My mother, grandmother, and grandfather all died from cancer.
Your parents may have high cholesterol, had heart attacks, and now you’re worried, as I was, that you’ll suffer the same fate. We may have the same diseases as our parents, however it’s likely not because we inherited their genes.
In fact, only 5 percent of cancer and cardiovascular patients can attribute their disease to heredity.1
Correlation does not imply causation, yet the mainstream narrative of “it’s genetic” has been engrained into our psyche.
Other than genetics, what else did my family share in common?
Their environment: they lived in the same house, ate similar food, and were exposed to the same TV programming.
Gene expression is what makes our cells behave the way they do.
Epigenetics
Our cells will only express themselves based on triggers from the environment. The study of how our environment impacts gene expression is called epigenetics, and was founded by embryologist Dr. Conrad Waddington in 1942.
In a nutshell, we are born with DNA that is contained in the nucleus of our cells, however it’s in the outer thin membrane, or “mem-brain” as Bruce Lipton, PhD likes to call it, where all the magic happens. It’s in our membrane that proteins, the building blocks of life, receive messages from our environment. These messages are electrochemical, and come from the food we eat to the light to which we expose ourselves.
Proteins then tell our DNA how to express its genes. You can think of DNA as a sheet of music, and proteins as the musician of environment who improvises and leaves out a note here and there.
The prevailing belief since DNA was discovered in the 1950s, was that our DNA was set in stone, and all causes of health or disease were genetic.
Epigenetics is proving that although we are all given one set of DNA, it can express itself in various different forms - from the diseases we manifest, to how we can create different muscles based on the type of daily exercise and tasks we perform.
To prove that environment is superior to genetics, when researchers transplanted the nucleus of a cancerous cell, the new cell remained healthy. They then transplanted the nucleus of a healthy cell into a cancerous one, and this cell remained cancerous.2
Bad vibes man…
Recent research by physicians such as Dr. Gabor Mate and biologists such as Lipton show how even our beliefs impact our health through electromagnetic frequencies (good or bad “vibes”).
Lee Lorenzen, Professor Saykally, and other geneticists at UC Berkley studied the functionality of DNA. They found that the health and optimal performance of DNA is determined by the amount of energized water molecules within the DNA matrix.3
Energized and structured waters are charged with a specific frequency. These charged molecules form a particular hexagonal crystalline shape, which enhances their ability to refract and reflect frequencies. This allows them to form clusters. These molecular clusters make it easier for DNA signaling to occur more accurately and efficiently; the frequencies are clearer, and less scrambled signals are sent and received at a much faster rate. The hexagonal crystalline molecules help to strengthen the shape and form of DNA strands.
When the amount of energized water is reduced even slightly, the frequency of the cell is disturbed, and the researchers observed that critical DNA function failed on an energetic level. As the frequency of the body decreases so does its health. For instance:
Disease starts at 58 MHz.
Colds and flu start at 57-60 MHz.
Cancer occurs at 42 MHz
Death begins at 25 MHz
“If you want to find the secrets of the universe, think in terms of energy, frequency and vibration.”
― Nikola Tesla
WiFi operates at the same frequency as a microwave oven of 2.45GHz.
The same frequency that heats up your food is also heating up and exciting your body’s water molecules, at 2.45 billion times per second!
There have been over 10,000 independent peer-reviewed studies showing how detrimental WiFi can be to all life.4
How Metabolism Can Create Disease
Did you know that diabetics are more likely to die from cancer than non-diabetics?5
In both cases, metabolism is impaired. If you’ve read my post about diabetes, you’ll know that our mitochondria, the engines of our cells, are impaired by electromagnetic fields. Our metabolism functions on what is called the electron transport chain. The last step in this chain requires an enzyme called cytochrome C oxidase to complete, and this is hampered by WiFi, radio waves and electricity. Cytochrome C oxidase exists in every cell and makes breathing possible.
Our cells’ behavior is mediated through the amount of oxygen they receive. Nobel Prize Winner Otto Warburg (1931) discovered that cancer cells do not consume oxygen, even when oxygen is present. Warburg was the first to illustrate how cancer was a metabolic disease, linked to damaged cellular respiration.
Thomas Seyfried, PhD contributed to Warburg’s discovery in a 2010 paper in the journal Nutrition and Metabolism, where he concluded “emerging evidence indicates that impaired cellular energy metabolism is the defining characteristic of nearly all cancers.”6
Does the Sun Cause Skin Cancer?
Swedish researchers Orjan Hallberg and Olle Johansson have shown that the overall rate of cancer changed precisely with the increase in exposure of the population to radio waves. In Sweden, the rates of cancer accelerated in the 1920s, 1955, and 1969. In their article, “Cancer Trends During the 20th Century”, the authors note: “In 1920 we got AM radio, in 1955 we got FM radio and TV I, and in 1969 we got TV II.”
Johansson and Hallberg continued to focus on FM radio exposure in connection to malignant melanomas (skin cancers), upon following up on the findings of Helen Dolk at the London School of Hygiene. Dolk and her colleagues had shown that the incidence of skin cancer declined with distance from powerful TV and FM radio transmitters, noting that the FM frequency range of 85 to 108 MHz is close to the resonant frequency of the human body.7
The graph below in Figure 1 shows melanoma incidence against the average number of FM transmitters to which a town is exposed. As transmitter density increases, so does the rate of melanoma:
Figure 2 below shows how deaths from skin cancer increased in tandem with the launch of FM radio broadcasting (1955 to 1965)
The graph below shows how skin cancer in Nordic women roughly doubled on the head region after 1955 while it increased by almost 20 times on the rest of the body (RoB):
In their article, “Malignant Melanoma of the Skin- Not a Sunshine Story,” Johansson and Hallberg refute the claim that the incredible surge of melanoma since 1955 is caused primarily by the sun. Rates of melanoma on the head and feet barely rose at all between 1955-2008, while rates for areas of the body that are typically clothed, especially by Nordics, increased twenty times.8
Why would the sun be causing more cancer on areas that are typically covered???
Don’t Tell Me: Smoking doesn’t cause lung cancer?
Cigarettes have many carcinogens, especially in the rolling paper and filter itself that does not help disease. However this does not explain the following fact:
The percentage of adult men and women who smoke has consistently decreased since 1970, however deaths from lung cancer has almost quadrupled in women, and is almost the same in men as it was fifty years ago.9:
The graph below shows how smoking rates were decreasing as mortality was increasing:
Today lung cancer in people who have never smoked ranks as the seventh most common cause of cancer death worldwide, even before pancreatic, cervical, and prostate cancers.10
Could it be that there are other invisible cancer sticks that are more prevelant, and that we all inhale? Namely, electropolluted air from radio waves?
The Vatican’s Negligent Homicide
In 2011, Italy’s Supreme Court upheld the 2005 criminal conviction of Cardinal Roberto Tucci, former president of Vatican Radio’s management committee. Tucci was charged with "dangerous launching of objects," referring to the station's electromagnetic waves.11
From The Invisible Rainbow by Arthur Firstenberg:
The Vatican’s broadcasts to the world emanate from fifty-eight powerful radio towers occupying over one thousand acres of land, surrounded by suburban homes. For decades, residents had been screaming that the transmissions were destroying their health and causing an epidemic of childhood leukemia.
An official investigation was ordered by Judge Secchi at the request of the Public Prosecutor’s office in Rome, which was considering charges against the Vatican for negligent homicide. The results of the 2010 investigation showed that between 1997 and 2003, children aged one to fourteen who lived between six and twelve kilometers (3.7 to 7.5 miles) from Vatican Radio’s antenna farm developed leukemia, lymphoma, or myeloma at eight times the rate of children who lived further away. Adults who lived between six and twelve kilometers from the antennas died of leukemia at almost seven times the rate of adults who lives further away.
The punishment for Tucci was a ten-day suspended jail sentence. No one was ever compensated for their injuries.
The Vatican antennas have not been shut down.
How do we move forward in a world where those in power get away with murder?
We raise our vibration.
We build awareness, and as a result build the bedrock of a new community.
Most importantly, before we can find a cure, we must understand the cause.
We must come to know how we came to be.
How did we get to this point?
We became greedy, and believed that faster is better, and touchscreens are “sexy.”
We gluttonously ate up social media likes, while taking for granted the hard wires of reality, and forgetting the elegant simplicity of a desktop computer.
We fell into lust with the allure of technology as our savior, just like our political leaders, both of whom are our servants.
Let’s start reminding them and ourselves that we lead our lives with the technology of nature.
Join me in next week’s post as I unravel what I believe to be potential cures for cancer.
Willett, Walter C. Balancing life-style and genomics research for disease prevention. Science 2002 Apr 26;296 (5568):695-8
Israel BA, Schaeffer WI. Cytoplasmic suppression of malignancy. In Vitro Cell Dev Biol 1987: 23(9): 627632.
K. Liu, J. D. Cruzan and R. J. Saykally. Water Clusters. Science Vol. 271, No. 5251 (Feb. 16, 1996), pp. 929-933
American Diabetes Association, American Cancer Society: Joint 2009 Conferences
Seyfried TN, Shelton LM. Cancer as a metabolic disease. Nutr Metab Lond) 2010; 7:7.
Firstenberg, Arthur. The Invisible Rainbow. Chelsea Green Publishing, 2020.
Firstenberg, Arthur. The Invisible Rainbow. Chelsea Green Publishing, 2020.
Data on smoking rates from National Center for Health Statistics. Data on lung cancer from Vital Statistics of the United States (1970, 1980, 1990) and National Vital statistics Reports (2000, 2010, 2015).
National Cancer Institute 2009.