Derek Clontz

Archive for March 3rd, 2008|Daily archive page

Read why doctors don’t get cancer; blockbuster report will change the way you think about the medical establishment forever

In amazing feats, Can this be true?, cancer conspiracy, cancer miracle, Cancer vaccine, conspiracy, crime, deadly virus, death, dirty tricks, doctor's dirty tricks, Dr. X, evil doctors, fringe science, fringe theory, gee whiz, healing miracle, Health, health and fitness, human behavior, life's lessons, medical conspiracy, medical miracle, money, odd, offbeat, office talk, outrageous, political corruption, politics, Satan's corner, stupid doctor tricks, technology, trivia, Uncategorized, what will they think of next, whistleblower, wild world on March 3, 2008 at 7:15 pm

Copyright (c) 2007 Derek Clontz/4-Page Media, Inc. All rights reserved.

CANCER maims or kills 200 Americans every single day but virtually every one of them could have been saved with an “experimental” vaccine that doctors have used to immunize themselves against all forms of the disease since 1969.

That’s the word from whistle-blowing cancer specialist Dr. Frederick “X”, who says the “carnage in America’s cancer wards belies a conspiracy of greed so evil and complex that you have to attend medical school and train for a decade or more just to begin to comprehend it.”

“Doctors don’t get cancer, their patients get cancer – and they don’t have to,” the expert – whose controversial, 760-page expose, Why Doctors Don’t Get Cancer (Shotgun Press, $42.95), is slated for a fall 2008 release – told me exclusively.

“Cancers are viral illnesses like measles or chicken pox and we’ve been vaccinating against them successfully for almost 40 years, since 1969, in fact, which is the same year American astronauts landed on the moon.

“If you don’t believe there is a cancer vaccine, then consider this: Both federally-funded and independent studies spanning three decades project that 50 of 100 Americans in non-medical occupations will face a diagnosis of cancer in their lifetimes, while only one in 100 doctors will face the same diagnosis.

“This isn’t a coincidence. Doctors aren’t ‘just lucky’. This is a criminal conspiracy of  disgusting magnitude.

“If the American people don’t stand up and demand the truth – if they don’t stand up and demand the cancer vaccine for themselves - the medical establishment will continue to suppress it even as you and your loved ones get sick, suffer and die for no sound medical reason whatsoever.”

Dr. X refuses to reveal his identity or whereabouts fearing what he terms “lethal punishment” from an industry that depends “on large and ever-growing numbers of cancer patients entering the system just to stay in business.”

He does divulge that he was “a highly successful and internationally respected” cancer specialist with privileges at major hospitals in the Northeast prior to quitting his practice after a spiritual conversion from atheist to born-again Christian in 2006.

As you might suspect, while Dr. X levels his charges through advance interviews with print journalists, talk radio hosts and over the Internet, unprecendented numbers of doctors, researchers and other industry insiders are fighting back, doing everything in their power to discredit him before his book hits the shelves later this year.

Unfortunately, from their point of view, certain statistics – as Dr. X is fond of pointing out – “can’t be faked, at least not for long.”

And when push comes to shove, the threat of cancer faced by ordinary people compared to doctors is an anomaly that Dr. X’s critics haven’t even attempted to explain.

The doctor himself insists that his statements stand on their own merits. He challenges “anybody, anywhere to prove me wrong.”

He goes on to provide specifics, saying the cancer vaccine was developed simultaneously at federally-funded research centers in Los Angeles and New York in 1967.

A simple and inexpensive ”cocktail” of weakened cancer cells, the vaccine showed such promise that the FDA agreed to forego normal procedure and allow early clinical trials on humans.

Those trials reportedly involved the vaccination of over 500 medical volunteers who were later injected with live, virulent cancers of the type that attack the brain, eyes, spine, colon, kidney, pancreas, liver and lung.

In all but three instances, says Dr. X, the live cancer cells “were destroyed within days.” By early 1969, he adds, “virtually everyone involved in the trials was convinced the vaccine would eradicate cancer for all Americans within a matter of a few years and for every human on earth within a single generation.”

According to Dr. “X”, the results “horrified the cancer industry, which saw its major source of income, its power and tens of thousands of high-paying jobs and careers going down the tubes.”

Under intense and apparently threatening pressure from “major lobbyists and influence peddlers,” he continues, the FDA hastily re-classified the vaccine as unsafe for humans.

But cancer researchers knew better, he alleges, and continued to order the vaccine for “experimental use” – a practice that he says continues with the FDA’s nodding but unspoken approval to this day.

“That’s why the cancer statistics show that doctors seldom get the disease while ordinary people remain at high risk,” explaines Dr. X. “The doctors are taking a so-called ‘experimental’ vaccine that they know to be safe and effective but won’t give to you.

“You might be asking yourself why the medical establishment would keep this vaccine from the very patients that doctors are sworn by Hippocratic Oath to treat and protect.

“But you have to remember that cancer is not only a terrifying disease, it is a multi-trillion-dollar industry that supports some of the most ruthlessly powerful agencies, individuals and businesses in the United States.

“They don’t want to eliminate cancer with a safe and simple vaccine. They want to treat cancer as slowly as possible with an expensive assortment of surgeries, drugs and poisonous therapies that will extend a patient’s life just long enough for them to bleed him financially dry.

“Just ask somebody who’s watched a friend or loved one die a slow and agonizing death while doctors cried crocodile tears and lied to their faces, saying surgery, chemotherapy and radiation ‘are our best weapons’ in the ‘war on cancer.’

“It’s a war, all right – but it’s the war in Viet Nam. Just as we could have vaporized the North Vietnamese with nuclear weapons but didn’t, we can eradicate all cancers but won’t.

“I know because I took the very vaccine I denied to my patients – and I told the same lies that doctors are telling you.

“The difference between them and me is that I started to hate myself for the lies and deception. That’s when I got out.”

New messiah or evil anti-Christ: Just who is Rex Farrye?

In 1000 years of peace, amazing feats, apocalypse, armageddon, atheists, bible, bible prophecy, born again Christian, christian prophecy, christian thought, cliches, conspiracy, cult watch, devil worship, end of the world, end times, gee whiz, healing miracle, human behavior, jesus back on earth, jesus christ, judgment day, messiah back on earth, odd, offbeat, office talk, prophecy, religion, sacrilege, Satan's corner, trivia, Uncategorized, wild world, world religions on March 3, 2008 at 4:20 am

Copyright (c) 2008 Derek Clontz/4-Page Media, Inc. All rights reserved.

A MAN who claims to have a human mother and a space alien father is said to be working miracles in the Holy Land.

And while untold thousands of true believers are convinced he is the new Messiah who will lead the forces of goodness and light to victory in the Battle of Armageddon, as many or more insist that Rex Farrye is not the Son of God or even a sincere evangelist.

He is, they say, the evil anti-Christ portrayed so chillingly in the Bible’s apocalyptic Book of Revelation.

Is Rex Farr “The Second Coming?”“I am who I am, nothing more,” the slightly bulb-headed and lily white, almost translucent, Farrye told me exclusively in a rare telephone interview from his ”Miracle Camp” on the outskirts of Jerusalem.

“I am of this world because my mother is of this world,” he said, referring to his claim of having an extraterrestrial father.

“I am not of this world because my father is not of this world. Some say I am the Messiah. Some say I am not.”

No one is denying that Farrye, 33, has performed seemingly impossible healings of hundreds of sick and dying people, many of whom have waited in lines up to a mile long seeking cures that, they believe, only he can give them.

He is also said to have the ability to vanish and reappear hundreds of miles away – and move or destroy objects just by looking at them or waving his hand.

But skeptics – including individuals, religious scholars, and intelligence agencies such as Israel’s Mossad and America’s CIA – say the question isn’t whether Farrye works miracles, it’s, “How does he work miracles – and why.”

“Everybody wants to know how it is he is able to do what he does,” said Laycie Datnoff, a freelance journalist who has reported on Farrye and his ministry since the mystery man began to develop a following late last year.

“Does he heal through mass hypnosis? Are we looking at group hysteria? Does Farrye seed the ranks of the sick and dying with healthy followers who only pretend to be sick and then  ‘miraculously recover’ to make his successes seem more common and dramatic than they really are?

“These are the kinds of possibilities that skeptics, especially religious skeptics, are inclined to embrace when discussing a man like Farrye.

“Unfortunately, dismissing Farrye as a mere charlatan isn’t that simple. For one thing, he lives in poverty and accepts neither gifts nor money for anything he does.

“And it’s pretty clear that he’s working at least some genuine miracles out there. As a journalist I consider myself to be a major skeptic,” she told me.

“And yet I’ve seen Farrye raise people from their deathbeds – people I know for a fact were being eaten alive with cancers and AIDS.

“It’s even been reported that he raised a dead woman from her coffin – alive – simply by commanding her to ‘live again by the Holy Name of God.’

“But he’s not too high and mighty to overlook ‘the little things.’ He’s just as likely to make a wart vanish as help a quadriplegic move again.

“Mossad and the CIA are taking a keen interest in Farrye,” she continued. “With the world on the brink of World War 3,  with strife in the Holy Land threatening to touch off that war at any moment, they have to take a man such as this seriously.

“As word of his miracles spreads, millions of people – and eventually billions of people – may find themselves compelled to take sides.

“Whether Farrye is real or a fake, the Messiah or the anti-Christ, isn’t really the issue. The issue is how much power over mankind can he assume, how quickly can he assume it, and what will he do with that power when he’s got it?

“Beyond that, the question remains: ‘For whom is Farrye working: the forces of light and peace and good – or the forces of darkness and evil and war?’

“To put all this in perspective, ask yourself whether you’d like to live in a world guided by the Pope and Dr. Billy Graham – or by Osama bin Laden and North Korea’s Kim Jong Il? 

“It’s clear that Farrye would be right at home with two of these men. But which two? Farrye’s followers insist that his miracles are proof enough of his close relationship with God and the forces of good.

“And yet, a large and growing number of opponents remain unconvinced. They are steadfast in their belief that the miracles might just as easily be a kind of ‘satanic sleight of hand’ – the work of a false prophet.”

A murky background doesn’t help his cause. Even though official records show that Farr was born out of wedlock to Jasmine Farrye, in Bethlehem, on December 25, 1974, his past remains shrouded in mystery.

There is no record of him having ever attended school. His mother, whose occupation, if she had one, is unknown, disappeared in 1978.

And his father has never been identified.

Not only that,  Farrye flip-flops on the specifics,  sometimes saying he spent his childhood in London , sometimes saying he spent it in Jerusalem – and sometimes saying he grew up on another planet with his space alien dad.

He has, according to the Jerusalem Post, been more consistent in discussing his immediate purpose, which, he claims, is “to bring love into the world.”

To that end, he reportedly has assembled a tightly knit and highly symbolic group of 12 disciples – just as Jesus Christ did to help spread and perpetuate his ministry some 2,000 years ago.

Meanwhile, with the controversy over Farrye heating up in the Holy Land, a Western intelligence source confirms that Farrye is planning a world tour “to bring his message of love – or hate – to a global audience.”

It is a tour that, another insider says, “the CIA will watch very closely.”

“I want to believe that God has sent a Messiah to keep us from annihilating ourselves in World War 3,” the veteran CIA analyst told me. 

“But in my business you’re not allowed to hope and dream – you expect the worst and you prepare for the worst and let the chips fall where they may.”

READER ALERT

With Christmas 70 days away and counting,  attorneys for the constitional watchdog group The Rutherford Institute are preparing to deal with the annual onslaught of calls to their legal hotline regarding the censorship of Christmas celebrations. In years past, the Institute has been besieged by calls from parents and teachers alike complaining about schools changing their Christmas concerts to “winter holiday programs” and renaming Christmas “winter festival” or cancelling holiday celebrations altogether to avoid offending those who do not celebrate the various holidays.

Hoping to clear up confusion over the do’s and don’ts of celebrating Christmas in schools, workplaces and elsewhere, The Rutherford Institute has issued its “Twelve Rules of Christmas” guidelines.

Here they are, followed by sources who can help you fight for a sane and sensible Christmas in your hometown.

  1. Public school students’ written or spoken personal expressions concerning the religious significance of Christmas (e.g., T-shirts with the slogan, “Jesus Is the Reason for the Season”) may … read all 12 guidelines and learn more about protecting your rights at derekclontz.com
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