The.Cure.For.All.Advanced.Cancers

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SUPPLEMENTS

regard,^104 bromelain was discovered by Syncrometer). Previ-
ously when we discussed ferritin, it was the hero that sacrificed
itself to surround the villain asbestos. Why are we now trying to
digest it? Because there is a drawback to using ferritin. Ferritin
as it coats and smears the outside surface of white blood cells
inadvertently “blinds” them.^105 Their surface has the receptors
which sense enemy molecules, acting as their “eyes and ears.”
Digesting ferritin lets the white blood cells regain their “sight.”
They can now find other white blood cells to pass their toxic
cargo to,^106 which is the normal method.
Now tissues can be cleared of asbestos much more quickly.
And excess damaged ferritin is no longer present, exposing its
ferric iron, which was oxidizing good germanium. Immunity
has returned.
We give 1 tsp. papain twice a day in a beverage before
meals. (Be careful not to inhale it, you could start an allergic
reaction.) Bromelain is much more palatable, though less effec-
tive. You can use 1 tsp. (4000 mg) two times a day instead of
papain. But in serious illness use both.
Selenium can be detected by the Syncrometer as sodium
selenite in healthy organs, never as selenate (so I assume that is
the beneficial form). But in the presence of ferritin coated white
blood cells or phenol or Ascaris produced chemicals, only the
selenate form is detected. It switches back to selenite as soon as
the above abnormal oxidizers are gone. Lack of selenite stalls
the unloading from White Blood Cells. They seem to be burst-
ing with high bacteria and toxin levels soon after ferritin and
lanthanides are gone, yet unable to dispatch and unload these
until large amounts of selenite are consumed. It typically re-
quires 3,000 to 4,000 mcg daily for 3 weeks. Fresh coconut is a


(^104) Papenhausen, P.R., Emeson, E.E., Croft, C.B., Borowiecki, B., Ferritin-Bearing
Lymphocytes in Patients With Cancer, Cancer, Jan. 15, 1984, v. 53, pp. 267-71.
(^105) Pattanapanyasat, K., Hoy, T.G., Jacobs, A., Courtney, S., Webster, D.J.T.,
Ferritin-bearing T-lymphocytes And Serum Ferritin in Patients With Breast Cancer,
Br. J. Cancer, 1988, v. 57, pp. 193-97.
(^106) Fubini, B., Barceló, F., Areán, C.O., Ferritin Adsorption on Amosite Fibers:
Possible Implications in the Formation and Toxicity of Asbestos Bodies, Jour. Tox.
Env. Health, v. 52, 1997, pp. 343-52.

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