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The same why I know decapitation often leads to death.
Often.
Ok. My mind is more demanding than to accept ‘one thing precedes the other frequently therefore it is the cause’. I’m not trying to convince you of anything either way.
Here are some direct examples of how cancer can kill.
All of these are examples of how the mere presence of cancer (with or without treatment) can cause death.
In anticipation of the argument:
Well if you want to argue that, then decapitation doesn't cause death, its the lack of oxygen to the brain.
I don’t think any of these dispute that cancer could be a healing process. The size certainly doesn’t, so the first 2 points are not valid. A toll on the body doesn’t argue against it being a healing process. Nor does herniation. The last 3 points I have no knowledge on, but it doesn’t seem as though they suggest the purpose of the cancer.
after reading your comments on this page, and looking this up myself, I haven't found any actual scientific anything that in anyway even hints at cancer being a healing process. I can, without reservation, state that cancer is not a healing process, nor is that idea "fairly well known". the concept that cancer is a healing process is so extraordinarily wrong that I will not entertain the idea further. I suggest you do some research beyond the vagueness of "toxins", which is a word often used by pseudoscientists when they don't know what the hell they are talking about.., IMO the burden of proof is on you to prove that cancer is a healing process, not for everyone else to prove it isn't.