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Medical Forum / Diseases and Disorders / Cancer / February 2005

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Prescription Drug cost estimate soars to $1.2 TRILLION !!

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awthrawthr@yahoo.com - 10 Feb 2005 05:29 GMT
In the federal Budget estimate released this week, the cost of the
newly enacted prescription program has soared to $1.2 trillion over 10
years. The new figure more than doubles the estimate from last
September.

In other words, all you morons who keep insisting on using expensive,
risky drugs are going to leave a legacy that will long outlive you. The
reality is that we just can't afford this insanity.

Maybe you could switch to bromelain instead. It has been shown to help
dissolve fibrin, which is a sticky substance in your blood (and
elsewhere) that causes inflammation, blockages and scarring.

Dr. William Wong, Ph.D., ND, says that most physicians who have studied
anatomy realize that in a way fibrolytic conditions are what kills us
all in the end, because the scarring it produces ultimately impairs
organ function to the degree that life is incompatible.

Cancer cells are surrounded by 15 times more fibrin than normal tissue.
The sticky substance plays a role in preventing natural killer cells
from attacking the tumors.

2,000 GDU's three times a day of bromelain, between meals, is what is
usually recommended. (GDU's stands for "Gelatin Digestive Units.")
Bromelain and other protein enzymes also help the body to produce
"Tumor Necrosis Factor" which attack cancer cells.

Enzymes such as papain, pancreatin, trypsin and chymotrypsin are also
excellent fibrin dissolvers.

While it would be too much to ask for bromelain to get rid of cancer by
itself, it appears to be a useful adjunct to any natural treatment for
cancer.

(Fibrin is found pretty much wherever there is inflammation, including
joints FIBROcystic breast disease, and in endometriosis, to name a few
conditions.)

I've been using bromelian for about a month now, and today the painful
burning arththritic sensation that I have had in my right knee for the
last few months appears to be gone. I've gone through two bottles at a
cost of $23 and am working on a third.

NEWSFLASH: It's not your responsibility to pay for my medical problems!
Especially ones brought on by my own bad habits, such as lack of
exercise and eating junk food.

(If some innocent bystander is run over by a bus, maybe then we all
chip in. But most of our medical problems and the bills that are
created by them are due to our own choices.)

Please don't exercise your 'right' to obtain taxpayer funded
prescription drugs. Pay for them yourself! Or switch to something
natural. Pay for those yourself, too.
Steph - 10 Feb 2005 05:35 GMT
> In the federal Budget estimate released this week, the cost of the
> newly enacted prescription program has soared to $1.2 trillion over 10
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
> risky drugs are going to leave a legacy that will long outlive you. The
> reality is that we just can't afford this insanity.

What we can't afford is your insanity

> Maybe you could switch to bromelain instead. It has been shown to help
> dissolve fibrin, which is a sticky substance in your blood (and
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
> all in the end, because the scarring it produces ultimately impairs
> organ function to the degree that life is incompatible.

Most physicians I know have studied anatomy extensively, and wouldn't agree.

> Cancer cells are surrounded by 15 times more fibrin than normal tissue.
> The sticky substance plays a role in preventing natural killer cells
> from attacking the tumors.

Do you think that is true of a leukemia cell floating in the bloodstream?

> 2,000 GDU's three times a day of bromelain, between meals, is what is
> usually recommended. (GDU's stands for "Gelatin Digestive Units.")
[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]
> itself, it appears to be a useful adjunct to any natural treatment for
> cancer.

You mean "It wouldn't work"? You're right

> (Fibrin is found pretty much wherever there is inflammation, including
> joints FIBROcystic breast disease, and in endometriosis, to name a few
> conditions.)

The fibro- in fibrocystic disease is nothing to do with fibrin.

> I've been using bromelian for about a month now, and today the painful
> burning arththritic sensation that I have had in my right knee for the
> last few months appears to be gone. I've gone through two bottles at a
> cost of $23 and am working on a third.

Keep it up. Soon be up to $1.2 triillion

> NEWSFLASH: It's not your responsibility to pay for my medical problems!
> Especially ones brought on by my own bad habits, such as lack of
> exercise and eating junk food.

I'm quite happy to subsidise both your education and your antipsychotics,
Kel.

> (If some innocent bystander is run over by a bus, maybe then we all
> chip in. But most of our medical problems and the bills that are
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> prescription drugs. Pay for them yourself! Or switch to something
> natural. Pay for those yourself, too.

Buy your own bus?
awthrawthr@yahoo.com - 10 Feb 2005 05:45 GMT
Why would anyone believe you?? You won't even look at photos of bones
being repaired because of your own psychological defense mechanisms.

Since fibrocystic breast disease is greatly helped by bromelain, it
kind of shows just how completely ignorant you are about a lot of
things when it comes to health.
Steph - 10 Feb 2005 08:01 GMT
> Why would anyone believe you?? You won't even look at photos of bones
> being repaired because of your own psychological defense mechanisms.

I look at xrays of bones being repaired every day. Looked at 2 today, as a
matter of fact.
The only psychological defense mechanism I have is a grasp on reality.

> Since fibrocystic breast disease is greatly helped by bromelain, it
> kind of shows just how completely ignorant you are about a lot of
> things when it comes to health.

Oh, I see. Bromelain dissolves fibrin..........bromelain helps fibrocystic
disease...... therefore fibrocystic disease must be due to fibrin.
Where did you do your logic course Kel?

Try this one. All cats are mammals........elephants are
mammals...........therefore all cats are elephants.

That's about as good as yours
awthrawthr@yahoo.com - 10 Feb 2005 18:00 GMT
>I look at xrays of bones being repaired every day. Looked at 2 >today,
as a matter of fact.

ROFL! Have you ever looked at 13 bones in one patient being repaired
simultaneously? No you haven't.

>Oh, I see. Bromelain dissolves fibrin..........bromelain helps
>fibrocystic disease...... therefore fibrocystic disease must be >due
to fibrin.

Bromelain also removes scarring, dufus. Btw, Killer, your knowledge of
the etiology of disease is about a step up from the cave man, except
yours is wrong.
Steph - 11 Feb 2005 03:20 GMT
> >I look at xrays of bones being repaired every day. Looked at 2 >today,
> as a matter of fact.
>
> ROFL! Have you ever looked at 13 bones in one patient being repaired
> simultaneously? No you haven't.

How do you know? Are you psychic as well as psychotic?

>>Oh, I see. Bromelain dissolves fibrin..........bromelain helps
>>fibrocystic disease...... therefore fibrocystic disease must be >due
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> the etiology of disease is about a step up from the cave man, except
> yours is wrong.

Grow up if it's possible
awthrawthr@yahoo.com - 12 Feb 2005 01:34 GMT
>> ROFL! Have you ever looked at 13 bones in one patient being repaired

>>simultaneously? No you haven't.

>How do you know? Are you psychic as well as psychotic?

Either you haven't (you haven't) or you are a huge a.shole. Because
only a huge a.shole would review those photos and not be blown away. So
back to my first premise, you are a huge a.shole who hasn't looked at
the photos.
Steph - 12 Feb 2005 02:11 GMT
>>> ROFL! Have you ever looked at 13 bones in one patient being repaired
>
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
> back to my first premise, you are a huge a.shole who hasn't looked at
> the photos.

Ah, the power of cogent argument. If you were intelligent, what would you
post next?
awthrawthr@yahoo.com - 12 Feb 2005 02:27 GMT
Hey Killer, why don't you enlighten us? Have you looked at the photos
in Revici's book or not?

PS. What would you post next if you were to suddenly become humane?
Steph - 12 Feb 2005 02:39 GMT
> Hey Killer, why don't you enlighten us? Have you looked at the photos
> in Revici's book or not?

Comprehension problems again, Kel?
I said I looked at bones repairing every day. I wouldn't use Revici's book
for toilet paper

> PS. What would you post next if you were to suddenly become humane?

Probably a lot of what I've posted before.
Exactly why were you fired, Kel?
awthrawthr@yahoo.com - 12 Feb 2005 18:06 GMT
>I said I looked at bones repairing every day.

You have NEVER in your life treated a patient, who had 13 bones (or
more) located from shoulder to thigh, that repaired themselves.

>I wouldn't use Revici's book for toilet paper[.]

The Society for the Promotion of International Relations, WITH ITS 14
NOBEL PRIZE WINNING SCIENTISTS on its board of trustees, saw fit to
award Dr. Revici its annual medal in response to the publication of his
book. But you're smarter than all of them, Killer.

Maybe it's time you started to lay off the cabernet as your source of
vitamins.
Steph - 12 Feb 2005 18:27 GMT
> >I said I looked at bones repairing every day.
>
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
> Maybe it's time you started to lay off the cabernet as your source of
> vitamins.

Well, it's been mildly amusing - very mildly amusing - chatting with you,
Kel, but it's become boring.
You have the critical reasoning skills of a below-average 8 year old, the IQ
of a potato, and the character of  an underwear stain.
Enjoy the killfile. I'll let you out again when I feel like it.
awthrawthr@yahoo.com - 12 Feb 2005 20:55 GMT
Steph's killfile contains quite a few bodies. I'm the only one to live
to talk about it.

He bailed when I nailed him about his refusal to look at a result he
could only dream about. He said he would use as toilet paper a book
that 14 Nobel Prize Winners respected so much that he was honored with
their annual medal. The grantors had a huge number of people to select
from. They selected Dr. Revici.

They did not select Steph.
Robert Cohen - 10 Feb 2005 13:58 GMT
My opinion/perception/observation about U.S.A. drug-pricing

The GOP-controlled U.S. govt is rather openly subsidizing the
private/corporate pharmaceutical industry by not seeking
wholesale/discount a la Canada etal

And when (we) Dems controlled things, they didn't do any different, did
they?

The "ethical drug" industry, apparently, has a favorable international
trade balance (it's hopefully an exporter, while there are subsidiary
pill factories all over the globe)

And what do I think about such?

I dunno--better minds than my humble mind are seemingly  non-pissed
about the phenomenon (so why should i give a s...kvetch?)

And, helle, as Senator Everett Dirksen skewers/satirizes our @#$%^&*()
damne debt, "a trillion here, a trillion there, and pretty soon ..."

I take enough vitamins, herbs, and prescription drugs to ... (you won't
want idiotic, tasteless jokes & other distortions about economics &
world starvation)
 
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