Guest guest Posted December 27, 2010 Report Share Posted December 27, 2010 Pretty dangerous philosophies. It goes hand in hand - period. We have bacteria we carry with us constantly and our immune system can fight it unless otherwise compromised or has built no resistance for. However, there is many bacteria and yeast that does over - run our bodies when we can't fight it no longer AND OR we come across bacteria / viruses / yeast for which we have not built immunity for or over ran our bodies. Germs can be introduced into our bodies through poor hygiene - and not washing hands. Handling bad meat etc - spiders, insects can all inject things foreign. They both go hand in hand - hands down. I have worked with major illnesses and surgeries for over 24 years and involved in Research studies after studies. Herbs and nutrition is a way to support our immune system through infections. It is black and white - no gray in this matter. Chris From: greatyoga Sent: Monday, December 27, 2010 I got a link and I believe it was from this group. It looked interesting and I clicked it and it took me to another candida group that has over 7000 members. I asked a question about herbs and candida. The group owner asked why I asked about herbs as they do not kill candida and she went on about the immunity theory ( as advocated by Bechamp)being the only theory. I countered and posted that the immunity theory of disease was the most important of the two theories but both were valid and they went hand in hand. She called Pasteur and others " frauds " and " impostors " . Maybe they were not 100% legit but those are strong words. I asked her if she believed in washing hands, disinfecting before surgery, " bugs " had nothing to do with flu, etc. She just restated her immunity theory. I said that one does not need to think in terms of black or white but shades of gray. After that I was banned from posting again. Has anyone else run into this kind of thinking? Happy New Year, GB Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 27, 2010 Report Share Posted December 27, 2010 Dear GB, Take heart, you are not alone! Although, the 2 1/2 years I've been in this group I have never heard it called a candida group. I stay with this group because there is a freedom to discuss anything regarding cancer, along as it is done with respect. I'm not sure where you got that link and I'm sorry they were so tenacious about their " short-sightedness. " I run into " short-sighted " thinking in too many places, especially when it comes to health discussions. That is proof, I think, that we are all different and that what works for one doesn't work for all. It's very sad, I think, that some people consider that their way is the only way. I used a great many alternative methods to cure my stage IV cancer and have lived past my doctors 6-12 month death sentence. However, there is no part of me that would ever concede that what I did would work for everyone. Besides the respectful atmosphere, which sometimes gets lively, what I appreciate most from this group is their willingness to share what worked. I'm going to spend my New Year in complete gratitude that I'm still here to continue doing research. Happy New Year to you, too, GB! I got a link and I believe it was from this group. It looked interesting and I clicked it and it took me to another candida group that has over 7000 members. I asked a question about herbs and candida. The group owner asked why I asked about herbs as they do not kill candida and she went on about the immunity theory ( as advocated by Bechamp)being the only theory. I countered and posted that the immunity theory of disease was the most important of the two theories but both were valid and they went hand in hand. She called Pasteur and others " frauds " and " impostors " . Maybe they were not 100% legit but those are strong words. I asked her if she believed in washing hands, disinfecting before surgery, " bugs " had nothing to do with flu, etc. She just restated her immunity theory. I said that one does not need to think in terms of black or white but shades of gray. After that I was banned from posting again. Has anyone else run into this kind of thinking? Happy New Year, GB Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 27, 2010 Report Share Posted December 27, 2010 I don't believe that germs " cause " disease; however, I do believe that when/if viruses, bacteria, parasites are in a body that is fertile for replication (because the immune system is not healthy) then disease can develop. An accurate comparison of the Germ Theory and Cellular Theory is below. I believe the Cellular Theory is the most correct. I do believe that bacteria, germs, parasites live outside the body and can invade the body (usually through the intestinal tract where at least 75% of the immune system is located) but I don't believe they actually " cause " disease. It is " proven " that hand-washing (basic hygiene) and staying away from sick people is beneficial for most people. Why? Because bacteria and viruses tend to be " environment-specific " (thus why some get sick when around sick people and some don't) and unless we are absolutely sure that our immune system is working at peak performance then our body terrain may indeed be " fertile " for disease. I suggest hand-washing BECAUSE most people have depressed immune systems; the same goes for avoiding sick people. It is ALL about the health of one's body - the terrain - the inside. There is a huge list of conditions that mean the immune system is compromised. One of the biggest is yeast over-growth and many have no idea that this compromises the immune system big-time. A good explanation - The Post-Antibiotic Age: Germ Theory by Tim O'Shea http://www.oasisadvancedwellness.com/learning/post-antibiotic-age-germ-theor y.html Below are some quotes from the above article: What exactly was this Germ Theory? Very simply, the Germ Theory stated that there were separate diseases and that each disease was caused by a particular micro-organism. It was the job of science, then, to find the right drug or vaccine that would selectively kill off the offending bug without killing the patient. Bacteria and viruses tend to be " environment-specific. " (terrain) That's why some people get colds and others don't. That's why some survived the Bubonic Plague. That's also why some doctors and nurses seem to be immune to disease even though they're surrounded by it every day. However, it depends on one's immune system and how healthy it is. So prudent hand-washing and keeping a distance from sick people is wise for most people because most people have compromised immune systems. It was Bechamp's view that it was not the bug that caused disease, but rather the condition (terrain) in which bugs lived. Disease happens when an imbalance causes some of the more pathological that is, bad, bacteria to take over. What causes that? Low resistance, weak immune system. Seems like such a simple idea, but that is really the foundation of the whole controversy all along. In the end, everyone, even Pasteur, agreed that bugs - bacteria and viruses - do not alone cause disease. Conventional medicine puts no credence on how healthy one's terrain is or is not. This is why they recommend vaccines be given even to those with compromised immune systems or babies whose immune system has not fully developed. So are germs the cause of disease or aren't they? Bechamp said that there was enough truth in that notion to make it seem reasonable at first glance. Sure we can sometimes identify certain types of bacteria in certain disease conditions. And it's undeniable that organisms can be found rampant within populations suffering from epidemics and outbreaks, as Laurie Garrett describes in The Coming Plague. But consider this: what if many more people than those who actually get a disease have the " bug " ? Usually the only people we test are the ones who get sick. So it looks like they're the only ones who have the 'causative' organism in measurable amounts. From Pasteur to the present, there is an entire other point of view that has been supported: maybe the bad bugs are commonly present in many normal people, but only multiply out of control when allowed to because of a weak immune system. They're harmless until they proliferate. This is a fundamental notion. " Bacteria and parasites cannot cause disease processes unless they find their own peculiar morbid soil in which to grow and multiply. " -Henry Lindlahr, MD - Founder of Lindlahr Sanitarium What is always present in diseases? Answer: depressed immune system. We live in a time where a HUGE percentage of the population have a depressed immune system. So putting these ideas together, a notion comes into focus so clear that even a lawyer could see it: soon we will be living in the Post-Antibiotic Era (we are getting there fast as so many of the newer antibiotics are proving inefficient). The paramount issue in health and survival will then be the immune system. Drugs, alcohol, smoking, air pollution, processed food, white sugar, white flour, radiation, stress, and bad living will still be doing their number on that immune system. But it will be performing without a net, this time. On its own. What will people turn to in order to strengthen their immune system? Answer: Alternative Medicine, just like before all of this went down. Actually, it's already started. Alternative medicine's purpose is to use natural means to strengthen the immune system. Whole food enzymes, antioxidants, natural herbs, aloe, probiotics, pure water, clean diet, spinal adjustment, massage, martial arts, and exercise have all been proven to be helpful. One reason things won't be completely the same as they were in the pre-antibiotic age is that our knowledge of holistic therapeutics has deepened exponentially, sort of as a by-product of the advances in biomedical technology in the past 50 years. An increasing number of people are learning what it feels like to build up their immune system, their resistance to illness. Once you've done that, even one time, you know you can overcome practically any health challenge out there by cleaning up your blood, simple detox, and following the basics. Taken as a whole complete self-regulating being, the body is simple and just needs a few things to maintain itself without disease, premature aging, or chronic poisoning. Things get complicated when the body is approached with what I call the Kragen Method - as in auto parts - meaning pretending that the body is simply a group of individual parts that can be treated in isolation from each other, one by one, like spark plugs and carburetors. Then we get into some heavy theorizing, dangerous chemical experimentation, and pathologically long words. Health then becomes a side issue, the focus is economic, and the patient becomes the mark. And this is the controlling philosophy in health care today. PASTEURIAN GERM THEORY vs BECHAMP CELLULAR THEORY by Walene GERM THEORY (PASTEUR) 1. Disease arises from micro-organisms outside the body. 2. Micro-organisms are generally to be guarded against. 3. The function of micro-organisms is constant. 4. The shapes and colors of micro-organisms are constant 5. Every disease is associated with a particular micro-organism 6. Micro-organisms are primary causal agents. 7. Disease can " strike " anybody. 8. To prevent disease we have to " build defenses " CELLULAR THEORY (BECHAMP) 1. Disease arises from micro-organisms within the cells of the body. 2. These intracellular micro-organisms normally function to build and assist in the metabolic processes of the body. 3. The function of these organisms changes to assist in the catabolic (disintegration) processes of the host organism when that organism dies or is injured, which may be chemical as well as mechanical. 4. Micro-organisms change their shapes and colors to reflect the medium 5. Every disease is associated with a particular condition. 6. Micro-organisms become " pathogenic " as the health of the host organism deteriorates. Hence, the condition of the host organism is the primary causal agent. 7. Disease is built by unhealthy conditions. 8. To prevent disease we have to create health. Be Well Dr.L Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 27, 2010 Report Share Posted December 27, 2010 Gb : Pasteur was indeed a fraud. Before his death he admitted that most of his work was false or " borrowed " . Many countries will not allow a Pasteur institute on their soil. Excerpt from website article: " Who was this man Pasteur? What did he actually discover? The answer to the first is that he was a chemist of sorts. The second question can be answered only with the reminder that he separated L & D tartic acids. That is absolutely all he did. The rest of his work, even the silkworm disease and bacterial work, was plagiarized from that, not too well-known and much neglected professor of Montpellier, Antoine Bechamp. Professor Bechamp's writings, when properly studied, will be found to have afforded the solution to many of the problems which had puzzled biologists, physiologists, pathologists and philosophers for many years. " Speaking of Professor Bechamp's works, Dr. Leverson of England says, " I also found in those truths absolute proof of the absurdity of the germ theory of disease; and, by the study of the writings of Pasteur, to which Bechamp’s works unavoidably led me, I found full proof that the great god of the (supposedly) men of science of the latter half of the last century and of many of the present, was in fact, the most astonishing of plagiarists and distorter of other men's discoveries; chiefly those of Professor Antoine Bechamp, and of his collaborators and pupils; and that this plagiarist was the most monumental charlatan, whose existence is disclosed to us, in the entire recorded history of medicine. " " You have already surmised who was this plagiarist and charlatan. It was Louis Pasteur, to whose memory France has erected statues all over the land and endowed the Pasteur Institute. " http://www.whale.to/vaccine/rabies.html Vic ________________________________ From: greatyoga Sent: Mon, December 27, 2010 .....candida group that has over 7000 members. I asked a question about herbs and candida. The group owner asked why I asked about herbs as they do not kill candida and she went on about the immunity theory (as advocated by Bechamp)being the only theory.....She called Pasteur and others " frauds " and " impostors " . Maybe they were not 100% legit but those are strong words........ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 27, 2010 Report Share Posted December 27, 2010 I certainly believe that a strong immune system can fight off much. That being said, I think the alarming rise in cancer rates is due to the pressure of modern-day carcinogens--both chemical and electro-magnetic. Let's face it: until the Industrial Revolution humans had not been exposed to this type of pressure on their immune systems. I read that study on Dr. Mercola's site about forensic examination of 300 Egyptian mummies--only one showed any evidence of cancer. If the same study were done today on the corpses of people from industrialized countries, 75-100 would show evidence of cancer. Are our immune systems inferior to those of our ancestors? Really if a strong immune system was all it took to fight off these environmental pressures then a person could pitch a tent in the ruins of Chernobyl for a couple of months without radiation protective gear. Then not get leukemia. I don't think any sane person would try that (maybe Deepak Chopra could do it--you know, yogic fly around the place for a while). One reads about repressed feelings or lack of forgiveness as the cause of cancer--that's arguing from ignorance with no data to back it up. Humans haven't changed since the Cro-Magnons--it doesn't make any sense. One-third of dogs die of cancer; we must remember that we are in fact mammals and still subject to physical law no matter how enlightened our spiritual beliefs or aspirations. No doubt modern stress weakens immune systems. There's no evidence yet that it causes cancer, but a weakened immune system--under pressure from carcinogens--and no wonder. The " planets must be in alignment, " so to speak. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 27, 2010 Report Share Posted December 27, 2010 I do not think anyone can argue that stress does in fact weaken the immune system. Junk foods, processed meats, white bread, antibiotics, pasteurized milk, are all contributors. Add in intentional misinformation like staying out of the sun and cancer is compounded. Low vitamin D levels are a major cause. The CDC knew this is the 60's and it is on their web site. One soda contains 9 times the sugar needed for one day. Sugar turns off the immune system for two hours. In the late 1800's the average sugar consumption was 3 pounds per year per person. Today it is 120 pounds per person. The immune system will not function properly no matter the diet or gut flora with low levels of vitamin D. Look at many of the jobs today, they are inside. No one wants to sweat anymore, a excellent detox. Windows block the UVB rays which produce vitamin D on the skin. Add the toxic sunscreen fad and even less sun reaches the skin. Yes too much sun is no good either, one should never allow themselves to burn. The cancer rates skyrocket north of 20 degrees latitude. Many if not most cancers are developed over the winter when the sun is at an angle where it does not produce vitamin D on the skin. There is no vitamin D being made on the skin at this time of the year in the US. As far as dogs go, most that develop cancer are kibble fed. A dog is a carnivore and to feed a dog a diet that is not species appropriate is a major cause of disease. Kibble is known to contain many cancer causing chemicals. Raw fed dogs do not have the cancer rates of kibble fed dogs. Add useless vaccines, toxic flea and tick treatments, poison heart worm treatments, poison wormers and wonder why dogs get cancer? Many forward thinking breeders have long switched to natural rearing. A neighbor had 7 dogs over the years and everyone died of cancer. I said to him maybe you should try something different, the light never lit. He knows I am a raw feeder. One can not expect a different result by doing the same things. Vic Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 27, 2010 Report Share Posted December 27, 2010 Vitamin D? No doubt, reflecting the move from agrarian society to office/factory environments. I take it every day, and do my qigong outside even in the cold. Dogs? Sure--no doubt subject to the same carcinogens as the rest of us in " civilized " society. But, of course, dogs are the most " breeded " species on earth. Perhaps genetic instability? The point of my rant? It's not easy. No easy answers. To every complex question there is an easy answer--and it's always wrong. ....The immune system will not function properly no matter the diet or gut flora with low levels of vitamin D..... As far as dogs go, most that develop cancer are kibble fed. A dog is a carnivore and to feed a dog a diet that is not species appropriate is a major cause of disease. Kibble is known to contain many cancer causing chemicals. Raw fed dogs do not have the cancer rates of kibble fed dogs...... Vic Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 27, 2010 Report Share Posted December 27, 2010 We can go round and round with semantics and theories but we do not know enough. Some believe they know that nothing, outside the body, causes anything. It is the body that acts upon whatever it is exposed to whether or not internally or externally. The bullet may be the primary cause of bleeding, but it is the loss of blood that kills. If any one thing caused cancer then it should cause cancer in everyone., Oh, some might say, but a strong immune system can fight it off. ?? There is no common germ that can cause anything. Germs are omnipresent, around us all the time, but we don’t always get affected/infected by them because, other factors come into play. At best, a germ can only be a secondary cause the first being the host’s ability to deal with it or not deal with it. I suspect one can have a strong immune system and still become ill because illness in itself is the body’s attempt at wellness. Doubt that? Ingest something the body wants to get rid of in a hurry.................heaving, diarrhea, a cough, a fever....and on and on and on. Yet modern medicine still treats these things as illness and tries to suppress them. They have it all wrong, backwards. Start from the premise it is the body that reacts not the other way around. There isn’t a laxative in the world that can cause a cadaver to have a movement. However, put that poison laxative in our body and behold the wonders of nature. A couple of years ago I read an article from one of the larger research organizations that stated, “30% of practicing physicians do not know that a fever is generally beneficialâ€. One Third of practicing physicians did not know that a fever is generally beneficial. I have forgotten which teaching hospital made that statement but it is no longer to be found. Lots of fever reducing meds are sold aren’t they? I suspect that there are some germs that we have not encountered that are so virulent the body has not developed a defense against them and one just cannot fight them. But in the end, you can introduce that germ into a cadaver and nothing happens. Nothing. Joe C. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 27, 2010 Report Share Posted December 27, 2010 Hi Joe, My favorite book which discusses the benefits of fevers, is " How to raise a healthy child in spite of your doctor " , by Dr Mendelsohn http://www.amazon.com/Raise-Healthy-Child-Spite-Doctor/dp/0345342763 This is a good book in general, see the readers comments. Just wondering what those cancer associated night sweats mean? Best wishes Fern Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 28, 2010 Report Share Posted December 28, 2010 Joe you are quite correct. That is the problem with cancer, the body does not produce a fever with cancer. For this reason far infrared is helpful for many as it heats the body from the inside. I think the answer is somewhere inbetween both theories as a cut will get infected if dirt or bacteria gets past the line of defense, the skin. Toxins come into play as well. Toxins shut off certain sections of the DNA. Only detoxing and a good diet can turn the sections of DNA on again. No drug can do this. Western medicine treats symptoms. Symptoms are not the cause. You have a fever take this drug. You have diarrhea take this drug. Doctor's love this method as many drugs for blood pressure, diabetes and so forth require return visits and drug companies love to get someone hooked on a drug for life. The cause is never addressed.  Vic  ________________________________ From: JoeCastron <jcastron1@...> Sent: Mon, December 27, 2010 9:29:49 PM Subject: Re: [ ] germ vs. immunity theory  We can go round and round with semantics and theories but we do not know enough. Some believe they know that nothing, outside the body, causes anything. It is the body that acts upon whatever it is exposed to whether or not internally or externally. The bullet may be the primary cause of bleeding, but it is the loss of blood that kills. If any one thing caused cancer then it should cause cancer in everyone., Oh, some might say, but a strong immune system can fight it off. ?? There is no common germ that can cause anything. Germs are omnipresent, around us all the time, but we don’t always get affected/infected by them because, other factors come into play. At best, a germ can only be a secondary cause the first being the host’s ability to deal with it or not deal with it. I suspect one can have a strong immune system and still become ill because illness in itself is the body’s attempt at wellness. Doubt that? Ingest something the body wants to get rid of in a hurry.................heaving, diarrhea, a cough, a fever....and on and on and on. Yet modern medicine still treats these things as illness and tries to suppress them. They have it all wrong, backwards. Start from the premise it is the body that reacts not the other way around. There isn’t a laxative in the world that can cause a cadaver to have a movement. However, put that poison laxative in our body and behold the wonders of nature. A couple of years ago I read an article from one of the larger research organizations that stated, “30% of practicing physicians do not know that a fever is generally beneficialâ€. One Third of practicing physicians did not know that a fever is generally beneficial. I have forgotten which teaching hospital made that statement but it is no longer to be found. Lots of fever reducing meds are sold aren’t they? I suspect that there are some germs that we have not encountered that are so virulent the body has not developed a defense against them and one just cannot fight them. But in the end, you can introduce that germ into a cadaver and nothing happens. Nothing. Joe C. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 28, 2010 Report Share Posted December 28, 2010  The history of Pasteur reveals that Pasteur's side kick had no formal training what so ever and paid $75 for a degree. Just a bit of history. I was sent this article and it pertains. An article about the post antibiotic age Go forward now a few centuries to France in the 1870s. Three scientists were conducting experiments in the area of chemistry, particularly having to do with fermentation, yeast, and the new discovery of little organisms called bacteria. All were involved in similar research but there was much competition and " borrowing " of discoveries, always with the undercurrent of politics and influence, as usual. The men were Louis Pasteur, Antoine Bechamp, and Koch, a German. These individuals were not colleagues, but worked independently. Each one knew that he was onto a whole new area of human discovery, and the race was on to influence the medical world. It was Pasteur who won the race of politics and influence. Today students memorize that Louis Pasteur " discovered " the Germ Theory. Not only is this not accurate, and not only is the Germ Theory itself unsubstantiated even today, but Pasteur himself in one of the most quoted deathbed statements perhaps of all time, recanted the Theory and admitted that his rivals had been right, and that it was not the germ that caused the disease, but rather the environment in which the germ was found: " Bernard acail raison; le terrain c'est tout, le germe c'est rien. " The Germ Theory What exactly was this Germ Theory? Very simply, the Germ Theory stated that there were separate diseases and that each disease was caused by a particular micro-organism. It was the job of science, then, to find the right drug or vaccine that would selectively kill off the offending bug without killing the patient. That would be great, but nature rarely is so black and white about things, ever notice that? For one thing, bacteria and viruses tend to be " environment-specific. " That's why some people get colds and others don't. That's why some survived the Bubonic Plague. That's also why some doctors and nurses seem to be immune to disease even though they're surrounded by it every day. Deepak Chopra tells us of a study in which the influenza virus was isolated and implanted directly onto the mucous membranes of a group of subjects, with only 12% of them getting the flu. (Quantum Healing) The Germ Theory has as many holes as a Swiss cheese, and it is likely that Pasteur knew it. But a little research shows us that Pasteur had a gift for PR. He rarely let his research keep him away from an opportunity to address royalty or medical society in the most prestigious university settings. He was quoted and published and offered practically every honorary title and chair in Europe. The records however not only cast suspicion, but seem to establish fairly clearly that Pasteur " borrowed " the research for some of his most famous discoveries, and then capitalized on the celebrity of being there first. What's The Big Secret? Before he died, Pasteur instructed his family not to release some 10,000 pages of lab notes after his death. Not until 1975, after the death of his grandson, were these " secret " notes finally made public. An historian from Princeton, Professor Geison made a thorough study of the lab notes. He presented his findings in an address to The American Association for the Advancement of Science in Boston in 1993. Dr. Geison's conclusions: Pasteur published much fraudulent data and was guilty of many counts of " scientific misconduct, " violating rules of medicine, science, and ethics. Like Koch, Pasteur was very motivated by money. In the race for a vaccine for anthrax, for example, not only did Pasteur not test it on animals before using humans; it was also established that Pasteur actually stole the formula from a colleague named Toussaint. Unable to prove his claim at the time, Toussaint died a few months later of a nervous breakdown. (Hume) Hume There was a book published in 1932 that is still in print today: Bechamp or Pasteur? This book was written by E. Hume, who it turns out was actually a woman who had to disguise her name as male to get the book published. Hume chronicles a contemporary of Pasteur, Antoine Bechamp, the most respected researcher and teacher in France at the time, department head at the University at Lille. Bechamp was too busy to be bothered with conventions and awards and politics. He was a professor and a researcher, and that took every moment of his time until his death at 93. It was Bechamp's view that it was not the bug that caused disease, but rather the condition in which bugs lived. Disease happens when an imbalance causes some of the more pathological that is, bad, bacteria to take over. What causes that? Low resistance, weak immune system. Seems like such a simple idea, but that is really the foundation of the whole controversy all along. In the end, everyone, even Pasteur, agreed that bugs - bacteria and viruses - do not alone cause disease. A little research uncovers the following amazing possibilities about Pasteur, which the reader is encouraged to further investigate: * Pasteur had no training or credentials in either medicine or physiology; he was a chemist * Pasteur very likely created the disease known as " hydrophobia, " rather than found a cure for it. * Pasteur initiated the practice of vivisection with horrific animal experiments. Hundreds of thousands of laboratory animals have been needlessly killed by atrocious experiments in the name of " science, " not only at Pasteurian Institutes, but pervasively throughout the entire empire of medical research laboratories worldwide, even to the present time. * Rather than protect the human race from disease, Pasteur was directly responsible for the deaths of hundreds of people who were inoculated with unproven vaccines and injections, and indirectly for thousands more in whom disease was introduced by the administration of unproven Pasteurian procedures. * Pasteur may be seen more as a merchant than a scientist, with his frequent reporting of false test findings and data, which had two designs: self-promotion and profiteering from the sale of drugs and vaccines that were often made mandatory by legislators. * Pasteurian treatment for a disease he did not even have actually killed , the King of Greece. * Pasteur did not work on naturally diseased subjects, but instead introduced the idea of inducing sickness by giving morbid (diseased) injections into healthy subjects. As far as his Germ Theory goes, there was much opposition to it among many researchers of his own time. In a lecture given in London on 25 May 1911, M.L. Leverson, MD stated: " The entire fabric of the germ theory of disease rests upon assumptions which not only have not been proved, but which are incapable of proof, and many of them can be proved to be the reverse of truth. The basic one of these unproven assumptions, wholly due to Pasteur, is the hypothesis that all the so-called infectious and contagious disorders are caused by germs. "  http://www.oasisadvancedwellness.com/learning/post-antibiotic-age-germ-theory.ht\ ml/?utm_source=newsletter & utm_medium=email & utm_campaign=oaw-dec10  Vic Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 28, 2010 Report Share Posted December 28, 2010 Vic and , I said before that I don't know if Pasteur was completely legit. i am not saying he was a saint. However, the Germ theory still has some merit and it became popular because of Pasteur. Just like Columbus may not have discovered the New World but his expedition changed the world. I still think immunity is more important than the germ theory but I don't see how you can separate them. Suppose a person takes a few hundred " germs " of name your bacteria. They may or may not get sick depending on their immunity. Suppose they take a tablespoon of a petri dish filled with that bacteria. My guess is that anyone on earth would get sick. Maybe it would take more but my point is that there is a breaking point for EVERYONE so it is not one theory or the other. Take arsenic. Some people might get sick and die with a few atoms. It might take 100 times that much to kill someone else but again the immune system can only take so much. How much anthrax is anyone willing to take? How many cancer cells is anyone willing to have injected to see how well their immune system is working? How many parasites can you injest? I think this is the same type of arguement as nature vs. nurture concerning health and mentality. You can't separate them and both interact with each other. GB > > Gb : > > Pasteur was indeed a fraud. Before his death he admitted that most of his work > was false or " borrowed " . Many countries will not allow a Pasteur institute on > their soil. > > Excerpt from website article: > > " Who was this man Pasteur? What did he actually discover? The answer to the > first is that he was a chemist of sorts. The second question can be answered > only with the reminder that he separated L & D tartic acids. That is absolutely > all he did. The rest of his work, even the silkworm disease and bacterial > work, was plagiarized from that, not too well-known and much neglected professor > of Montpellier, Antoine Bechamp. Professor Bechamp's writings, when properly > studied, will be found to have afforded the solution to many of the problems > which had puzzled biologists, physiologists, pathologists and philosophers for > many years. " > Speaking of Professor Bechamp's works, Dr. Leverson of England says, " I also > found in those truths absolute proof of the absurdity of the germ theory of > disease; and, by the study of the writings of Pasteur, to which Bechamp’s works > unavoidably led me, I found full proof that the great god of the (supposedly) > men of science of the latter half of the last century and of many of the > present, was in fact, the most astonishing of plagiarists and distorter of other > men's discoveries; chiefly those of Professor Antoine Bechamp, and of his > collaborators and pupils; and that this plagiarist was the most monumental > charlatan, whose existence is disclosed to us, in the entire recorded history of > medicine. " > " You have already surmised who was this plagiarist and charlatan. It was Louis > Pasteur, to whose memory France has erected statues all over the land and > endowed the Pasteur Institute. " > > http://www.whale.to/vaccine/rabies.html > > Vic > > > > ________________________________ > From: greatyoga > Sent: Mon, December 27, 2010 > > ....candida group that has over 7000 members. I asked a question about herbs and candida. The group owner asked why I asked > about herbs as they do not kill candida and she went on about the immunity theory (as advocated by Bechamp)being the only theory.....She called Pasteur and others " frauds " and " impostors " . Maybe they were not 100% legit but those are strong words........ > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 28, 2010 Report Share Posted December 28, 2010 Loretta, Maybe one could say that germs don't cause disease but one could also say that having inmmunity does not free one from disease either so one cannot be right to say it is only immunity. Everyone has a point where immunity will be compromised. It is a combination of germ and immunity theory. It is along a spectrum but not black or white. GB > > I don't believe that germs " cause " disease; however, I do believe that > when/if viruses, bacteria, parasites are in a body that is fertile for > replication (because the immune system is not healthy) then disease can > develop. > > An accurate comparison of the Germ Theory and Cellular Theory is below. I > believe the Cellular Theory is the most correct. I do believe that > bacteria, germs, parasites live outside the body and can invade the body > (usually through the intestinal tract where at least 75% of the immune > system is located) but I don't believe they actually " cause " disease. It is > " proven " that hand-washing (basic hygiene) and staying away from sick people > is beneficial for most people. Why? Because bacteria and viruses tend to be > " environment-specific " (thus why some get sick when around sick people and > some don't) and unless we are absolutely sure that our immune system is > working at peak performance then our body terrain may indeed be " fertile " > for disease. I suggest hand-washing BECAUSE most people have depressed > immune systems; the same goes for avoiding sick people. It is ALL about the > health of one's body - the terrain - the inside. There is a huge list of > conditions that mean the immune system is compromised. One of the biggest > is yeast over-growth and many have no idea that this compromises the immune > system big-time. > > A good explanation - The Post-Antibiotic Age: Germ Theory by Tim O'Shea > http://www.oasisadvancedwellness.com/learning/post-antibiotic-age-germ-theor > y.html > > Below are some quotes from the above article: > > What exactly was this Germ Theory? Very simply, the Germ Theory stated that > there were separate diseases and that each disease was caused by a > particular micro-organism. It was the job of science, then, to find the > right drug or vaccine that would selectively kill off the offending bug > without killing the patient. > > Bacteria and viruses tend to be " environment-specific. " (terrain) That's why > some people get colds and others don't. That's why some survived the Bubonic > Plague. That's also why some doctors and nurses seem to be immune to disease > even though they're surrounded by it every day. However, it depends on > one's immune system and how healthy it is. So prudent hand-washing and > keeping a distance from sick people is wise for most people because most > people have compromised immune systems. > > It was Bechamp's view that it was not the bug that caused disease, but > rather the condition (terrain) in which bugs lived. Disease happens when an > imbalance causes some of the more pathological that is, bad, bacteria to > take over. What causes that? Low resistance, weak immune system. Seems like > such a simple idea, but that is really the foundation of the whole > controversy all along. In the end, everyone, even Pasteur, agreed that bugs > - bacteria and viruses - do not alone cause disease. > > Conventional medicine puts no credence on how healthy one's terrain is or is > not. This is why they recommend vaccines be given even to those with > compromised immune systems or babies whose immune system has not fully > developed. > > So are germs the cause of disease or aren't they? Bechamp said that there > was enough truth in that notion to make it seem reasonable at first glance. > Sure we can sometimes identify certain types of bacteria in certain disease > conditions. And it's undeniable that organisms can be found rampant within > populations suffering from epidemics and outbreaks, as Laurie Garrett > describes in The Coming Plague. But consider this: what if many more people > than those who actually get a disease have the " bug " ? Usually the only > people we test are the ones who get sick. So it looks like they're the only > ones who have the 'causative' organism in measurable amounts. From Pasteur > to the present, there is an entire other point of view that has been > supported: maybe the bad bugs are commonly present in many normal people, > but only multiply out of control when allowed to because of a weak immune > system. They're harmless until they proliferate. This is a fundamental > notion. > > " Bacteria and parasites cannot cause disease processes unless they find > their own peculiar morbid soil in which to grow and multiply. " > -Henry Lindlahr, MD - Founder of Lindlahr Sanitarium > > What is always present in diseases? Answer: depressed immune system. We > live in a time where a HUGE percentage of the population have a depressed > immune system. > So putting these ideas together, a notion comes into focus so clear that > even a lawyer could see it: soon we will be living in the Post-Antibiotic > Era (we are getting there fast as so many of the newer antibiotics are > proving inefficient). The paramount issue in health and survival will then > be the immune system. Drugs, alcohol, smoking, air pollution, processed > food, white sugar, white flour, radiation, stress, and bad living will still > be doing their number on that immune system. But it will be performing > without a net, this time. On its own. What will people turn to in order to > strengthen their immune system? Answer: Alternative Medicine, just like > before all of this went down. Actually, it's already started. > > Alternative medicine's purpose is to use natural means to strengthen the > immune system. Whole food enzymes, antioxidants, natural herbs, aloe, > probiotics, pure water, clean diet, spinal adjustment, massage, martial > arts, and exercise have all been proven to be helpful. One reason things > won't be completely the same as they were in the pre-antibiotic age is that > our knowledge of holistic therapeutics has deepened exponentially, sort of > as a by-product of the advances in biomedical technology in the past 50 > years. An increasing number of people are learning what it feels like to > build up their immune system, their resistance to illness. Once you've done > that, even one time, you know you can overcome practically any health > challenge out there by cleaning up your blood, simple detox, and following > the basics. Taken as a whole complete self-regulating being, the body is > simple and just needs a few things to maintain itself without disease, > premature aging, or chronic poisoning. Things get complicated when the body > is approached with what I call the Kragen Method - as in auto parts - > meaning pretending that the body is simply a group of individual parts that > can be treated in isolation from each other, one by one, like spark plugs > and carburetors. Then we get into some heavy theorizing, dangerous chemical > experimentation, and pathologically long words. Health then becomes a side > issue, the focus is economic, and the patient becomes the mark. And this is > the controlling philosophy in health care today. > > PASTEURIAN GERM THEORY vs BECHAMP CELLULAR THEORY by Walene > > GERM THEORY (PASTEUR) > > 1. Disease arises from micro-organisms outside the body. > 2. Micro-organisms are generally to be guarded against. > 3. The function of micro-organisms is constant. > 4. The shapes and colors of micro-organisms are constant 5. Every disease is > associated with a particular micro-organism 6. Micro-organisms are primary > causal agents. > 7. Disease can " strike " anybody. > 8. To prevent disease we have to " build defenses " > > CELLULAR THEORY (BECHAMP) > > 1. Disease arises from micro-organisms within the cells of the body. > 2. These intracellular micro-organisms normally function to build and assist > in the metabolic processes of the body. > 3. The function of these organisms changes to assist in the catabolic > (disintegration) processes of the host organism when that organism dies or > is injured, which may be chemical as well as mechanical. > 4. Micro-organisms change their shapes and colors to reflect the medium 5. > Every disease is associated with a particular condition. > 6. Micro-organisms become " pathogenic " as the health of the host organism > deteriorates. Hence, the condition of the host organism is the primary > causal agent. > 7. Disease is built by unhealthy conditions. > 8. To prevent disease we have to create health. > > Be Well > Dr.L > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 28, 2010 Report Share Posted December 28, 2010 We’re probably beating the subject to death because, in the end, what does it matter to us BUT, to the medical profession there entire existence has been built upon a false premise and that is, germs cause disease. At best (worst), they can only be a secondary cause just as it was brought out that sometimes they do and sometimes they don’t based upon what some call, The Immune System. In that event we have the primary cause.....an inadequate defense. However, exactly what are we attributing to this germ? A cold? The Flu? A sore throat? Diarrhea? A cough? With all of these measures obvious bodily defenses that keep us alive by eliminating unwanted toxins. Do we think that germs are not everywhere all the time? They are yet we don’t get sick all the time but we have toxins in us all the time. The Scientific community has all but ruled out what many of us might believe, that being our body, when overloaded with toxins, brings about heroic means to save its existence bet that a fever, diarrhea...... blah blah blah. Time after time, on this list, we read from people that “only the body can healâ€..........and they are correct and those so-called illnesses mentioned above are just as much the body healing itself but no, many want to give a germ the credit for all this havoc and not blame the things bringing about the toxins which ultimately kill us..........hopefully many moons down the road. In the final analysis, when cancer develops (not strikes), none of what any of us have written about germs matters until we deal with the cancer. Yes, I believe I have added to the beating to death of this subject. Joe C. From: greatyoga Sent: Tuesday, December 28, 2010 6:16 PM Subject: [ ] Re: germ vs. immunity theory Vic and , I said before that I don't know if Pasteur was completely legit. i am not saying he was a saint. However, the Germ theory still has some merit and it became popular because of Pasteur. Just like Columbus may not have discovered the New World but his expedition changed the world. I still think immunity is more important than the germ theory but I don't see how you can separate them. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 28, 2010 Report Share Posted December 28, 2010 Maybe this is an area to consider the view of Chinese medicine, Yin and Yang. All disease is a result of a problem with the immune system .This includes auto-immune diseases. But on the other hand the immune system is only as strong as its exposure to " germs " . Without the exposure to less dangerous germs of everyday ;we would never build the defense against more dangerous pathogens . This is a danger of all these anti bacterial soaps .We are weakening our defense mechanism . On the other hand, an immune system that is so compromised even the most friendly bacteria can be fatal. With saying this it is mostly the immune system that counts . No matter the germ it can only thrive where there is a breach in the immune system . Why can you expose a room with the rhino virus and not everyone gets a cold? Parasites are often a big cause in the breaching of the immune system . These parasites get under the radar! > > I don't believe that germs " cause " disease; however, I do believe that when/if viruses, bacteria, parasites are in a body that is fertile for replication (because the immune system is not healthy) then disease can develop........... > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 28, 2010 Report Share Posted December 28, 2010 When you make your money from selling drugs, the only approach is the germ approach .Follow the money trail. We're probably beating the subject to death because, in the end, what does it matter to us BUT, to the medical profession there entire existence has been built upon a false premise and that is, germs cause disease. At best (worst), they can only be a secondary cause just as it was brought out that sometimes they do and sometimes they don't based upon what some call, The Immune System. In that event we have the primary cause.....an inadequate defense. However, exactly what are we attributing to this germ? A cold? The Flu? A sore throat? Diarrhea? A cough? With all of these measures obvious bodily defenses that keep us alive by eliminating unwanted toxins. Do we think that germs are not everywhere all the time? They are yet we don't get sick all the time but we have toxins in us all the time. The Scientific community has all but ruled out what many of us might believe, that being our body, when overloaded with toxins, brings about heroic means to save its existence bet that a fever, diarrhea...... blah blah blah. Time after time, on this list, we read from people that only the body can heal..........and they are correct and those so-called illnesses mentioned above are just as much the body healing itself but no, many want to give a germ the credit for all this havoc and not blame the things bringing about the toxins which ultimately kill us..........hopefully many moons down the road. In the final analysis, when cancer develops (not strikes), none of what any of us have written about germs matters until we deal with the cancer. Yes, I believe I have added to the beating to death of this subject. Joe C. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 28, 2010 Report Share Posted December 28, 2010 It's always about the terrain of the body....always....and this is where conventional medicine really misses the boat. I think what you are saying seems correct. However, we live in a world in which a very high percentage of people do have compromised immune systems -- mainly because of lifestyle choices and because of the 24/7 on-slaught of chemicals/toxins (man-made) that continually attack the immune system. Add to this the fact that our precious drugs/vaccines (actually brings the immune system down) are becoming more and more inefficient and we then begin to see epidemics on the rise in which we have no good solution. In my opinion, one of these epidemics is cancer. A healthy immune system doesn't mean one will never get sick. It does mean that when one does get sick the down-time will be minimal. In fact, some illness actually helps to rev-up the immune system. Could we be on the way to a time when absolutely no one possesses a healthy immune system? Most likely. Our air and water are already toxic and now the government wants to control all foods from backyard gardens to seeds. Could it be that government's know that people will " follow " better when they are sick? Well, I won't go there but I think we all know the answer to that. We have an Immune System Calculator at http://www.oasisadvancedwellness.com/products/immune-calculator.html This list shows health concerns that can indicate the immune system is not working properly. It's amazing how many people have at least 1-2 of these concerns. I believe the information below answers your concerns: So are germs the cause of disease or aren't they? Bechamp said that there was enough truth in that notion to make it seem reasonable at first glance. Sure we can sometimes identify certain types of bacteria in certain disease conditions. And it's undeniable that organisms can be found rampant within populations suffering from epidemics and outbreaks, as Laurie Garrett describes in The Coming Plague. But consider this: what if many more people than those who actually get a disease have the " bug " ? Usually the only people we test are the ones who get sick. So it looks like they're the only ones who have the 'causative' organism in measurable amounts. From Pasteur to the present, there is an entire other point of view that has been supported: maybe the bad bugs are commonly present in many normal people, but only multiply out of control when allowed to because of a weak immune system. They're harmless until they proliferate. This is a fundamental notion. " Bacteria and parasites cannot cause disease processes unless they find their own peculiar morbid soil in which to grow and multiply. " -Henry Lindlahr, MD - Founder of Lindlahr Sanitarium Personally, I believe we MUST begin to think outside of the box and realize that we are at a time when the " disease theories " of science and conventional medicine are no longer valid. It's imperative that we change directions...and not look back. Be Well Dr.L [ ] Re: germ vs. immunity theory Loretta, Maybe one could say that germs don't cause disease but one could also say that having inmmunity does not free one from disease either so one cannot be right to say it is only immunity. Everyone has a point where immunity will be compromised. It is a combination of germ and immunity theory. It is along a spectrum but not black or white. GB > > I don't believe that germs " cause " disease; however, I do believe that > when/if viruses, bacteria, parasites are in a body that is fertile for > replication (because the immune system is not healthy) then disease can > develop. > > An accurate comparison of the Germ Theory and Cellular Theory is below. I > believe the Cellular Theory is the most correct. I do believe that > bacteria, germs, parasites live outside the body and can invade the body > (usually through the intestinal tract where at least 75% of the immune > system is located) but I don't believe they actually " cause " disease. It is > " proven " that hand-washing (basic hygiene) and staying away from sick people > is beneficial for most people. Why? Because bacteria and viruses tend to be > " environment-specific " (thus why some get sick when around sick people and > some don't) and unless we are absolutely sure that our immune system is > working at peak performance then our body terrain may indeed be " fertile " > for disease. I suggest hand-washing BECAUSE most people have depressed > immune systems; the same goes for avoiding sick people. It is ALL about the > health of one's body - the terrain - the inside. There is a huge list of > conditions that mean the immune system is compromised. One of the biggest > is yeast over-growth and many have no idea that this compromises the immune > system big-time. > > A good explanation - The Post-Antibiotic Age: Germ Theory by Tim O'Shea > http://www.oasisadvancedwellness.com/learning/post-antibiotic-age-germ-theor > y.html > > Below are some quotes from the above article: > > What exactly was this Germ Theory? Very simply, the Germ Theory stated that > there were separate diseases and that each disease was caused by a > particular micro-organism. It was the job of science, then, to find the > right drug or vaccine that would selectively kill off the offending bug > without killing the patient. > > Bacteria and viruses tend to be " environment-specific. " (terrain) That's why > some people get colds and others don't. That's why some survived the Bubonic > Plague. That's also why some doctors and nurses seem to be immune to disease > even though they're surrounded by it every day. However, it depends on > one's immune system and how healthy it is. So prudent hand-washing and > keeping a distance from sick people is wise for most people because most > people have compromised immune systems. > > It was Bechamp's view that it was not the bug that caused disease, but > rather the condition (terrain) in which bugs lived. Disease happens when an > imbalance causes some of the more pathological that is, bad, bacteria to > take over. What causes that? Low resistance, weak immune system. Seems like > such a simple idea, but that is really the foundation of the whole > controversy all along. In the end, everyone, even Pasteur, agreed that bugs > - bacteria and viruses - do not alone cause disease. > > Conventional medicine puts no credence on how healthy one's terrain is or is > not. This is why they recommend vaccines be given even to those with > compromised immune systems or babies whose immune system has not fully > developed. > > So are germs the cause of disease or aren't they? Bechamp said that there > was enough truth in that notion to make it seem reasonable at first glance. > Sure we can sometimes identify certain types of bacteria in certain disease > conditions. And it's undeniable that organisms can be found rampant within > populations suffering from epidemics and outbreaks, as Laurie Garrett > describes in The Coming Plague. But consider this: what if many more people > than those who actually get a disease have the " bug " ? Usually the only > people we test are the ones who get sick. So it looks like they're the only > ones who have the 'causative' organism in measurable amounts. From Pasteur > to the present, there is an entire other point of view that has been > supported: maybe the bad bugs are commonly present in many normal people, > but only multiply out of control when allowed to because of a weak immune > system. They're harmless until they proliferate. This is a fundamental > notion. > > " Bacteria and parasites cannot cause disease processes unless they find > their own peculiar morbid soil in which to grow and multiply. " > -Henry Lindlahr, MD - Founder of Lindlahr Sanitarium > > What is always present in diseases? Answer: depressed immune system. We > live in a time where a HUGE percentage of the population have a depressed > immune system. > So putting these ideas together, a notion comes into focus so clear that > even a lawyer could see it: soon we will be living in the Post-Antibiotic > Era (we are getting there fast as so many of the newer antibiotics are > proving inefficient). The paramount issue in health and survival will then > be the immune system. Drugs, alcohol, smoking, air pollution, processed > food, white sugar, white flour, radiation, stress, and bad living will still > be doing their number on that immune system. But it will be performing > without a net, this time. On its own. What will people turn to in order to > strengthen their immune system? Answer: Alternative Medicine, just like > before all of this went down. Actually, it's already started. > > Alternative medicine's purpose is to use natural means to strengthen the > immune system. Whole food enzymes, antioxidants, natural herbs, aloe, > probiotics, pure water, clean diet, spinal adjustment, massage, martial > arts, and exercise have all been proven to be helpful. One reason things > won't be completely the same as they were in the pre-antibiotic age is that > our knowledge of holistic therapeutics has deepened exponentially, sort of > as a by-product of the advances in biomedical technology in the past 50 > years. An increasing number of people are learning what it feels like to > build up their immune system, their resistance to illness. Once you've done > that, even one time, you know you can overcome practically any health > challenge out there by cleaning up your blood, simple detox, and following > the basics. Taken as a whole complete self-regulating being, the body is > simple and just needs a few things to maintain itself without disease, > premature aging, or chronic poisoning. Things get complicated when the body > is approached with what I call the Kragen Method - as in auto parts - > meaning pretending that the body is simply a group of individual parts that > can be treated in isolation from each other, one by one, like spark plugs > and carburetors. Then we get into some heavy theorizing, dangerous chemical > experimentation, and pathologically long words. Health then becomes a side > issue, the focus is economic, and the patient becomes the mark. And this is > the controlling philosophy in health care today. > > PASTEURIAN GERM THEORY vs BECHAMP CELLULAR THEORY by Walene > > GERM THEORY (PASTEUR) > > 1. Disease arises from micro-organisms outside the body. > 2. Micro-organisms are generally to be guarded against. > 3. The function of micro-organisms is constant. > 4. The shapes and colors of micro-organisms are constant 5. Every disease is > associated with a particular micro-organism 6. Micro-organisms are primary > causal agents. > 7. Disease can " strike " anybody. > 8. To prevent disease we have to " build defenses " > > CELLULAR THEORY (BECHAMP) > > 1. Disease arises from micro-organisms within the cells of the body. > 2. These intracellular micro-organisms normally function to build and assist > in the metabolic processes of the body. > 3. The function of these organisms changes to assist in the catabolic > (disintegration) processes of the host organism when that organism dies or > is injured, which may be chemical as well as mechanical. > 4. Micro-organisms change their shapes and colors to reflect the medium 5. > Every disease is associated with a particular condition. > 6. Micro-organisms become " pathogenic " as the health of the host organism > deteriorates. Hence, the condition of the host organism is the primary > causal agent. > 7. Disease is built by unhealthy conditions. > 8. To prevent disease we have to create health. > > Be Well > Dr.L > ------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 28, 2010 Report Share Posted December 28, 2010 Of course--man-made carcinogens are the cause of the alarming rise in cancer rates in industrialized nations. I don't think the government is behind this to control the population through illness--the ruinous price of health care is helping to ruin our economy. That would seem to be cutting off one's nose to spite one's face. But what of native populations as I've written about twice? Healthy, robust immune systems with a diet better than that of European populations at the time. Yet died in the millions from smallpox, etc. That seems to support an aspect of the germ theory. It's always about the terrain of the body....always....and this is where conventional medicine really misses the boat. I think what you are saying seems correct. However, we live in a world in which a very high percentage of people do have compromised immune systems -- mainly because of lifestyle choices and because of the 24/7 on-slaught of chemicals/toxins (man-made) that continually attack the immune system. Add to this the fact that our precious drugs/vaccines (actually brings the immune system down) are becoming more and more inefficient and we then begin to see epidemics on the rise in which we have no good solution. In my opinion, one of these epidemics is cancer. A healthy immune system doesn't mean one will never get sick. It does mean that when one does get sick the down-time will be minimal. In fact, some illness actually helps to rev-up the immune system. Could we be on the way to a time when absolutely no one possesses a healthy immune system? Most likely. Our air and water are already toxic and now the government wants to control all foods from backyard gardens to seeds. Could it be that government's know that people will " follow " better when they are sick? Well, I won't go there but I think we all know the answer to that............. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 28, 2010 Report Share Posted December 28, 2010 Germ vs. immunity theory? Life is rarely black or white; proponents on both sides of the question often have vested interests. Certainly the voracious greed of big pharma (a microcosm of American culture--one shudders and thinks of Mussolini's statement: " Facism is corporatism. " ). But, the obverse is true: many alternative practitioners pimp a host of products they either create or endorse to help people--and make a lot of cash in the process. Out-of-pocket, of course. You know--Deepak Chopra: five grand a week for a stay at a " wellness center; " $400 for a " personal " mantra. Significantly more for instruction in the art of " yogic flying; " which apparently is supposed to promote perfect health and world peace. And material abundance and the perfect soulmate. And save a fortune on airfare. Most importantly, one may never again need to sit on a dubious toilet seat: just hover. From: Dr. Loretta Lanphier <drlanphier@...> Subject: RE: [ ] Re: germ vs. immunity theory Date: Tuesday, December 28, 2010, 7:58 PM Â It's always about the terrain of the body....always....and this is where conventional medicine really misses the boat. I think what you are saying seems correct. However, we live in a world in which a very high percentage of people do have compromised immune systems -- mainly because of lifestyle choices and because of the 24/7 on-slaught of chemicals/toxins (man-made) that continually attack the immune system. Add to this the fact that our precious drugs/vaccines (actually brings the immune system down) are becoming more and more inefficient and we then begin to see epidemics on the rise in which we have no good solution. In my opinion, one of these epidemics is cancer. A healthy immune system doesn't mean one will never get sick. It does mean that when one does get sick the down-time will be minimal. In fact, some illness actually helps to rev-up the immune system. Could we be on the way to a time when absolutely no one possesses a healthy immune system? Most likely. Our air and water are already toxic and now the government wants to control all foods from backyard gardens to seeds. Could it be that government's know that people will " follow " better when they are sick? Well, I won't go there but I think we all know the answer to that. We have an Immune System Calculator at http://www.oasisadvancedwellness.com/products/immune-calculator.html This list shows health concerns that can indicate the immune system is not working properly. It's amazing how many people have at least 1-2 of these concerns. I believe the information below answers your concerns: So are germs the cause of disease or aren't they? Bechamp said that there was enough truth in that notion to make it seem reasonable at first glance. Sure we can sometimes identify certain types of bacteria in certain disease conditions. And it's undeniable that organisms can be found rampant within populations suffering from epidemics and outbreaks, as Laurie Garrett describes in The Coming Plague. But consider this: what if many more people than those who actually get a disease have the " bug " ? Usually the only people we test are the ones who get sick. So it looks like they're the only ones who have the 'causative' organism in measurable amounts. From Pasteur to the present, there is an entire other point of view that has been supported: maybe the bad bugs are commonly present in many normal people, but only multiply out of control when allowed to because of a weak immune system. They're harmless until they proliferate. This is a fundamental notion. " Bacteria and parasites cannot cause disease processes unless they find their own peculiar morbid soil in which to grow and multiply. " -Henry Lindlahr, MD - Founder of Lindlahr Sanitarium Personally, I believe we MUST begin to think outside of the box and realize that we are at a time when the " disease theories " of science and conventional medicine are no longer valid. It's imperative that we change directions...and not look back. Be Well Dr.L [ ] Re: germ vs. immunity theory Loretta, Maybe one could say that germs don't cause disease but one could also say that having inmmunity does not free one from disease either so one cannot be right to say it is only immunity. Everyone has a point where immunity will be compromised. It is a combination of germ and immunity theory. It is along a spectrum but not black or white. GB > > I don't believe that germs " cause " disease; however, I do believe that > when/if viruses, bacteria, parasites are in a body that is fertile for > replication (because the immune system is not healthy) then disease can > develop. > > An accurate comparison of the Germ Theory and Cellular Theory is below. I > believe the Cellular Theory is the most correct. I do believe that > bacteria, germs, parasites live outside the body and can invade the body > (usually through the intestinal tract where at least 75% of the immune > system is located) but I don't believe they actually " cause " disease. It is > " proven " that hand-washing (basic hygiene) and staying away from sick people > is beneficial for most people. Why? Because bacteria and viruses tend to be > " environment-specific " (thus why some get sick when around sick people and > some don't) and unless we are absolutely sure that our immune system is > working at peak performance then our body terrain may indeed be " fertile " > for disease. I suggest hand-washing BECAUSE most people have depressed > immune systems; the same goes for avoiding sick people. It is ALL about the > health of one's body - the terrain - the inside. There is a huge list of > conditions that mean the immune system is compromised. One of the biggest > is yeast over-growth and many have no idea that this compromises the immune > system big-time. > > A good explanation - The Post-Antibiotic Age: Germ Theory by Tim O'Shea > http://www.oasisadvancedwellness.com/learning/post-antibiotic-age-germ-theor > y.html > > Below are some quotes from the above article: > > What exactly was this Germ Theory? Very simply, the Germ Theory stated that > there were separate diseases and that each disease was caused by a > particular micro-organism. It was the job of science, then, to find the > right drug or vaccine that would selectively kill off the offending bug > without killing the patient. > > Bacteria and viruses tend to be " environment-specific. " (terrain) That's why > some people get colds and others don't. That's why some survived the Bubonic > Plague. That's also why some doctors and nurses seem to be immune to disease > even though they're surrounded by it every day. However, it depends on > one's immune system and how healthy it is. So prudent hand-washing and > keeping a distance from sick people is wise for most people because most > people have compromised immune systems. > > It was Bechamp's view that it was not the bug that caused disease, but > rather the condition (terrain) in which bugs lived. Disease happens when an > imbalance causes some of the more pathological that is, bad, bacteria to > take over. What causes that? Low resistance, weak immune system. Seems like > such a simple idea, but that is really the foundation of the whole > controversy all along. In the end, everyone, even Pasteur, agreed that bugs > - bacteria and viruses - do not alone cause disease. > > Conventional medicine puts no credence on how healthy one's terrain is or is > not. This is why they recommend vaccines be given even to those with > compromised immune systems or babies whose immune system has not fully > developed. > > So are germs the cause of disease or aren't they? Bechamp said that there > was enough truth in that notion to make it seem reasonable at first glance. > Sure we can sometimes identify certain types of bacteria in certain disease > conditions. And it's undeniable that organisms can be found rampant within > populations suffering from epidemics and outbreaks, as Laurie Garrett > describes in The Coming Plague. But consider this: what if many more people > than those who actually get a disease have the " bug " ? Usually the only > people we test are the ones who get sick. So it looks like they're the only > ones who have the 'causative' organism in measurable amounts. From Pasteur > to the present, there is an entire other point of view that has been > supported: maybe the bad bugs are commonly present in many normal people, > but only multiply out of control when allowed to because of a weak immune > system. They're harmless until they proliferate. This is a fundamental > notion. > > " Bacteria and parasites cannot cause disease processes unless they find > their own peculiar morbid soil in which to grow and multiply. " > -Henry Lindlahr, MD - Founder of Lindlahr Sanitarium > > What is always present in diseases? Answer: depressed immune system. We > live in a time where a HUGE percentage of the population have a depressed > immune system. > So putting these ideas together, a notion comes into focus so clear that > even a lawyer could see it: soon we will be living in the Post-Antibiotic > Era (we are getting there fast as so many of the newer antibiotics are > proving inefficient). The paramount issue in health and survival will then > be the immune system. Drugs, alcohol, smoking, air pollution, processed > food, white sugar, white flour, radiation, stress, and bad living will still > be doing their number on that immune system. But it will be performing > without a net, this time. On its own. What will people turn to in order to > strengthen their immune system? Answer: Alternative Medicine, just like > before all of this went down. Actually, it's already started. > > Alternative medicine's purpose is to use natural means to strengthen the > immune system. Whole food enzymes, antioxidants, natural herbs, aloe, > probiotics, pure water, clean diet, spinal adjustment, massage, martial > arts, and exercise have all been proven to be helpful. One reason things > won't be completely the same as they were in the pre-antibiotic age is that > our knowledge of holistic therapeutics has deepened exponentially, sort of > as a by-product of the advances in biomedical technology in the past 50 > years. An increasing number of people are learning what it feels like to > build up their immune system, their resistance to illness. Once you've done > that, even one time, you know you can overcome practically any health > challenge out there by cleaning up your blood, simple detox, and following > the basics. Taken as a whole complete self-regulating being, the body is > simple and just needs a few things to maintain itself without disease, > premature aging, or chronic poisoning. Things get complicated when the body > is approached with what I call the Kragen Method - as in auto parts - > meaning pretending that the body is simply a group of individual parts that > can be treated in isolation from each other, one by one, like spark plugs > and carburetors. Then we get into some heavy theorizing, dangerous chemical > experimentation, and pathologically long words. Health then becomes a side > issue, the focus is economic, and the patient becomes the mark. And this is > the controlling philosophy in health care today. > > PASTEURIAN GERM THEORY vs BECHAMP CELLULAR THEORY by Walene > > GERM THEORY (PASTEUR) > > 1. Disease arises from micro-organisms outside the body. > 2. Micro-organisms are generally to be guarded against. > 3. The function of micro-organisms is constant. > 4. The shapes and colors of micro-organisms are constant 5. Every disease is > associated with a particular micro-organism 6. Micro-organisms are primary > causal agents. > 7. Disease can " strike " anybody. > 8. To prevent disease we have to " build defenses " > > CELLULAR THEORY (BECHAMP) > > 1. Disease arises from micro-organisms within the cells of the body. > 2. These intracellular micro-organisms normally function to build and assist > in the metabolic processes of the body. > 3. The function of these organisms changes to assist in the catabolic > (disintegration) processes of the host organism when that organism dies or > is injured, which may be chemical as well as mechanical. > 4. Micro-organisms change their shapes and colors to reflect the medium 5. > Every disease is associated with a particular condition. > 6. Micro-organisms become " pathogenic " as the health of the host organism > deteriorates. Hence, the condition of the host organism is the primary > causal agent. > 7. Disease is built by unhealthy conditions. > 8. To prevent disease we have to create health. > > Be Well > Dr.L > ------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2010 Report Share Posted December 29, 2010 Loretta, I understand your concern and agree. I want to take your analogy a step further. A germ is like a seed. You cannot have an aster flower without an aster seed. You cannot have an aster flower without nourishment like soil, light, water, etc. If it lands on a desert rock, it will not grow. You cannot have the flu without a flu virus or anthrax without Bacillus anthracis. If a person's immune system is strong enough to withstand the virus or bacteria, then one will not get the disease. If one has an acid blood stream or undigested food in the colon, etc., that person will be more Susceptible to that certain " bug " . If the germ does not exist, one cannot get that disease. Smallpox is supposedly eradicated so no one can get it anymore. You need both the germ and the terrain. There are many more variables in the terrain and that is why it is more controversial and more complicated. GB > > It's always about the terrain of the body....always....and this is where > conventional medicine really misses the boat. I think what you are saying > seems correct. However, we live in a world in which a very high percentage > of people do have compromised immune systems -- mainly because of lifestyle > choices and because of the 24/7 on-slaught of chemicals/toxins (man-made) > that continually attack the immune system. Add to this the fact that our > precious drugs/vaccines (actually brings the immune system down) are > becoming more and more inefficient and we then begin to see epidemics on the > rise in which we have no good solution. In my opinion, one of these > epidemics is cancer. > > A healthy immune system doesn't mean one will never get sick. It does mean > that when one does get sick the down-time will be minimal. In fact, some > illness actually helps to rev-up the immune system. > > Could we be on the way to a time when absolutely no one possesses a healthy > immune system? Most likely. Our air and water are already toxic and now the > government wants to control all foods from backyard gardens to seeds. Could > it be that government's know that people will " follow " better when they are > sick? Well, I won't go there but I think we all know the answer to that. We > have an Immune System Calculator at > http://www.oasisadvancedwellness.com/products/immune-calculator.html This > list shows health concerns that can indicate the immune system is not > working properly. It's amazing how many people have at least 1-2 of these > concerns. > > I believe the information below answers your concerns: > > So are germs the cause of disease or aren't they? Bechamp said that there > was enough truth in that notion to make it seem reasonable at first glance. > Sure we can sometimes identify certain types of bacteria in certain disease > conditions. And it's undeniable that organisms can be found rampant within > populations suffering from epidemics and outbreaks, as Laurie Garrett > describes in The Coming Plague. But consider this: what if many more people > than those who actually get a disease have the " bug " ? Usually the only > people we test are the ones who get sick. So it looks like they're the only > ones who have the 'causative' organism in measurable amounts. From Pasteur > to the present, there is an entire other point of view that has been > supported: maybe the bad bugs are commonly present in many normal people, > but only multiply out of control when allowed to because of a weak immune > system. They're harmless until they proliferate. This is a fundamental > notion. > > " Bacteria and parasites cannot cause disease processes unless they find > their own peculiar morbid soil in which to grow and multiply. " -Henry > Lindlahr, MD - Founder of Lindlahr Sanitarium > > Personally, I believe we MUST begin to think outside of the box and realize > that we are at a time when the " disease theories " of science and > conventional medicine are no longer valid. It's imperative that we change > directions...and not look back. > > Be Well > Dr.L Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2010 Report Share Posted December 29, 2010 On Wed, Dec. 29, 2010, Dr. Loretta Lanphier wrote: [Excerpt from message] " It's always about the terrain of the body....So are germs the cause of disease or aren't they?...Sure we can sometimes identify certain types of bacteria in certain disease conditions. And it's undeniable that organisms can be found rampant within populations suffering from epidemics and outbreaks...But consider this: what if many more people than those who actually get a disease have the " bug " ? Usually the only people we test are the ones who get sick. So it looks like they're the only ones who have the 'causative' organism in measurable amounts. " >-------- But this is just not true, is it? Innumerable outbreaks of infectious illness have been traced to a single infected person or carrier importing the microrganism into a suceptible population - smallpox, typhoid, etc. As others have said, sometimes personal immunity is dominant, most obviously in those who have had the infection before, or who have been effectively vaccinated against it. At other times, devastating clinical infection is almost inevitable, as when isolated tribes were exposed to unfamilar diseases such as smallpox, TB etc. PM Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 30, 2010 Report Share Posted December 30, 2010 I thought I was going to not address this subject any longer but I must. The following e-mail actually supports Dr. Loretta’s contention that It is all about the Terrain with the statement, “ “ importing the microrganism�into a “susceptible population†- smallpox, typhoid, etc.†The truth is glaring. Even this post admits that it is a “susceptible Population†otherwise known as ‘Terrain’. What was said here is that the germ must first have a “susceptible population†(person). At best, (worst), the germ can only be a secondary cause because it must first have the proper terrain and regardless, not all illnesses are related to germs in the first place. Since this is a cancer list we need to get back to issues relative to cancer but it is important to know that it is the terrain. Joe C. From: Moran Sent: Thursday, December 30, 2010 2:36 AM Subject: [ ] Re: germ vs. immunity theory On Wed, Dec. 29, 2010, Dr. Loretta Lanphier wrote: [Excerpt from message]� " It's always about the terrain of the body....So are germs the cause of disease or aren't they?...Sure we can sometimes identify certain types of bacteria in certain disease conditions. And it's undeniable that organisms can be found rampant within populations suffering from epidemics and outbreaks...But consider this: what if many more people than those who actually get a disease have the " bug " ? Usually the only people we test are the ones who get sick. So it looks like they're the only ones who have the 'causative' organism in measurable amounts. " >-------- But this is just not true, is it? Innumerable outbreaks of� infectious illness have been traced to a single infected person or carrier importing the microrganism�into a suceptible population - smallpox, typhoid, etc. As others have said, sometimes personal immunity is dominant, most obviously in�those who have had the infection before,�or who�have been effectively vaccinated against it. At other times, devastating clinical infection is almost inevitable, as when�isolated tribes were exposed to unfamilar diseases such as smallpox, TB etc. PM Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 30, 2010 Report Share Posted December 30, 2010 , It is good to see you back on the list. All too often those in the alternative world like to resurrect the debates of yestercentury. Another example would be those who argue whether cancer is one disease or many diseases. Too often these arguments are among those who don't understand or accept molecular or evolutionary biology. I don't quite understand so much of today's aversion to today's science. So many practitioners skip right over it and go straight to some visionary quantum energy science of the future. I think that one of the main weaknesses of any argument is the intention to win the argument rather than to seek the truth. Real science knows this and this is why you find a " Discussion " section at the end of most peer-reviewed published research. Sometimes the conclusions are wrong-headed, but at least the mechanisms are in place for eventual correction. My own pet peeve is the lack of an adequate review system in patent literature. It is our nature to assume that if something is patented there must be some merit to it. I don't bother to read fiction because I get more than my fair share of such entertainment by reading all the speculative and plausible science in patent applications. But, I am addicted to such reading because of the occasional gem. And speaking of gems I want to thank Joe Castronovo who sent me a delightful quote from Orwell: " They had their cynical code worked out. The public are swine; advertising is the rattling of a stick inside a swill-bucket. " I can no longer see or hear advertising without this image coming to mind. _____ From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Moran Sent: Wednesday, December 29, 2010 11:36 PM Subject: [ ] Re: germ vs. immunity theory On Wed, Dec. 29, 2010, Dr. Loretta Lanphier wrote: [Excerpt from message] " It's always about the terrain of the body....So are germs the cause of disease or aren't they?...Sure we can sometimes identify certain types of bacteria in certain disease conditions. And it's undeniable that organisms can be found rampant within populations suffering from epidemics and outbreaks...But consider this: what if many more people than those who actually get a disease have the " bug " ? Usually the only people we test are the ones who get sick. So it looks like they're the only ones who have the 'causative' organism in measurable amounts. " >-------- But this is just not true, is it? Innumerable outbreaks of infectious illness have been traced to a single infected person or carrier importing the microrganisminto a suceptible population - smallpox, typhoid, etc. As others have said, sometimes personal immunity is dominant, most obviously inthose who have had the infection before,or whohave been effectively vaccinated against it. At other times, devastating clinical infection is almost inevitable, as whenisolated tribes were exposed to unfamilar diseases such as smallpox, TB etc. PM Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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