The.Cure.For.All.Advanced.Cancers

(pavlina) #1
SUPPLEMENTS

supplying it as a supplement, it seems wise to give beta carotene
as well.


Lick the Lanthanides


Although heavy metals will leave by themselves after using
ozonated water and many sulfur-containing supplements, lan-
thanides will not. The lanthanides are a group of 15 elements
listed in the periodic table beginning with lanthanum: lantha-
num, neodymium, praseodymium, samarium, gadolinium, ce-
rium, terbium, europium, dysprosium, holmium, erbium, thu-
lium, ytterbium, lutetium, promethium. They have special prop-
erties: their magnetic nature^107 , their high molecular weight,
their similar chemistry (so similar they can hardly be separated
from each other), and their affinity for tumors.^108 Their mag-
netic properties is why lanthanides are used to make “ceramic”
magnets, much more powerful than iron and steel magnets of
the same size. That is also why they are used as “contrast” ma-
terials for MRI and CT scans, especially gadolinium. Surpris-
ingly, the Syncrometer detects not only gadolinium, but all the
lanthanides together in contrast materials. Were they never truly
separated in the production process? Each cancer patient is get-
ting dose after dose of all the lanthanides by injection!
Lanthanides do special damage.^109 They cause calcium to
deposit in cells. This triggers the enzyme, protein kinase. And
this signals cells to divide! At the same time, white blood cells
that begin to eat up the lanthanides are disabled by the very
same calcium buildup and must stop eating them. So lantha-
nides accumulate. Cells that are filled with calcium deposits get
stiff—too stiff to move about. And too stiff to put up the acute
distress signal. The signal, a molecule of phosphatidyl serine,


(^107) Lee, E.W., Magnetism , Dover Publications, Inc., New York, 1970, p. 103.
(^108) Yokoyama, A. and Saji, H., Tumor Diagnosis Using Radioactive Metal Ions and
Their Complexes in Metal Ions in Biological Systems, Carcinogenicity and Metal
ions, H. Sigel (ed.), v. 10, ch. 10, p. 321.
(^109) Das, T., Sharma, A., and G. Talukder, Effects of Lanthanum in Cellular Systems A
Review , Biological Trace Element Research, v. 18, 1988, pp. 201-28.

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