Post by skytroll on Sept 9, 2007 1:41:49 GMT -5
Our delving into Antoine Bechamp's theories, that have been buried.
The fight goes on between gene theory and terrain in body
as cause of disease, however, now, the terrain has been contaiminated by unknown proteins and enzymes that cannot ferment, and bring us right down to particulate matter.
The terrain cannot digest particulate matter that is not organic.
a quote maybe might serve us to remember.
Benjamin Rush was a signer of the Declaration of Independence.
He wanted to have "a patients bill of rights" put in the Consitution.
"While your ultimate goal should, in our opinion, always be to minimize the use of toxic drugs and invasive surgeries and diagnostic tests, it also is important to recognize that if you have, or suspect a medical condition and/or are taking prescription medication, you MUST work with your health care practitioner so that your response can be monitored to your benefit. Know that many physicians today are hamstrung by insurance requirements and a plethora of state laws and regulations. This sad fact gives new urgency to an observation made by Benjamin Rush who was the personal physician to George Washington: "Unless we put medical freedom into the constitution, the time will come when medicine will orgnize into an undercover dictatorship."
Nevertheless, if your practitioner refuses to work with you on your new endeavor, find one who will. That is, after all, still your right.
from this link, beginning with Antoin Bechamp's medical view.
......."At the root of the disparity between what has actually been discovered and what we tell each other about what it takes to be healthy is the germ theory of disease. This theory was very successfully promoted by Louis Pasteur, despite the crucial discoveries of Pasteur's contemporaries Antoin Bechamp and Claude Bernard which showed that a compromised, unhealthy biological terrain provided the environment needed for disease. From this germ theory came the vaccine myth, against which Bechamp argued strenously and in vain. ".....
thehealthadvantage.com/introduction.html
So, now we find ourselves where Benjamin Rush said we might be.
Pathetic, isn't it?
Bechamp's works were buried, even though, I believe he was right all along.
Is it too late now? Have we and are we destined to devour inorganic proteins and enzymes that were never meant for human consumption?
Skytroll
The fight goes on between gene theory and terrain in body
as cause of disease, however, now, the terrain has been contaiminated by unknown proteins and enzymes that cannot ferment, and bring us right down to particulate matter.
The terrain cannot digest particulate matter that is not organic.
a quote maybe might serve us to remember.
Benjamin Rush was a signer of the Declaration of Independence.
He wanted to have "a patients bill of rights" put in the Consitution.
"While your ultimate goal should, in our opinion, always be to minimize the use of toxic drugs and invasive surgeries and diagnostic tests, it also is important to recognize that if you have, or suspect a medical condition and/or are taking prescription medication, you MUST work with your health care practitioner so that your response can be monitored to your benefit. Know that many physicians today are hamstrung by insurance requirements and a plethora of state laws and regulations. This sad fact gives new urgency to an observation made by Benjamin Rush who was the personal physician to George Washington: "Unless we put medical freedom into the constitution, the time will come when medicine will orgnize into an undercover dictatorship."
Nevertheless, if your practitioner refuses to work with you on your new endeavor, find one who will. That is, after all, still your right.
from this link, beginning with Antoin Bechamp's medical view.
......."At the root of the disparity between what has actually been discovered and what we tell each other about what it takes to be healthy is the germ theory of disease. This theory was very successfully promoted by Louis Pasteur, despite the crucial discoveries of Pasteur's contemporaries Antoin Bechamp and Claude Bernard which showed that a compromised, unhealthy biological terrain provided the environment needed for disease. From this germ theory came the vaccine myth, against which Bechamp argued strenously and in vain. ".....
thehealthadvantage.com/introduction.html
So, now we find ourselves where Benjamin Rush said we might be.
Pathetic, isn't it?
Bechamp's works were buried, even though, I believe he was right all along.
Is it too late now? Have we and are we destined to devour inorganic proteins and enzymes that were never meant for human consumption?
Skytroll