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Reason: Damn. Forgot to add a link.

From my post above:

"We have the cures" doesn't necessarily mean we have single-substance magic bullets (although we probably do, for some diseases or conditions), but rather that we have, ALREADY AVAILABLE, things that can do more to prevent and cure disease, slow aging, and improve your quality of life than you might imagine.

The article doesn't give a specific dosage nor does it likely cover all the detail you'd want to have if you were dealing with cancer. I suggest actually reading the article and doing more research -- a LOT more research if you are dealing with cancer yourself.

The article does point out that A -- melatonin is a natural molecule that life has been making and relying on for literally billions of years (plants and even bacteria make it), and B -- melatonin "has no known toxic threshold", so unlike say, chemotherapy, where the "cure" is sometimes more damaging than the disease (one study found that in the first month of treatment, more patients died from the chemo than from their cancer) -- higher-than-normal doses of melatonin are not likely to be harmful; it's something your body ALREADY MAKES. Don't be stupid about it; you can actually kill yourself by drinking too much water, for instance, but the article mentions 50mg for after-heart-attack or -stroke cellular protection and ONE GRAM being taken by some medical colleagues for protection from cellular damage caused by high blood sugar in diabetics. A gram is a surprisingly large dose; I'd start with less in any case.

Also: many supplements fight cancer according to studies, often very many studies. Occasionally you'll see articles about someone who became cancer-free from taking, for instance, nothing but high-dose curcumin (one of the best-proven supplements for fighting cancer). But those anecdotal cures are rare. As modern mainstream cancer therapies show, fighting cancer isn't the same as curing cancer, else there wouldn't be anyone dying from the disease. EDIT: A "cure" often involves more than one substance or action (Dr. Zelenko's COVID protocol, for instance. Here's Life Extension's protocol page, including information about cancer.)

If I were dealing with cancer, I'd take a wide range of supplements that have shown efficacy against cancer instead of any single one by itself. Also, I'd cut out seed oils (they're in everything, read labels and you'll see), eat organic or home-grown food wherever possible, reduce my intake of carbs and sugar, and do a number of other things -- all of which would encourage better health generally and, from the studies I've seen, would likely make it harder for cancer to survive, grow, and metastacize in my body.

If you ARE dealing with cancer, or have a family member who is, I wish you well.

2 years ago
3 score
Reason: added some text and changed some wording

From my post above:

"We have the cures" doesn't necessarily mean we have single-substance magic bullets (although we probably do, for some diseases or conditions), but rather that we have, ALREADY AVAILABLE, things that can do more to prevent and cure disease, slow aging, and improve your quality of life than you might imagine.

The article doesn't give a specific dosage nor does it likely cover all the detail you'd want to have if you were dealing with cancer. I suggest actually reading the article and doing more research -- a LOT more research if you are dealing with cancer yourself.

The article does point out that A -- melatonin is a natural molecule that life has been making and relying on for literally billions of years (plants and even bacteria make it), and B -- melatonin "has no known toxic threshold", so unlike say, chemotherapy, where the "cure" is sometimes more damaging than the disease (one study found that in the first month of treatment, more patients died from the chemo than from their cancer) -- higher-than-normal doses of melatonin are not likely to be harmful; it's something your body ALREADY MAKES. Don't be stupid about it; you can actually kill yourself by drinking too much water, for instance, but the article mentions 50mg for after-heart-attack or -stroke cellular protection and ONE GRAM being taken by some medical colleagues for protection from cellular damage caused by high blood sugar in diabetics. A gram is a surprisingly large dose; I'd start with less in any case.

Also: many supplements fight cancer according to studies, often very many studies. Occasionally you'll see articles about someone who became cancer-free from taking, for instance, nothing but high-dose curcumin (one of the best-proven supplements for fighting cancer). But those anecdotal cures are rare. As modern mainstream cancer therapies show, fighting cancer isn't the same as curing cancer, else there wouldn't be anyone dying from the disease. EDIT: A "cure" often involves more than one substance or action (Dr. Zelenko's COVID protocol, for instance. Here's Life Extension's protocol page, including information about cancer.

If I were dealing with cancer, I'd take a wide range of supplements that have shown efficacy against cancer instead of any single one by itself. Also, I'd cut out seed oils (they're in everything, read labels and you'll see), eat organic or home-grown food wherever possible, reduce my intake of carbs and sugar, and do a number of other things -- all of which would encourage better health generally and, from the studies I've seen, would likely make it harder for cancer to survive, grow, and metastacize in my body.

If you ARE dealing with cancer, or have a family member who is, I wish you well.

2 years ago
3 score
Reason: Original

From my post above:

"We have the cures" doesn't necessarily mean we have single-substance magic bullets (although we probably do, for some diseases or conditions), but rather that we have, ALREADY AVAILABLE, things that can do more to prevent and cure disease, slow aging, and improve your quality of life than you might imagine.

The article doesn't give a specific dosage nor does it likely cover all the detail you'd want to have if you were dealing with cancer. I suggest actually reading the article and doing more research -- a LOT more research if you are dealing with cancer yourself.

The article does point out that A -- melatonin is a natural molecule that life has been making and relying on for literally billions of years (plants and even bacteria make it), and B -- melatonin "has no known toxic threshold", so unlike say, chemotherapy, where the "cure" is sometimes more damaging than the disease (one study found that in the first month of treatment, more patients died from the chemo than from their cancer) -- higher-than-normal doses of melatonin are not likely to be harmful; it's something your body ALREADY MAKES. Don't be stupid about it; you can actually kill yourself by drinking too much water, for instance, but the article mentions 50mg for after-heart-attack or -stroke cellular protection and ONE GRAM being taken by some medical colleagues for protection from cellular damage caused by high blood sugar in diabetics. A gram is a surprisingly large dose; I'd start with less in any case.

Also: many supplements fight cancer according to studies, often very many studies. Occasionally you'll see articles about someone who became cancer-free from taking, for instance, nothing but high-dose curcumin (one of the best-proven supplements for fighting cancer). But those anecdotal cures are rare. As modern mainstream cancer therapies show, fighting cancer isn't the same as curing cancer, else there wouldn't be anyone dying from the disease.

If I were dealing with cancer, I'd take a wide range of supplements that have shown efficacy against cancer instead of any single one by itself. Also, I'd cut out seed oils (they're in everything, read labels and you'll see), eat organic or home-grown food wherever possible, reduce my intake of carbs and sugar, and do a number of other things -- all of which would encourage better health generally and, from the studies I've seen, would likely make it harder for cancer to survive, grow, and metastacize in my body.

If you ARE dealing with cancer, or have a family member who is, I wish you well.

2 years ago
1 score