A cancer trial has reportedly become the first in the world to completely remove the disease in every patient, according to a study published Sunday in the New England Journal of Medicine. https://link.theepochtimes.com/mkt_app/cancer-trial-using-monoclonal-antibody-finds-remission-in-every-patient-report_4514295.html
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (47)
sorted by:
This is why they ban things like hcq, ivermectin, mono antibodies
... that are cheap
True for IVM, HCQ or Phenbendazol. The drug used in this study was $11,201 per dose x 8 doses = $89,608 for the drug alone.
I'm not certain, but I think that's still cheaper than conventional treatments, including chemo.
yes sir (assumed gender)
Rapamycin is not 100% banned but it's really hard to get but apparently it's the "Fountain of Youth" miracle drug.
I read an article long time ago (when I was a teenager or in my early 20's?) on Rapamycin and how some people were using them to help them feel young.
One man had an aging dog and the dog wouldn't run, wouldn't eat normally and wouldn't even play like it used to back in the old days. I forgot how he got the idea of giving his dog Rapamycin but he did. 1 week and half later, the dog was back to being itself -- playing, running and eating normally as if it was like 3 years old, rather than being 16 years old.
Another one was about a 75 year old man who had chronic back pains, couldn't do much and wanted to be able to live independently, without having to rely on his family and aides. He heard about Rapamycin so he decided to splurge on it (I think ~$1,000 a pill) and about a month later, he said he has the energy of a 25 year old man and his back pain was completely gone, he was able to do a lot of exercises that he previously can't. He was able to do a mile run on his own. He can do pretty much everything that he previously can't at his current age.
When I read about that, I was hopeful for the future and thought it would help us live longer -- possibly up to 125 years old or so. But then the information and the news surrounding Rapamycin disappeared.
Then I immediately knew the government was hoarding it, just like they are with cancer cures, AIDS, and the cure(s) for all kind of diseases and only releasing the treatment regimens for patients to go on, that would take years for them to get better.
That's probably when I started questioning the government and everything that's going on in the world. That's also why I'm never the one to jump on a new fad or whatever it is as I prefer to observe first and if it's a good thing, then I'll join (You can say I'm not an early adopter, but a late adopter or will never join/buy).
Like Fakebook for example, I was hesitant at first but I saw no harm into joining so I did. This was around the time Fakebook just came out so I joined like a year after it came out. Then after a few years, I felt weird and was disgusted with the amount of "private info" people were sharing online that they wouldn't tell us in real life. I felt like I walked into a room filled with hypocrisy so I left Fakebook after being a member for 5 years. Felt so much better without it.
I know on the last part of this, I went off the point but it's actually probably because of Rapamycin, among other things, were what got me thinking more about how BigPharma, the government, doctors/nurses, and everyone involved, were treating us as a whole. They never cared for us but they are always after the $$$. I've always felt the cure has always been out there but I also had the feeling that if they had the cure, they'd not release it either right away or at all.
Thank you for coming to my TED talk.