djt10 wrote:I'm a a licensed teacher, investigative researcher and writer, published author
You don't have to say anything about yourself, but you bring it up. Your point seems to be that someone who is "a a licensed teacher, investigative researcher and writer, published author" couldn't be a complete idiot, appearances notwithstanding. So, since you do bring it up, what's your educational background (dates, institutions, degrees)? What have you researched and written? What have you published? A google of your name and place of residence (from the whois search) turns up your site,
this article and that's about it. As for the "writer, published author" claim, my immediate reaction is to ask if the word "paragraph" means anything to you.
and I specialize in alternative cancer treatments.
That's a little like specializing in astrology.
Not for money--my stomach cancer was cured by a naturopathic doctor in 1979
Do you know what anecdotes are worth in terms of proof? If not, please go do "investigative research" on claims of alien abductions. There are plenty of 'em. After all, my great-aunt Tillie raises prize-winning tomatoes in her garden in the Sea of Tranquility.
Salve didn't come along until several years later,
If you mean escharotics - so-called "black salves" - as I think you yourself wrote above, they've been around far longer than that. Burned your skin off then too.
and we used it ourselves before I ever went public with it in 2003.
"The plural of anecdote is not data." - Roger Brinner.
He became known as a "naturopathic oncology pioneer"
Who? Do you mean Caton? For a "published author", you really don't write very well.
and had a cure rate unknown to conventional medicine.
Proof? Why, he says so. What more could you want?
I observed for 2 1/2 years as a lay student so I could write about it, so I saw it happen first hand.
Ah. You say so too. Did I mention that my great-aunt Tillie also raises record-setting pumpkins? Great place, the Sea of Tranquility.
This business about "burning" tissues is utter nonsense. Salve won't react unless there is abnornal tissue, and they don't have to be on the surface.
Proof? I'm sure actual clinical trials are too much to ask. So I'll settle for the chemistry. Please tell us the compounds that produce these miracle results, and diagram the reactions by which they attack "abnornal" tissue and not normal tissue. My chemistry background goes through orgo, so I'll get the gist.
Of course, you could always produce the clinical trials.
I tried to remove a couple of benign moles with it and the salve just sat there and did nothing.
As I said,
Night of the Living Dead.
Go ahead and stick with allopathic medicine if you really have faith in "conventional cancer therapy".
Ah. "Allopathic medicine", the term invented by Samuel Hahnemann, father of homeopathy, to describe medicine that works but that he didn't get paid for. Are you into homeopathy too?