Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Cancer: Step Outside the Box

Cancer: Step Outside the Box - by: Shay McConaughey

What is Cancer? It�s the continent across an uncharted ocean--or is it? In his book, Cancer: Step Outside the Box (2nd Edition 2007, Infinity 5102 Partners, ISBN 0-9788065-0-6), the author rediscovers and shares the cures for cancer.

This book is well-organized, easy to read, and crammed with eye-opening information about this frightening disease. The author goes into great detail about the causes and the very nature of cancer and it�s many faces.

He explains current treatments widely offered in the medical community, the effectiveness of the treatments and the opinions of the doctors who dispense them.

Ty Bollinger, a tax accountant by trade, lost seven members of his family, including his mother and father, to cancer over a period of 8 years. His devastating loss and his ability to collect and summarize complicated data and ideas motivated him to search out the truth about cancer and share it with the world in an easy-to-understand and concise format.

Mr. Bollinger states ��my goal is to �bring it down a notch� and enable you to actually comprehend complex medical information as it regards to cancer, nutrition, and overall health.�

Find out what these doctors really think. �If I contracted cancer, I would never go to a standard cancer treatment centre.� �Of the 79 oncologists surveyed, 58 said that ALL chemotherapy programs were unacceptable��

The author includes�not one, but several�cures that have already been discovered and documented and the effectiveness of these treatments and information about the people who�s lives have been saved because of them.

Cancer has long been the monster in the closets of our minds. Mr. Bollinger does an excellent job of opening the closet, shining the light and exposing the beast for what it really is. He gives you power from the knowledge that cancer really DOES have a cure and not just one, but many.

If you or someone you know has already been diagnosed with cancer, I highly recommend you get a copy of this book TODAY! It could be the answer you�ve been praying for. Even if you�re currently cancer free, it�s a threat that is always looming. You should get a copy just as fast as you can. It could save your life.

I am a retired statistical database designer and stay-at-home mom with 3 children.� I enjoy learning about the complexities of nutrition and nature with respect for God's master design.� My goal is to uncover the mysteries of optimum health and share them with family, friends and others with similar desires.� ~Shay

Monday, August 24, 2009

Cancer The Missing Point

Cancer - The Missing Point by: Dr. Randy Wysong
If one were to judge by television advertising and news reports, it would seem that the “war on cancer” is all but won. What are the weapons being heralded? Drugs, research, tests and exams. They miss the point.

“Prevention” is promoted as meaning catching the disease early. Really. That also misses the point. Is it “prevention” if you call 911 when you come home and see smoke billowing from all your windows? Do we just live with a carpe diem philosophy and wait for the doctor to tell us we have a lump in our breast or a swollen nodular prostate? Is the cause of cancer a lack of one of the new cancer drugs? Is the cause of cancer really unknown, requiring endless research? First, let me put to rest the propaganda that the war is being won.

Since President Nixon declared the war (1971) and after over 200 billion dollars have been spent on research (remember, one billion is a thousand million), more Americans will die of cancer in the next 14 months than have died in all U.S. wars ever fought combined! (Where are the protest marches?) Soon, cancer will overtake heart disease as the number one killer. Decades ago, early in the war, there were some dramatic successes such as with Hodgkin's disease and some forms of childhood leukemia.

There can be little doubt that debunking (surgical removal) of large cancers brings benefits. But the big killers such as colorectal, lung, prostate and breast cancer remain as threatening as ever. Survival gains are measured primarily in additional months (not years) added to life, not in cures. The placebo effect is by and large ignored. (People getting a sugar pill placebo in cancer studies have been known to lose their hair and some actually cure themselves by simply thinking they will be cured.) A percentage of people can experience remissions spontaneously and from simple lifestyle adjustments, but the cancer therapy is always credited with the cure. Investigations"Placebo Learning: The Placebo Effect as a Conditioned Response," 1985; 2(1):23.O'Regan B, et al. 1993. Spontaneous Remission: An Annotated Bibliography. Sausalito, CA.http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0943951178/103-3301155-6416668?v=glanceTalbot M. 1991. The Holographic Universe. New York. Harper Collins Publishershttp://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0060922583/103-3301155-6416668?v=glance Townsend Letter, 2004; 251:32-3 http://www.townsendletter.com/June2004/June2004.htm

Statistics can always be massaged to create the result desired. This practice is rampant in cancer research. Animal models (euphemism for real living and feeling caged creatures being tortured by the millions) do not prove effectiveness across species boundaries to humans. Neither do laboratory cell lines. That's why all the "breakthroughs" based on tumor shrinkage never pan out.

For-profit drug companies and National Cancer Institute grant-based research ignore metastases (the spreading cells of cancer through the body) in their positive reports. Instead they highlight and focus on more easily obtained lab results, such as "tumor shrinkage,” and on easily manipulated clinical data such as "five-year survival." Twelve new "improved" drugs introduced in Europe between 1995 and 2000 were no better than the drugs they replaced. But the prices were all higher, in one instance by a factor of 350 times. One new "revolutionary" drug, Erbitux™, found to "shrink" tumors but not extend the lives of patients at all costs $2,400 per week. Avastin™, another costly chemotherapeutic, by the best calculation, extended the lives of 400 colorectal patients by 4.7 months. Tamoxifin™ is proven to be effective in decreasing breast cancer. Risk is decreased by about 15% but what is not equally heralded is the fact that it increased the risk of endometrial uterine cancer by about 15%. (Patient Information: Nolvadex, Zeneca Pharmaceuticals) Are such results worth the financial devastation and miserable life that chemotherapy, radiation and surgery impose?

Is that the way to spend one's remaining days? If such therapy does add a couple of months, are those couple of months really worth the poking, prodding, pain, unrelenting nausea, disfiguring, destruction of the immune system and increased susceptibility to other diseases? "Yes" would be a hard answer to justify. In the face of a cancer diagnosis most people just throw up their hands in terror and surrender to the conventional cancer therapy death process. The feeling is that something must be done, and, since "doctors know best," one must begin the "fight" by following the advice of the doctor. But fighting does not mean surrendering to the will of another person who has their own personal agenda and narrowed field of view dictated by the club they belong to. That misses the point. You must do something. Here's the on-point best approach:1. Prevention means adjusting your life right now so that you are living in tune with your design. Cancer is, quite simply, the reaction of cells subjected long enough to an environment they are not designed for. The genetic apparatus loses its bearings, becomes insane, if you will, and regresses to embryonic infancy and just begins multiplying recklessly.

What is the proper environment?

It is that food, air, water and lifestyle you are genetically designed for. The proper healthy preventive living context is encapsulated in the Wysong Optimal Health Programâ„¢.

2. If you get cancer, don't panic. First thing is follow #1 advice. Learn. Gather as much information as you can from all resources, not just what the medical establishment provides. We try to gather such information for you in: The Wysong Directory of Alternative Resources http://www.wysong.net/page/WOTTPWS/PROD/EDUAIDS/MM028

3. Think about what has happened in your life that has caused the disease. It is caused, it does not just happen. Correct your life.

4. You take control of your own body and you make the decisions. Determine to set right what is wrong and do it. Taking control is essential to not feeling like a helpless victim and sinking into hopeless despair – a sure mindset to speed the disease along.

5. Think long and hard before submitting to unproven cancer therapies. If the doctor cannot prove effectiveness (at least prove that you will be better off with the therapy than without) and if you are not willing to take the risk of all the contraindications, then don't submit because you think it is "all that can be done." It isn't. See #2 above.

All good things in life are hard. In our modern world, good health takes effort and attention. Preventing and reversing disease also takes effort – your effort. Begin today to take charge of your health and be the best you can be. Most chronic degenerative diseases have long latency periods, the time between when the disease begins and it manifests in overt symptoms. Most everyone reading this has such disease brewing within at this very moment. So take advantage of the window of opportunity and give your body a chance by living the life you were designed to live. That will not only prevent disease from gaining a foothold, but reverse disease that is incubating within.

Dr. Wysong is a former veterinary clinician and surgeon, college instructor in human anatomy, physiology and the origin of life, inventor of numerous medical, surgical, nutritional, athletic and fitness products and devices, research director for the present company by his name and founder of the philanthropic Wysong Institute. He is author of The Creation-Evolution Controversy now in its eleventh printing, a new two volume set on philosophy for living entitled Thinking Matters: 1-Living Life... As If Thinking Matters; 2-The Big Questions...As If Thinking Matters, several books on nutrition, prevention and health for people and animals and over 18 years of monthly health newsletters. He may be contacted at Wysong@Wysong.net and a free subscription to his e-Health Letter is available at http://www.wysong.net.

check out http://www.cerealwysong.com

Sunday, August 23, 2009

The New Miss Universe


Miss Venezuela Stefania Fernandez was crowned Miss Universe 2009 at the Miss Universe beauty pageant in Nassau, Bahamas. - Sunday, Aug. 23, 2009- Associated Press-(AP Photo/Andres Leighton)

How To Write An Effective E-Mail

How To Write An Effective E-Mail-Tue, Aug 11 01:30 PM- Susan Adams, Forbes.com

In July 2008, South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford e-mailed his Latin lover, praising "the erotic beauty of you holding yourself (or two magnificent parts of yourself) in the faded glow of night's light."

That now-public note is just the latest example of how even the most politically savvy pro can be an idiot when it comes to electronic mail.

Tips For Dealing With Your Laid-Off Friend

Tips For Dealing With Your Laid-Off Friend - Read the full story- Tara Weiss

With unemployment at 8.5%, most people has at least one friend or acquaitance who has been laid off.

But they may not know how to act around that person.

Here's some advice on what to say and what to avoid.

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Inside The Year's Biggest Data Breach

Wed, Aug 19 05:30 PM
Taylor Buley, Forbes.com
The U.S. Department of Justice's indictment of Albert Gonzalez on Monday seems to have all the elements of a Hollywood crime drama: A hacker gains access to millions of credit and debit card numbers and has the power to take down a nation. Too bad for Tinseltown, the attack itself was about as sexy and a pile of routers.

According to the indictment, Gonzalez, 28, gained a foothold into the systems of credit card processors such as Heartland Payment Systems and retailers like OfficeMax, Barnes & Noble and TJX Cos. using an amateur hacking technique called "wardriving," which uses wireless access points to find vulnerable networks from which to launch attacks. Once connected to those private networks, Gonzalez used a well-known technique called "SQL injection" to trick Web applications into forking over private information that gave him deeper access into networks. Even though it sounds complicated, techies liken this kind of hack to simply turning the front doorknob to get into a house.

Most Dangerous Websites

The top 100 most dangerous websites for your PC enlisted.

Melbourne, Aug 20 (ANI): Internet security company Norton Symantec has come up with a list of Top 100 Dirtiest sites, which could infect your computer with malware.

Malware is a software that can damage or compromise a computer system without the owner's consent.