PART ONE: THE CAUSE
One of the constant companions of tapeworm stages are
Streptomyces, fungus-like bacteria. There are hundreds of spe-
cies; they are well known for making streptomycin, an antibi-
otic. But they should not be making such compounds in our
tissues on a steady basis. The side effect of streptomycin is
stopping protein formation. This is exactly what happens in the
tumor. When Streptomyces are present, the Syncrometer can
detect no RNA, which is the nucleic acid that leads to protein
building. Healthy cells make RNA constantly.
Ozonated oil plus cysteine is the best way to kill tapeworm
stages because together they are also effective against Strepto-
myces.
What Does Ascaris Do?
The primitive metabolism used by Ascaris (and other para-
sites) is called the glyoxylate cycle. Ascaris’ glyoxylate cycle
commandeers our Krebs cycle. (The Krebs cycle is what hu-
mans use to burn food into energy.) Killing Ascaris stops this,
and helps speed up our metabolism in a single day.
Another thing that Ascaris does is to destroy all the vitamin
C in the organ with the tumor by oxidizing it (removing a hy-
drogen atom). To be useful, vitamin C must have reducing
power (it must be able to pin a hydrogen atom onto other com-
pounds). When Ascaris is killed, vitamin C is immediately pre-
sent again, and in proper reduced form.
Ascaris harbors Rhizobium leguminosarum. We have been
taught that Rhizobium is a rather lovable bacterium, busily
changing nitrogen gas into nitrates in the nodules along the
roots of legume plants. But in our bodies, the nitrate gets re-
duced to nitrite, nitrites form nitroso compounds, and these
cause mutations. Rhizobium is also capable of making DNA,
which is necessary for tumor formation. Fortunately, killing
Ascaris with ozonated oil plus cysteine also kills Rhizobium.