The.Cure.For.All.Advanced.Cancers

(pavlina) #1
THE CURE FOR ALL ADVANCED CANCERS

If you have plastic materials in your dentalware, I find they
will seep urethane, maleic acid, malonic acid, and various azo
dyes. Methacrylate dentures even seep acrylic acid. Urethane
and azo dyes have had decades of research in the past; they were
found to be highly carcinogenic. Maleic and malonic acids were
found to be respiratory inhibitors which, in turn, cause tumors
to form. And acrylic acid, another carcinogen, is the same
chemical that is made by frying foods in unsaturated fats. With
so many well-studied carcinogens in dental materials, we should
ask a child’s question: Have they ever been tested for carcino-
genicity? If so, what were the results?
Is it impossible to make plastics that don’t have all these
carcinogens? Not at all. The Syncrometer detected more dental
ingredients that were free of them than those that had them. But
if each dental material (such as composite, ceramic, glass iono-
mer) requires the use of ten ingredients, then the chance of
finding the final restoration free of carcinogens is essentially
zero. Using a Syncrometer, each ingredient could be tested
separately for one dozen of the most harmful chemicals–not im-
possible–but quite impractical.
So to accomplish the two purposes of eliminating Clostrid-
ium infection and seeping carcinogens, you must extract teeth
with large metal or plastic fillings, root canals, crowns or caps.
They once were infected—before you had them “repaired”.
Now they are infected again and must be removed.


Why Is There Metal In Plastic?


Metal is not an essential ingredient of plastic manufacture.
How can plastic material become polluted with it? I can specu-
late on several ways, but the fact is I am not the only one find-
ing it.^60


(^60) Benjamin, M., Jenne, E., Trace Element Contamination, Copper From Plastic
Microlitre Pipet Tips, Atomic Abs. Newsletter, v. 15, no. 2, Mar-Apr 1976, p. 53.
Sommerfeld, M., et al., Trace Metal Contamination Of Disposable Pipet Tips,
Atomic Abs. Newsletter, v. 14, no. 1, Jan-Feb 1975, p. 31.

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