Glyco-Benzaldeyde, Cancer
In this video, James W. Forsythe spends about 30 minutes speaking on "Glyco-Benzaldeyde, Cancer" at the 38th Annual Cancer Convention held on Labor Day weekend by the Cancer Control Society.
Transcription
Thanks again. Tremendous. OK.
Ladies and gentlemen, certainly happy to have you here, the 38 annual Cancer Control Society convention. Labor Day weekend 2010. We're also want to welcome back Dr. James Foresi from Reno, Nevada Century Wellness Clinic. Dr. Foresi is not only a medical doctor, conventionally trained board certified in oncology, but he's also a certified homeopath, licensed homeopath in the state of Nevada. So he's gone the extra steps to learn about things that above and beyond the narrow range of conventional medicine. In the past, he's shared with us some of his clinical experience utilizing things such as poly MBA and he's going to tell us today. One of the main things, of course, is a new new development with the Bend's aldehyde product. And they have all hit the patients that he's treated with that doctor foresight. Thank you very much for being here.
Thank you, folks, and thank you, Frank and Lorraine, for, again, holding a very superb meeting. I always think of the difference between going to a conventional oncology meeting and the CCSVI meeting as the difference between pessimism and hope. And this is all pure.
It's important, I think, to for all of you folks here, and I know probably at least 70, 80 percent of you are patient yourselves, are friends of patients, relatives. What have you to describe the new subspecialty of medical oncology, which is integrative oncology. A recent book has been written by the father of alternative medicine. Andrew Weil and his associates, who is the chief of medical oncology at UC San Francisco, my alma mater on integrative oncology. So this is not that far out. We're not too far out of the box, although you do have to think out of the box to do this because ninety nine percent of medical oncologist will not deviate from the straight big pharma line or the out of the box thinking. So I think you all know that. So just a word about my background, how I got there, because it was a rather torturous route. I graduated from UC Berkeley in 1960, 50 years ago, believe it or not. Lorraine was also a graduate of UC Berkeley and went across the bay to UC San Francisco. From there, went into the military in order to pay off my medical school bills and did a pathology residency. And from there, I went and became the chief of pathology at Womack Army Hospital, the home of the Eighty Second Airborne. And from there to Vietnam, where I was chief of several laboratories, tropical medicine and blood banking and forensic pathology. Like her good friend, Dr. Wallachia. After that,