THE CURE FOR ALL CANCERS
lions of eggs. They pass out of us with the bowel movement.
The adult, though, stays tightly stuck to our intestine (or liver,
causing cancer, or uterus, causing
endometriosis, or thymus, causing
AIDS, or kidney, causing Hodgkin's
disease).
Most of us get little lesions in our
intestines from time to time. These
tiny sores allow the eggs, which are
microscopic in size, to be pulled into
the blood stream (other parasite eggs
get into the blood this way too).
Some of these eggs actually hatch
in the intestine or in the blood. The
microscopic hatchlings are called mi-
racidia and are the second stage. They swim about with their
little swimmer-hairs. And of course, the liver whose job it is to
dispose of toxins, will receive them and kill them as the blood
arrives from the intestine. They have no chance to survive in
normal people.
Size about 1/10 mm.
Fig. 4 Fasciolopsis egg
Fig. 5 Miracidia hatching