Nah. They probably just know a little medical science. Cancer is parasitic, but it is not a parasitic worm. There are key differences between the two and treating cancer properly requires that we understand that. Cancer cells are human cells, period. They're not trans species. The same basic rules of biology that tell us that you can't be "trapped in the wrong body" as a trans person apply to this cancer argument.
Cancer is your own cells. Over the course of time, the are exposed to things that damage DNA and cause mutation. We have means to repair that damage, but sometimes, mutations still get through. And if they occur in certain key genes that control the growth cycle, we can get cancer. 95% of the cells in your body grow, differentiate, and then their reproduction turns off. They do their job until they're injured and the cell dies. Yes, we have some cells that regrow, but they're the minority: certain skin cells, bone marrow cells, cells that replace the lining of your GI tract, etc. But for those 95%, if a mutation turns on the "grow" signals or turns off the "stop growing" signals, it can lead that cell that's not supposed to grow to make copies of itself. It functions parasitically in the sense that it feeds off of the body's circulatory system for food and oxygen while it grows. That's what a cancer is. But again, the cells don't change species and turn into worm cells.
As far as ivermection and fenbendazole working in cancer, first we have to establish that's reliably true, and second, we have to explain how that works. Cancer is diverse enough of a topic genetically that you can't just claim really any treatment "cures cancer." Anything that actually does work would be highly specific to the mutation profile of the individual cancer. For example, HER2+ breast cancer is very different from triple-negative breast cancer and the treatments are very different as well. The details matter if we're going to have a serious discussion on the topic.
*For the record, I did not downvote the comment, but it is incorrect.
Right... and a calorie is a calorie and fat people have an unlimited supply of energy via beta oxidation but are just to lazy to take advantage of all those calories just waiting to be burned...and the vax is good for you and will protect you against COVID...
Nah. They probably just know a little medical science. Cancer is parasitic, but it is not a parasitic worm. There are key differences between the two and treating cancer properly requires that we understand that. Cancer cells are human cells, period. They're not trans species. The same basic rules of biology that tell us that you can't be "trapped in the wrong body" as a trans person apply to this cancer argument.
Cancer is your own cells. Over the course of time, the are exposed to things that damage DNA and cause mutation. We have means to repair that damage, but sometimes, mutations still get through. And if they occur in certain key genes that control the growth cycle, we can get cancer. 95% of the cells in your body grow, differentiate, and then their reproduction turns off. They do their job until they're injured and the cell dies. Yes, we have some cells that regrow, but they're the minority: certain skin cells, bone marrow cells, cells that replace the lining of your GI tract, etc. But for those 95%, if a mutation turns on the "grow" signals or turns off the "stop growing" signals, it can lead that cell that's not supposed to grow to make copies of itself. It functions parasitically in the sense that it feeds off of the body's circulatory system for food and oxygen while it grows. That's what a cancer is. But again, the cells don't change species and turn into worm cells.
As far as ivermection and fenbendazole working in cancer, first we have to establish that's reliably true, and second, we have to explain how that works. Cancer is diverse enough of a topic genetically that you can't just claim really any treatment "cures cancer." Anything that actually does work would be highly specific to the mutation profile of the individual cancer. For example, HER2+ breast cancer is very different from triple-negative breast cancer and the treatments are very different as well. The details matter if we're going to have a serious discussion on the topic.
*For the record, I did not downvote the comment, but it is incorrect.
Right... and a calorie is a calorie and fat people have an unlimited supply of energy via beta oxidation but are just to lazy to take advantage of all those calories just waiting to be burned...and the vax is good for you and will protect you against COVID...
Right?
🤡
Cancer is your own cells. Over the course of time, the are exposed to things that damage DNA and cause mutation.
Things.
Exactly. It makes me laugh.
"But meh medical science...the vax is good, masks work.. "#clown