news a >chance to bash alternative cancer treatments.... > >I was talking to my mother about treatments in Mexico (i'm the one that had >cancer, not her) and she was familiar with Dr. Donsbach's work there >and as a >chiropractor and she was on his mailing list... >but does anyone have any information about any results he might have had? > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 5, 2006 Report Share Posted February 5, 2006 VGammill wrote: Dr. Donsbach is no saint, but he and his clinic are being unfairly bashed over the Coretta King death. The conventional cancer industry is using this as an opportunity to attack all alternative cancer clinics. Under a one-party system such as we have in the US the mega-corporations have the power to enforce incremental increases in cancer rates through incremental increases in environmental pollution. Neocons scoff at pollution because they believe the concept is moot as the " Rapture " is just around the corner. They see cancer as a major growth industry and all alternative competition must be snuffed. ----------- joe replies: can this really be the case? i mean its provocative as conspiracy....but more likely as general systemic freakout all around us....everything popping off on fractal... the chief boo-hoos surely don't want their kids on cancer drugs by 35 - though you make a nice case elsewhere that psychopaths tend to be affected less & there is no shortage in power politics! logically, it is difficult to model. the either/or function does not cover the massive interwoven complexities of the field.... a mine-field. -------- vincent wrote: This is why finding simple ways to prevent and to treat cancer is so very important. Methods must be found that the medical associations, the health insurers, the pharmaceutical cartels, and an imperial kleptocracy can't control. --------- joe replies: this seems so important! i know you are very involved in this on your own score... how else can you see this happening in canada/australia/europe....eastern europe already is in s.america..... & what about cuba? possibly one of the best places to take off. great medics possible facilities and no FDA axe to grind....possible devotion to finding out WHAT IS THE CASE. anyway, what ideas cross the horizons of what you loosely refer to as your mind? cheers joe Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2007 Report Share Posted April 20, 2007 Hi All, I've just got some miscellaneous questions to see if anyone has some input. Over the last few days, we have tried to reintroduce grapes into my son's diet. He loves them. It's become obvious by his behavior that he doesn't tolerate them well. His stools are horrible and I think I am going to attribute that to the grapes (over the virus he had earlier in the week and the yeast...we always have yeast). Anyway, he bottom is so raw, it is bleeding. It's almost like he has an acidic burn. Are grapes very acidic? Is there anyway he could be passing bile in his stool? The stool is neon yellow and very small amounts...that could be yeast, but it seems different than his typical yeast stools. Also, he is VERY sensitive to many different types of beans. His ELISA test indicated extreme sensitivity to soy beans, pinto beans and peas (not sure if they are in the bean familiy). Should I assume that he is probably then sensitive to garbanzo beans, or is that a different family of food. Thanks for anyones insight!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2007 Report Share Posted April 20, 2007 Comments interspersed. S S Hi All, I've just got some miscellaneous questions to see if anyone has some input. Over the last few days, we have tried to reintroduce grapes into my son's diet. He loves them. It's become obvious by his behavior that he doesn't tolerate them well. *I think they're high phenol. Does he have problems with other high phenol foods? I bet www.danasview.net has a section on phenols. Have you tried No-Fenol? Lots of pesticides are used on conventional grapes, were they organically grown grapes? His stools are horrible and I think I am going to attribute that to the grapes (over the virus he had earlier in the week and the yeast...we always have yeast). Anyway, he bottom is so raw, it is bleeding. It's almost like he has an acidic burn. Are grapes very acidic? Is there anyway he could be passing bile in his stool? The stool is neon yellow and very small amounts...that could be yeast, but it seems different than his typical yeast stools. Also, he is VERY sensitive to many different types of beans. His ELISA test indicated extreme sensitivity to soy beans, pinto beans and peas (not sure if they are in the bean familiy). Should I assume that he is probably then sensitive to garbanzo beans, or is that a different family of food. *Black/turtle beans are often among the more easily tolerated. A lot depends upon what aspect of the beans he's sensitive to. Peas and garbanzos are often excluded on galactosemia diets but most kids with galactosemia are given soy formula. Soy beans are high in rufinose which some people like my husband don't tolerate. Black beans and garbanzos are the beans with the lowest levels of whatever causes gas/flatulence and that can be reduced by adding a small amount of apple cider vinegar to the soak water. Thanks for anyones insight!! _______________________________________________ Join Excite! - http://www.excite.com The most personalized portal on the Web! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 21, 2007 Report Share Posted April 21, 2007 > Over the last few days, we have tried to reintroduce grapes into my > son's diet. He loves them. It's become obvious by his behavior that > he doesn't tolerate them well. My son tolerated green grapes with No-Fenol enzyme, but did not tolerate red grapes until I corrected his carotene conversion problem. Grapes also tend to increase yeast. >>Anyway, > he bottom is so raw, it is bleeding. It's almost like he has an > acidic burn. Orange and green foods, and certain red foods like grapes and strawberries, did this to my son until his carotene conversion problem was corrected. Sorry, I can't answer your bean question. My son could not have green beans or peas, but he could have pintos and other " brown " beans. Dana Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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