Fungus, Cancer
In this video, Doug Kaufmann spends about 21 minutes speaking on "Fungus, Cancer" at the 41st Annual Cancer Convention held on Labor Day weekend by the Cancer Control Society.
Transcription
Frank, I don't know. Decades ago, I had this hypothesis. And today we get to see that unravel a little bit. So as you guys know, there's one hundred auto immune diseases. Cancer is one of those auto immune diseases. And somebody is going to have to teach me how to work this.
Is there an UpDown button?
OK, good right there. Thanks. OK. So I was working with groups of doctors who are distraught because we had nowhere else to go with cancer patients. Why not try antifungals? The story of Myra. Forty one years is just amazing.
They say cancer is mimicked by fungus and is often a misdiagnosed. And me show you some interesting facts here that I think are going to compel you. Here's a DNA strand on the left. There is a break in the DNA strand that's called the genetic or a DNA or a genetic mutation. And there's the fusion. Two healthy strands, maybe one from a rabbit and one from a pair. But there are two healthy strands being put together. Similarities between human cells and fungal cells, both are eukaryotic. Their cells contain a distinct membrane biome nucleus. And by the way, fungus nucleus is DNA, a bacteria, not virus and a fungus. Only a human nucleus is DNA. God forbid if those two merge, what would be the end result? And don't we have built in systems in our body to halt such a thing from happening? One of the earlier presenters today talked about phagocytes ptosis. We learned about that elementary school or high school when the white blood cell gobbles up debris like fungus in the in the blood within the blood system fails us. And you'll see, here's my cancer hypothesis.
I drew this a long, long time ago. Fungal DNA merges with human DNA to form a third hybrid that lives in a sac. The SAC is called an ASCO, my seat. It mimics a cancer tumor perfectly, perfectly, as you'll see as I continue. Cancer says, oh, you'd of all love Milton White Milty. His wife called him, her name was Ruth. She died of breast cancer years ago. And on her deathbed, she told her physician, husband, You're a smart man, Milty. You'll figure out cancer.
And he passed about seven or eight years ago, but not before I went to Detroit and met him. Cancer is neither a result of a virus nor a consequence of an inherited gene defect. It's a hybrid.
It is due to a plant. I think he's wrong on this. It's due to a plant bacterium. No, it's a plant fungus. And the canadia are the sexual spores