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The breast cancer industry operates a racist medical racket that
exploits black women for corporate profits, charges consumer health
advocate Mike Adams in a newly-published online report: Breast Cancer
Deception.
The report, available now at www.NewsTarget.com
reveals the obvious reason why black
women suffer higher rates of breast cancer
(with greater mortality) than whites.
It also charges the breast cancer industry
with intentionally denying black women
access to the information they need to
prevent nearly 8 out of 10 cases of breast
cancer using a simple nutrient available
for free that's actually manufactured
by the human body under the right conditions.
The report is available online now at:
www.NewsTarget.com/Report_Breast_Cancer_Deception_0.html
"The breast cancer industry is
dominated by wealthy white men who are,
in my view, exploiting the bodies of
low-income black women in order to generate
obscene corporate profits," Adams
said. "The industry refuses to educate
black women about the real reasons why
their cancers are more severe than white
women, and it simultaneously refuses
to teach black women the simple, natural
solution to breast cancer prevention
that can reduce national breast cancer
rates by over 75 percent."
Adams backs up his assertions with charts
from the National Cancer Institute as
well as considerable research into the
effects of vitamin D on the halting of
cancer tumor growth. By combining three
simple observations -- the sunlight blocking
capacity of darkly pigmented skin, ultraviolet
light intensity at geographic latitudes,
and recent research showing vitamin D's
ability to prevent cancer tumors from
growing -- Adams has pieced together
a powerful, yet obvious explanation for
why black men and women experience far
more serious cancers than whites. The
cancer industry, meanwhile, remains baffled
by the difference and claims to not understand
why black women experience more severe
cancers than white women.
The real explanation for the difference?
Chronic vitamin D deficiency caused by
darker skin pigmentation, indoor work
environments, and dark-skinned people
living at Northern latitudes (such as
the Northern half of the United States,
Canada or the U.K.) where sunlight intensity
is greatly reduced. These factors explain
why virtually all black children being
born in the United States today are vitamin
D deficient (see article) and why black
women suffer such severe cases of breast
cancer. Vitamin D circulating in the
blood has the ability halt breast cancer
tumor growth, but chronic deficiency
allows cancer tumors to grow unregulated.
The breast cancer industry, Adams says,
feeds upon the nutritional ignorance
of black women and even seeks to keep
them ignorant where they can be exploited
through a system of "medical slavery" that
transforms the bodies of black women
into cash-generating machines for pharmaceutical
companies and cancer non-profit groups.
Pink ribbon products are a "sham" says
Adams, and many of the products promoted
with pink ribbons actually cause cancer,
he says. Furthermore, no consumers seem
to know where the pink ribbon donation
money is actually going or whether it's
doing any good. "One thing for sure
is that nobody is bothering to fund educational
campaigns that would teach black women
how to actually prevent breast cancer
and avoid the disease altogether."
The cancer industry, Adams says, is
banking on the continuation of the disease
and simply cannot afford to have 80 percent
of black women avoid breast cancer entirely. "The
loss in revenues and jobs to the cancer
industry would be devastating," he
explains. "Keeping cancer alive
and well is a matter of survival for
the cancer industry which is now focused
entirely on generating profits, not preventing
cancer," Adams charges.
Additional details are revealed in Adams'
special report, Breast Cancer Deception,
which is available now at: www.NewsTarget.com/Report_Breast_Cancer_Deception_0.html
The report is available free of charge,
and Adams earns no money from any of
the numerous anti-cancer product recommendations
made in the report. Permission has been
granted to readers to redistribute the
report to those who desperately need
the information. |