‘Unprecedented’, ‘Remarkable’: Cancer Study Leaves Every Patient Cancer-Free

Cancer Cells

Results from a small cancer trial that left every patient in remission is being praised as “unprecedented” and “remarkable.”

paper published on Sunday at The New England Journal of Medicine outlined a study of 18 rectal cancer patients who were given dostarlimab every three weeks for six months and ended up cancer-free, including the first patient who is now two years out from the trial.

“I believe this is the first time this has happened in the history of cancer,” said Dr. Luis A. Diaz Jr. said, an author of the paper, The New York Times reported.

Dr. Andrea Cercek, an oncologist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and another author of the paper, described “a lot of happy tears” at the end of the trial.

https://www.dailywire.com/news/unprecedented-remarkable-cancer-study-leaves-every-patient-cancer-free

Choices

I was waiting in line for a ride at the airport. When a cab pulled up, the first thing I noticed was the taxi was polished to a bright shine. Smartly dressed in a white shirt, black tie, and freshly pressed black slacks, the cab driver jumped out and rounded the car to open the back passenger door for me.

He handed me a laminated card and said, “I’m Wasu, your driver. While I’m loading your bags in the trunk, I’d like you to read my mission statement.”

Taken aback, I read the card. It said, “Wasu’s Mission Statement: To get my customers to their destination in the quickest, safest, and cheapest way possible in a friendly environment.”

This blew me away. Especially when I noticed the inside of the cab matched the outside. Spotlessly clean!

As he slid behind the wheel, Wasu said, “Would you like a cup of coffee? I have a thermos of regular and one of decaf.”
I said jokingly, “No, I’d prefer a soft drink.”

Wasu smiled and said, “No problem. I have a cooler up front with regular and Diet Coke, lassi, water, and orange juice.”

Almost stuttering, I said, “I’ll take a lassi since I’ve never had one before.”

Handing me my drink, Wasu said, “If you’d like something to read, I have Good Housekeeping magazine, Reader’s Digest, The Bible, and a Travel + Leisure magazine.”

As we were pulling away, Wasu handed me another laminated card, “These are the stations I get and the music they play, if you’d like to listen to the radio.”

And as if that weren’t enough, Wasu told me he had the heater on and asked if the temperature was comfortable for me.
Then he advised me of the best route to my destination for that time of day. He also let me know he’d be happy to chat and tell me about some of the sights or, if I preferred, to leave me with my own thoughts.

“Tell me, Wasu,” I was amazed and asked him, “have you always served customers like this?”

Wasu smiled into the rear view mirror. “No, not always. In fact, it’s only been in the last two years. My first five years driving, I spent most of my time complaining like all the rest of the cabbies do. Then I heard about power of choice one day.”

“Power of choice is that you can be a duck or an eagle. If you get up in the morning expecting to have a bad day, you’ll rarely disappoint yourself. Stop complaining! Don’t be a duck. Be an eagle. Ducks quack and complain. Eagles soar above the crowd.”

“That hit me right,” said Wasu. He continued and said, “It is about me. I was always quacking and complaining, so I decided to change my attitude and become an eagle. I looked around at the other cabs and their drivers. The cabs were dirty, the drivers were unfriendly, and the customers were unhappy. So I decided to make some changes. I put in a few at a time. When my customers responded well, I did more.”

“I take it that has paid off for you,” I said.

“It sure has,” Wasu replied. “My first year as an eagle, I doubled my income from the previous year. This year, I’ll probably quadruple it. My customers call me for appointments on my cell phone or leave a message on it.”

Wasu made a different choice. He decided to stop quacking like ducks and start soaring like eagles. I hope we all decide to soar like an eagle and not quack like a duck.

Credit: Summer Grace Vanni

On Addiction

Rodent On Coke

This is why the lockdowns were initiated and why the groups in charge of the government’s response were primarily psychologists and not immunologists. This is also why the government kept the weed, bottle and fast food shops remained open during a “health” crisis. Those who beg to be ruled will be.

“Put a rat in a cage and give it 2 water bottles. One is just water and one is water laced with heroin or cocaine. The rat will almost always prefer the drugged water and almost always kill itself in a couple of weeks. That is our theory of addiction.

Bruce comes along in the ’70s and said, “Well, hang on. We’re putting the rat in an empty cage. It has nothing to do. Let’s try this a bit differently.”

So he built Rat Park, and Rat Park is like heaven for rats. Everything a rat could want is in Rat Park. Lovely food. Lots of sex. Other rats to befriend. Colored balls. Plus both water bottles, one with water and one with drugged water. But here’s what’s fascinating: In Rat Park, they don’t like the drugged water. They hardly use it. None of them overdose. None of them use in a way that looks like compulsion or addiction.

What Bruce did shows that both the right-wing and left-wing theories of addiction are wrong. The right-wing theory is that it’s a moral failing, you’re a hedonist, you party too hard. The left-wing theory is that it takes you over, your brain is hijacked. Bruce says it’s not your morality, it’s not your brain; it’s your cage. Addiction is largely an adaptation to your environment.

Now, we created a society where significant numbers of us can’t bear to be present in our lives without being on something, drink, drugs, sex, shopping… We’ve created a hyperconsumerist, hyperindividualist, isolated world that is, for many of us, more like the first cage than the bonded, connected cages we need.

The opposite of addiction is not sobriety. The opposite of addiction is connection. And our whole society, the engine of it, is geared toward making us connect with things not people. You are not a good consumer citizen if you spend your time bonding with the people around you and not stuff. In fact, we are trained from a young age to focus our hopes, dreams, and ambitions on things to buy and consume. Drug addiction is a subset of that.”

No child deserves a dumbed down label and a daily amphetamine habit

ADHD Is BS

ADHD the Facts:

There are no objective, scientific, diagnostic tests for ADHD. (Read More)

The most commonly used ADHD drugs are amphetamines or near-amphetamines (e.g. Ritalin). (Read More)

The youngest children in a class are much more likely to be drugged than their older classmates. (Read More)

Any doctor who tells you your ‘ADHD child’ has a ‘biochemical brain imbalance’ is dangerously incompetent. Ask them to show you the proof – they won’t, there is none. (Read More)

The diagnosis relies on parent and teacher reports of children exhibiting childish behaviours including; fidgeting, disliking homework, running and climbing, playing loudly and interrupting. (Read More)

Prescribed amphetamine and illicit amphetamine have very similar effects. (Read More)

In the USA methamphetamine (brand Desoxyn) is used to treat ADHD in children as young as six. (Read More)

When taken in low doses amphetamines will temporarily sharpen focus in most people. This effect has nothing to do with ADHD. (Read More)

Any ‘medication’ benefits last hours, with alarming evidence that these drugs increase the risks of growth retardation, academic failure, substance abuse and brain damage. (Read More)

When the short-term stimulant effects of the drugs wear off there are often withdrawal effects that worsen ADHD type behaviours. (Read More)

ADHD drugs carry a range of serious risks including suicide, strokes, psychosis, addiction, anorexia, blurred vision, dizziness, stunted growth, headache, heart attack, hypertension, insomnia, liver damage, palpitations, tics and seizures. (Read More)

All ADHD stimulants are addictive and carry warnings for abuse. (Read More)

ADHD is big business. Pharmaceutical companies will sell US$25Billion+ ADHD drugs in 2021. (Read More)

The world’s ten most influential ‘ADHD experts’ have all accepted funding from multiple ADHD drug manufacturers. (Read More)

The ugly truth about ADHD is that the label is unscientific and stigmatising – teaching kids to believe their brains are broken. Worse still the amphetamines and other drugs used to treat it damage developing brains and bodies.

Yes, some children diagnosed with ADHD do have real problems. They need responses that match their individual circumstances. This requires the adults in their lives (parents, teachers and doctors) to realise pills mask problems and don’t deal with underlying causes.

Adult ADHD – Many adults diagnosed with ADHD are never properly informed about the unscientific nature of the diagnosis and the risks of treatment. They mistakenly believe there are scientifically valid diagnostic ‘tests’ and that the near universal temporary effects of ‘medications’ are unique to those with ADHD. This constitutes an abuse of their right to ‘informed consent’.

Nonetheless, some adults who have been fully informed choose to self-identify as having ADHD and to take drugs. This is their choice. It does not legitimise ADHD as a ‘neurodevelopmental disorder’ or suggest that the drugs are safe and effective for either children or adults in the long-term.

https://www.adhdisbs.com/

Norman Rockwell – The Gossips

Norman Rockwell - The Gossips

‘The Gossips’ oil on canvas painted in 1948 (74 years ago)

by Norman P. Rockwell (1894-1978) Rest in peace, sir!

Great American painter, illustrator and author. His works have a wide popular appeal in the United States for their thoughtful study of our fine traditional American culture and values. Mr. Rockwell is most famous for his illustrations of everyday life, many of which he created for the cover of the The Saturday Evening Post — for over five decades.

This illustration was the cover for the March 6, 1948 edition.

Indonesia Is Switching Capital Cities Because the Old One Is Sinking Into the Ocean

Jakarta Sinking

Jakarta, Indonesia’s biggest city, has been free of Dutch rule for about 70 years — but the lasting effects of colonialism are far from over.

Case in point, the city is sinking into the surrounding Java Sea because many of the city’s 10 million people have no access to piped water and must rely on wells to suck up drinkable groundwater.

The flooding, pollution, sinking earth and congestion have gotten so catastrophic, in fact, that the country is switching capital cities altogether. Yes, seriously: the government is packing up and moving the country’s capital to the island of Borneo, according to the Associated Press.

But the move is unlikely to help poor residents who are still suffering from the chaos of environmental disaster, financial ruin, and the side effects of colonization ever since the Netherlands built a purposefully segregated city in the 1600s.

“The construction of the new capital city is not merely a physical move of government offices,” President Joko Widodo told AP. “The main goal is to build a smart new city, a new city that is competitive at the global level, to build a new locomotive for the transformation … toward an Indonesia based on innovation and technology based on a green economy.”

https://futurism.com/indonesia-capital-jakarta-sinking