Archive for DNA repair

A $cientist Cries ‘Woo’…

Posted in 2012, Alternative Medicines, Arcady Petrov, Blogroll, Cancer, Education, Grigori Grabovoi with tags , , on May 18, 2012 by phaelosopher

Stem_Cells_Pic2

It was quite a surprise to discover just how much attention my article, Genome Healing: An Awakening Opportunity, was given by a writer who calls himself Orac, and publishes the blog, Respectful Insolence. A member of the www.scienceblogs.com collective, the article, as well as the idea of healing your genome, received full-scale scrutiny and a thorough lambasting last week.

As if I needed confirmation that we’re on to something. This is like the FDA’s declaration that MMS is, when used as directed, “a powerful bleach.” They’ve spent millions of taxpayer dollars attempting to make a case against the perception and actual truth that MMS has been a far greater help to many, willing to make a criminal out of Daniel Smith. But this too won’t hold up to the light of truth. There’s something far greater than MMS… and that’s the Healer Within each of us, to which Orac emphatically cries “woo!”

The blogger, who says he was among the 1,300 members to come to Scottsdale to attend the 2012 annual meeting of the American Society of Breast Surgeons, somehow came across one of the postcards that we distributed about our Genome Healing Workshop (June 11-18).

Just a few of the vendors at the breast surgeons conference include:

  • Agendia, which through its product called Symphony, offers a “Personalized Breast Cancer Genomic Profile”
  • Allergan, whose product offerings include the category of breast and facial aesthetics, and is deeply committed to the “science of rejuvenation. BOTOX and silicon breast implants are just a few of their product offerings.
  • Genomic Health, whose product, OncotypeDX® Breast Cancer Assay, promises to provide a 10-year risk assessment of recurrence.
  • Invuity, which makes a line of illuminated breast retractors, filling what it calls, an unmet need in minimally invasive breast cancer and thyroid, orthopedic and spinal surgery tools.
  • Trulife, which makes a line of prosthetic products, including breast forms.

This was a random list to give you a feel for the conference itself. You can view the entire list by click here.

This is by no means an attempt to mock breast surgeons, or attack the profession. It does, however, give you a glimpse into the training and mindset of Orac, and why the notion of Genome Healing, in the absence of any actual research on his own (which would put him at odds to his profession and its conventions of thinking), is viewed with such skepticism and derision.

Hilarious! But it’s genius as well. Imply to the marks without actually explicitly saying so that they can regenerate their failing organs. Don’t promise anything, but tell them that regeneration is “possible” and that regeneration “may indeed be achieved.” In a way, you almost have to admire the purity of the lying going on here. At least, I have to think that it’s lying, because I find it hard to believe that anyone could really believe something so utterly full of grade-A 100% nonsense. On the other hand, I always did have an overly optimistic view of humanity.

Notice how he infers that anyone who sees potential in Genome Healing is a “mark.” This would apply to any form of self-healing. Spoken like a true $cientist who wants you to believe that what he says represents all known and acceptable knowledge. What he doesn’t tell you is that he subscribes to the concept of truth by consensus, and outside authority. If his superiors, who have been honored for their ability to regurgitate accepted conventions of thinking, haven’t said it’s so, then it’s not so. His mistake is in thinking that what applies to him must apply to everyone. Yet, if he can convince you that his boxed-in concepts are true, then they will be for you too.

Imagine the millions of people who were told by their doctors that they had only a few weeks to live, who enjoyed years and even decades of extended life and health by deciding for themselves what would be true for them. I’ve met a number of such people. They are always glad they listened to their own guidance, and shudder to think about what might have happened if…

Nonetheless, Orac had many supporters among his readers in the comments that followed the article.

Even more surprising is that this was not the first or second time Orac has found fertile grist for his “woo” mill from this forum. In January 2012 he cited me in an article, “Combining energy woo with The Secret”, and as far back as July 2010, we caught his attention with our introduction to structured water.

He might have had a field day with MMS after the FDA announcement when we garnered so much attention from various troll groups.

If I were so inclined, we could go through the entire Oracic Record, but that would be counter-productive. I must say that I’m grateful. It’s good to know he’s out there and watching, because it says that these subjects are important enough for more people, who might not find, read, watch, or listen to this blog on sincere interest alone, to be introduced to these ideas.

Since many are, even without their knowledge, conditioned to be mentally polarized against the idea of consciousness-based, self-healing and organ regeneration, then they’re going to first hear about it through a negative perceptual lens.

I’m okay with that.

Polarity can be changed; not by me, but by sufficient doses of common sense information. If what I write doesn’t ring true within the reader, then it’s not for them at this time. Like a seed, the idea will still have been planted, also not by me, but by whatever “force” led them to be introduced to the idea in the first place. I’m certainly not forcing anyone to read these thoughts. They will be here if and when the reader is ready. When their own “moment of truth” comes, as it surely will, they’ll wonder whether that “consciousness-healing” idea actually had teeth.

What I find fascinating is the literal aversion that Orac and many of his readers appear to have against even considering the possibility that such a level and form of healing is indeed possible. There is no harm involved in activating one’s own healing abilities and using Nature’s systems. There’s great harm in castration and breast mutilation. There’s great harm in standard oncological treatment. Yet these practices go unquestioned and unchallenged. The surgeons step in to make the patient feel that they have an acceptable replacement for that “bad” and misbehaving body part that you didn’t need anymore.

I’m willing to bet that there are very likely no doctors who have had a radical mastectomy. Most likely because the vast majority are males, and any women doctors who have had a radical mastectomy would likely not wish such an ordeal on anyone.

Just my speculation. I don’t know this to be a fact.

I also don’t know that restoration of The Norm of the Creator is not possible. Neither does Orac or his posse. If restoration of The Norm is really possible, and we can re-instruct our DNA, reactivate Stem Cells (if they haven’t been decimated by chemotherapy), and lengthen telomeres, we owe it to ourselves to figure out how, and to KNOW for ourselves whether it is true. A real scientist will be open to the possibility, and willing to see the evidence or experience it for himself. The price of $3,000 for this course also pales against a medical education that easily costs over $100,000, and is costing millions of lives from standard treatments each year.

And look at what a doctor and society has gained by that time all that money has been spent and matriculation through medical school is complete: a washed brain and closed mind, set to what the authorities tell it to do, and fearful to have a thought of its own.

Talk about “marks.”

Arcady Petrov experienced regeneration of his gallbladder and kidneys, as well as normalization of his eyesight in his journey of self-discovery. What gifts are we turning our backs on if we refuse to open our minds?

This was a nice email to receive from a woman who, after I sent her additional information, spent an entire evening considering whether to attend the Genome Healing Workshop:

Hi Adam,

Thank you for sending me all this information. I have just spent the entire evening reading and watching videos you sent. I had told Les I was not interested because of the cost. I am very interested now. I am really excited. I will send this information out to 60 plus people tomorrow to be of service. I look forward to meeting you in the near future.

Blessings,

Jolin

If all this resonates with you, please send it to others who may be interested in attending.

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