Fungus, Cancer
In this video, Doug Kaufmann spends about 14 minutes speaking on "Fungus, Cancer" at the 38th Annual Cancer Convention held on Labor Day weekend by the Cancer Control Society.
Transcription
Well, thank you all for being here. Dr. Patrick Quillen, it was very nice of you to give up your time for us to squeeze my talk in here, go back and see my friend Patrick and pick up one of his books. This. This man is mentored me for many, many years.
Does fungus cause cancer? And how do I do this? This is a contraption I don't know much about. It's called a computer. Okay. Right here.
OK. Has an incredible science been overlooked? We're gonna get through this quickly. This information is going to be on our Web site. No, the cause dot com. And I'll just go through it quickly with you. Milton White was another mentor of mine. Dr. Milton White lost his wife, Ruth, to breast cancer. And he said it was the ugliest thing he had ever seen before she died. She grabbed his hand and in tears, said, Milty, you're a smart man. You can figure out what cancer is. I met with Milton before his untimely death a few years ago. Cancer is a chronic, infectious, abnormal, anaerobic, respiratory and metabolic inflammatory germ disease. It's not a virus or the consequence of an inherited gene.
Rather, it's a hybrid. It's due to a plant combining with a human DNA.
Look at this, this from the American Academy of Microbiology, Fungi are the cause of many outbreaks of disease, but are mostly ignored. Fungi can cause a number of life threatening diseases. Many people, scientists among them, are largely unaware. And then this in the course of time, more than sixty nine thousand species of fungi have been recognized and described. It's estimated that there about a million and a half out there. And today we think a couple hundred. But in the future, we believe four to six hundred of these will be pathogenic to man. We know that Candida al backhands. We know that aflatoxin be one. We know that Zarela known and some of these mycotoxins and the fungi that make them are very damaging to man. It's a simple plant. Fungus is and it lacks chlorophyl. So it has to go find a food supply. Mostly we see it eating up dead and decaying vegetation. But importantly, I interviewed Dr. Elizabeth Moore Landecker years ago. Importantly, it can become a parasite, a man. And when it gets on board, be careful. Are we calling it cancer when it's fungus? In 1957, a medical textbook was handed out to all the students at Johns Hopkins University. I've listed four pages, independent pages and four different fungi. Cock CTO. My cozies is a disease caused by a fungus blastoma. Nkosi's