Cancer ISN'T all in your genes: Up to 90% of cases 'could be wiped out by avoiding triggers caused by our unhealthy lifestyles'
Get Started for FREE
Sign up with Facebook Sign up with X
I don't have a Facebook or a X account
Your new post is loading...
Your new post is loading...
|
Despite what you may be told, the majority of cancer is not caused by your genes or by bad luck. How can that be, if today 1 in 2 males, and 1 in 3 females, will have cancer in their lifetime’s according to WHO? Cancer incidence is far too high to be explained by simple mutations in cell division alone. Research indicates that genetic susceptibility may be likely in from only 2% to 5% of cases.
There are ample studies and research that show lifestyle, diet, environment, and pollution are the major contributors to cancer. The bottom line is that most cancer (and most other chronic degenerative diseases) is caused by the way we live and by man-made products and chemicals, and is therefore preventable if we can get access to the right knowledge.
The knowledge to prevent cancer is not accessible from your medical practitioners, as their focus is on disease rather than health, and their education is lacking in how to be healthy. In fact our medical system lacks even a basic credible definition of health.
Some ‘experts’ like to constantly remind everyone that there is no evidence or clinical research that diet and lifestyle are the answer to cancer prevention or reduction. There is never likely to be any clinical evidence, as no organization will spend the huge sum of money required on such research to conclude that you can prevent or even overcome cancer with self-therapy based on non-patentable interventions as simple as change of habits and non-exposure to chemicals. The US$100 billion cancer industry of today does not want to hear that. There are also other vested interests across the food and chemical industries that don’t want to hear such inconvenient truths.
While the medical industry does the best they can to extend the life of cancer patients based on what they are legally permitted to prescribe (chemotherapy, radiation and surgery) without any intention of trying to cure cancer, there are thousands of people in the world who do cure their own cancer by taking charge of their own health and changing their lifestyle. It is these cancer survivors that we need to learn from.