Repurposed Drugs for Spike Protein Disease and the Cancer Connection
Ever-increasing numbers of people worldwide are afflicted with spike protein disease. These two conditions – vaccine injuries and long COVID – are the Pandemic’s aftermath, and according to Dr. Tess Lawrie, they will be major health challenges for years to come. Just as long-term radiation sequelae plagued the survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, spike protein damage will likely follow COVID-19 legacies.
These two health disasters thrust upon us by the toxic spike protein have an uncanny connection with cancer. And for this reason, accelerated cancers may be a third healthcare challenge in the future. Why?
Before getting into the details of the repurposed drug therapies, allow me to share a quick cancer survivor story to illustrate. Fred Evrard is a 50-year-old martial artist with a strong family history of colon cancer. However, given his highly healthy lifestyle, he hoped to side-step it. As a result, he was in the best shape of his life, at 9% body fat, and engaging in Cross Fit, Martial Arts, and Boxing activities regularly [16:20].
Fred’s father and grandfather both died from colon cancer. But Fred explained his rather extreme lifestyle. He never smoked, drank alcohol, or ate junk food. Evrard never even drank soda. He was an avid 20-year practitioner of intermittent fasting [01:47].
Everything was organic, and he was sure his robust health would protect him. However, the stress of the COVID-19 Pandemic caught up with him as he was forced to close 20 martial arts studios and dealt with the stress and expense of obtaining an immigration green card.
His first clues were unusual episodes of skin irritation surrounding his elbows and knees [02:10]. This was followed by blood in his stools. He ascribed this to something he ate and brushed it off. He now regrets this and feels he could have caught the cancer at Stage 1 if he had seen a physician then. However, he allowed the bloody stools to continue for about six more months [02:40]. When he finally got tested, it was Stage 3 Colon Cancer – almost Stage 4.
“[03:03] When you get that diagnosis, you freeze. It’s complete action and thinking inhibition. And it’s really hard to fight the medical system and to try to see if there are other options.”
His prognosis was poor because he had a 4-inch tumor extending from the colon to the rectal area. He was given a 50% chance of survival provided he underwent surgery and the complete courses of 24 sessions of chemotherapy and six months of radiation [04:02].
He was told to decide quickly, as any delay would lessen his survival odds. Fred carefully considered his chances and the ramifications of following the traditional and recommended treatment. He then realized he was a life-long practitioner of intermittent and prolonged fasting. Fred also liked the ketogenic diet and felt he had the tools to “heal” his cancer naturally. And so he set out to do so to avoid all chemo, radiation, and surgery.
Following the diagnosis, he immediately embarked on a 21-day fast – and the tumor shrank by 50% [04:54]. He followed the fast with a strict 100% ketogenic diet of the type advised by Dr. Thomas Seyfried with overnight fasting at one meal per day. Within four months, he was cancer free. However, he admits the pain grew so severe that he consented to 3 sessions of chemotherapy [09:55]. The rest, he did naturally. He found that fasting could eliminate almost all the side effects of the chemotherapy. With fasting, he avoided nausea and vomiting; he also reported being the only one among his friends not to lose hair [10:35]. The PubMed studies support his experience. In addition, chemotherapy is much less toxic when the patient fasts [11:00].
His oncologist was shocked and admitted he rarely witnessed a patient being fully cured of advanced cancer. When he delivered the news of his clean MRI, the oncologist stated, “[13:31] Mr. Evrard, I don’t see this often in my line of work, but you are disease free.” No surgery, no radiation, and only three sessions of chemotherapy.
The oncologist didn’t ask what he did to cure himself and did not seem interested. During chemotherapy, the nurses passed around coke and cookies, and Mr. Evrard politely declined, stating he was on a fast [14:55].
Why did Fred Evrard see immediate tumor shrinkage with the 21-day fast, and why could he resolve his cancer with only fasting and the ketogenic diet? Dr. Thomas Seyfried, a respected authority, has published extensively on the Metabolic Theory of Cancer and believes he has the answer.
He explains that cancer is a disease of the mitochondria, where they lose their ability to process energy using oxygen. As a result, cancer cells are limited to burning fuels like glucose through glycolysis, an inefficient process. Some cancers may also utilize proteins, so by using a low-protein, low-carbohydrate, and high-fat diet, i.e., a ketogenic diet, one can feed normal cells and selectively starve cancer cells.
Keep in mind that cancer is a disease of mitochondria as we look further at the repurposed drugs for spike protein disease – also thought to be a mitochondria disorder.
Dr. Tess Lawrie, the World Council for Health co-founder, teamed up with Dr. Paul Marik, Chief Science Officer of the FLCCC, to publish a landmark paper on treatments for the long COVID and COVID-19 vaccine injured.
The study, recently published in the Journal Microorganisms, is timely and pertinent for the millions of Americans who now are disabled from spike protein disease and searching for answers.
The broad applicability of repurposed drugs and supplements to these conditions struck me immediately after reading the article. Interestingly, many of these repurposed substances possess anti-cancer properties, so it should be no surprise that spike protein disease has been correlated with a dramatic increase in cancers.
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