THE TUMOR
bax, a protein bit from another gene, should be detectable
for its share of time, the remaining thirty seconds out of each
minute. Healthy tissues, right beside the tumor-growing organ
are producing bax at the proper rate. In a growing tumor, bax is
always underproduced. Gradually the ratio worsens, until it ap-
pears as if bcl-2 is always present and bax is not. bcl-2 and bax
decide whether a cell will self-destruct by starting to digest it-
self internally.
Recall that cells filled with lanthanides, and therefore, cal-
cium and iron deposits cannot be digested externally by pancre-
atin and lipase.
The Conspiracy Gains Control
We have now seen a dozen contributors to the tumor-
growing process. They interact like the pieces of a puzzle. Is it
possible to determine which piece comes first? And which
comes next? Is there an orderly sequence? A jigsaw puzzle can
be put together starting with any piece. Perhaps the pieces that
go into making a tumor can all combine independently, too. Or
perhaps there is a specific sequence. Only more scientific re-
search can answer this question correctly. Meanwhile, we can
imagine various ways. Here is one:
- Tapeworm larvae infect our tissues, releasing malonic
acid, which interferes with respiration (the making of
ATP in mitochondria). We also get malonic acid from
food and plastic teeth. - Invading Clostridium bacteria supply DNA, isopropyl al-
cohol, and toxic amines in the vicinity of larvae. - These amines can shift the balance between pyruvic al-
dehyde and thiourea production in favor of thiourea,
speeding up cell division, mitosis. - Excess thiourea consumes thyroid hormones (like thy-
roxine), which in turn disables lysosomes, your cells’
bacteria killers, and mitochondria.