Would the government let Jesus cure cancer?
By Jon Rappoport
As I've been telling you for years, it's easy to keep the
public on your side if you regularly tout medical "breakthroughs" in the
press. The latest innovation. The promise of a cure around the corner.
The maybe-could-be discovery that will change the course of disease
treatment forever.
In this case, a start-up called Tilos has one of those, for
cancer. They say it's an antibody their researchers came across while
looking for a cure for MS. They stumbled on to it by accident. Aha.
Somehow, this antibody helps the immune system to recognize
and wipe out cancer cells. It produces "a memory" in immune-system
cells, and they are ready to go to war when cancer arrives. Or
something. It's hard to say.
The people at Tilos are, naturally, very enthusiastic.
So forthwith, I give you an assignment. Keep track of stories
about this amazing antibody as time passes, and see whether it ever a)
becomes a real cancer treatment, and b) does any good. Or c) disappears
down the memory hole, never to be heard from again. I'm betting on c.
Why? Because I've watched a number of these flashes dim out quickly and
recede into nowhere land. And because, in this case, the company is very
far from being able to fashion the antibody into a ground-level
treatment. Of course, it's possible that, on the basis of the recent
gaudy announcement, Tilos could pick up some investor funding, but
funding isn't a disease treatment the last time I looked.
On the other hand, if a non-pharmaceutical company or
researcher actually makes a promising discovery in cancer treatment
(read about the troubles of Dr. Stan Burzynski, Dr. Willam Koch, Royal
Rife, etc.), all hell breaks loose. The press immediately pounces on the
researcher as if he's working on an H-bomb in his basement. He must be
an outright quack and charlatan, "because they all are."
Corporate drug outfit=potential breakthrough.
Independent non-pharmaceutical researcher=Dr. Mengele.
Good press vs. bad press comes down to: how much can you pay;
who do you know; how much advertising can you afford to buy; what
official expert can you bring on board to vouch for you; is your product
a drug rather than a detested natural non-patentable substance; can you
do officially recognized clinical trials; are you connected with a
favored group (university, research foundation, federal facility, pharma
lab) who can obtain publication in a well-known medical journal.
Or are you a dreaded INDEPENDENT?
In the 1990s, I watched a federal trial in a Los Angeles
courtroom. The defendant was charged with selling medical drugs without a
license to practice medicine.
The defendant was prepared to argue that a) the substance he
was selling was naturally produced in the body and b) it was effective.
The prosecution moved to exclude such testimony, on the grounds that it was irrelevant.
The judge agreed. Therefore, the trial was nasty, brutish,
and short. The defendant was found guilty and sentenced to prison for
several years.
This is how the federal bureaucracy operates. "Do you have a government-issued license to heal? No? You're a criminal."
I believe that if Jesus of Nazareth were walking the Earth
today, in the United States, he would be arrested on the same grounds.
This would be particularly so if he were curing cancer.
Imagine this extreme case: in a stadium packed with 50,000
people who have been diagnosed with cancer, Jesus of Nazareth waves his
hand and cures all of them in a few seconds.
Now he is threatening the profits of many companies, to say
nothing of the power of the government, which backs the
chemo-radiation-surgery monopoly to the hilt.
So he is arrested. He is put on trial. He opts to defend
himself without an attorney. He tells the court that curing cancer is no
crime.
The prosecuting attorney objects. "Your Honor," he says,
"whether or not this man has cured cancer is beside the point. He has no
license to practice medicine. That is why we are here today. We are
simply establishing that a) he was practicing medicine and b) he has no
government-issued license. That is the scope of this proceeding."
The judge agrees. The verdict is issued. Guilty.
Of course, on another front, the major media, who depend for
their existence on pharmaceutical advertising, take the ball and run
with it. The networks and major newspapers seek out "experts," who
emphatically state that what Jesus of Nazareth "performed" in the
stadium was mere hypnotism. It was all a placebo effect. Whatever sudden
"remissions" may have occurred are just temporary. Tragically, the
cancers will return.
Not only that, these 50,000 people have effectively been
sidetracked and diverted from seeking "real care from real doctors."
With chemo, with radiation, with surgery, they would have stood a chance
of surviving and living long normal lives.
Other media pundits send up this flag: "Many of those present
in the stadium were bitter clingers to their religion. They refuse to
accept science. They are living in the past. They favor superstition
over real medical care. In fact, they are threatening the whole basis of
healthcare, since other confused and deluded Americans may now turn
away from doctors and seek snake-oil salesmen and preachers for
healing."
From the highest perches of political power in this country,
the word quietly goes out to the media: don't follow up on those people
who were in the stadium; don't try to track them; don't compile
statistics on their survival rates; move on to other stories
(distractions); let this whole madness die down.
But among the citizenry, an awareness spreads: the government
is controlling healing through its issuance of licenses. That's how the
government is essentially protecting one form of "healing" and enabling
it to become an all-encompassing cartel.
What would be the alternative or the adjunct to licenses?
Contracts.
Contracts are agreements entered into by consenting adults,
who assume responsibility for the outcomes. In the case of healing, a
contract would specify that people have a right to be wrong.
Let's say two consenting adults, Jim and Frank, agree to
allow Frank to treat Jim for his arthritis with water from a well on
Frank's land.
The two men acknowledge that no liability will be attached to
the outcome. In other words, whether Jim get better or gets worse, no
one is going file a suit. No one is going to go to the government for
redress of wrongs.
The well water may be wonderful or it may be completely
useless. Both men understand and acknowledge that. But they assert a
right to try the treatment, because they are free.
Immediately people say, "This is ridiculous. Water can't cure
arthritis. Frank is cheating Jim. Jim is a victim. He needs to see a
doctor. He needs to go on arthritis drugs."
No, Jim doesn't have to do anything. He is free.
To put it another way, Jim has the right to be right or wrong. It's his decision, which is beyond the scope of any authority.
If government tries to remove that right from all of us, it
is essentially saying it knows what is correct, it knows what is true,
it knows what we need and require, and it's going to give it to us even
if it has to shove it down our throats. Does that sound like freedom to
you?
If Jesus of Nazareth lived in the United States today, and if
he went around curing cancer, he would be arrested. He wouldn't be
charged with blasphemy or treason. He would be charged with something
much simpler and more mundane: practicing medicine without a license.
And he would be convicted and sentenced.
Because then and now, the government, in its throne of corruption, wants to protect its proprietary and illegal interests.
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