Chronic Diseases
In this video, Charlotte Gerson spends about 32 minutes speaking on "Chronic Diseases" at the 38th Annual Cancer Convention held on Labor Day weekend by the Cancer Control Society.
Transcription
What a pleasure to see you here, ladies and gentlemen. I've also had the pleasure to see many, many of you three years before. In the meantime, there has been a publication of a book which has shaken everybody up considerably. The reason is simply that it proves that nature presents a cancer cure. It's that simple. If you study a little bit about embryology, you run across a term that's called trough a blast. Yet very few people know about it. Very few people know the name. A Dr. Nick Gonzalez, who has been working with originally. He went through regular medical school. But he worked with Donna Kelley, who had used the Gersen therapy to cure himself of his own pancreatic cancer. He also did a little bit. But the interesting thing is the book that Dr. Gonzalez has republished, we simply.
Would you believe it's under five years old? And it says cancer. And the origin of cancer.
I have to give you a little bit of embryology and of course, please any doctors, I do have to simplify it considerably. You'll forgive me. It turns out, and this has been proven now. It turns out that once the female ovum is fertilized by the male sperm in any vertebrate. But let's not talk about ourselves once it is fertilized, it travels down from the ovary through the fallopian tube into the uterus. And there, of course, the job is it has to develop.
But in order to develop, it needs nutrients, needs food.
What's it going to do that by the time it has traveled down the tubes? It's already spent a couple of times now. It comes into the uterus and it has to find food. So it actually burrows into the lining of the uterus. It powers in their. And there it attaches itself to some blood vessels so that it can survive on the mother's blood. And it also produces the. The new blood vessels, the arteries that tumors. And this little fertilized egg has to have to grow. At that point when it burns into tissue. And produces its own growth media. It is indistinguishable physically, biochemically and microscopically from any malignant cell. In other words, we all start with malignant cells. And that goes for all vertebrates or any animals that give birth to live young. And that little embryo now grows and spreads and grows and splits, as any tumor tissue would. And there's this new vascularization, which means the blood vessels it builds for itself. Same as any tumor. How ever. The big difference and this is what we should be learning from nature. When this little cell is