daveOS
Jedi
The Beautiful Truth
Learning of Judyth Vary Baker today under the sad news about "The Death of Martha Rose Crow" (in "What's on your mind") I discovered Judyth had been involved in cancer research (among many other things). This compelled me to finally watch a movie I've been meaning to get to in my Netflix instant queue called The Beautiful Truth
The movie "The Beautiful Truth" focuses on findings of Dr. Max Gerson that indicate diet can cure cancer. The Gerson Institute was founded by Dr. Gerson's daughter Charlotte and continues to afford avenues into the natural therapies they promote. It's all new to me at this moment, but the movie blew me away by its 'innocent as doves' expose' of corruption in high places.
As the movie opened up I was blown away to discover it was produced by folks in Haines, Alaska (a place near and dear to me by virtue of having lived there, with friends still living there today). The movie focuses on Garrett a 15-year old boy living in the Alaskan wilderness caretaking orphaned animals and the sensitivity he has to the balance of life therein. Amidst this circumstance and pondering diseases of the outside world Garrett stumbles onto the teachings of Dr. Gerson and the movie takes off on an adventure to verify the truth.
Incredibly the movie delves into water fluoridization, mercury tooth amalgams, The American Cancer Society, genetically engineered foods, and the host of ponerized politics that have orchestrated the health care mess we're in. In the most guileless approach to these topics I've encountered "The Beautiful Truth" lays bare the evil poisoning society to the bone while verifying the veracity of the Gerson Therapy.
While Wikipedia will tell you Dr. Max Gerson fled Germany as a German Jew back in 1933 it does not tell you that Dr. Gerson cured Albert Schweitzer and the rapport they had or how Dr. Gerson nearly died while working on his seminal book "A Cancer Therapy; Results of 50 Cases" and then discovered his manuscripts missing apparently stolen by his secretary on behalf of some sort of corporate espionage. Wikipedia won't tell you it took Dr. Gerson another year to heal and recreate his final book only to discover he was ill again poisoned by arsenic which killed him. Fortunately there's no stopping truth, and "The Beautiful Truth" helps make it bare.
Learning of Judyth Vary Baker today under the sad news about "The Death of Martha Rose Crow" (in "What's on your mind") I discovered Judyth had been involved in cancer research (among many other things). This compelled me to finally watch a movie I've been meaning to get to in my Netflix instant queue called The Beautiful Truth
The movie "The Beautiful Truth" focuses on findings of Dr. Max Gerson that indicate diet can cure cancer. The Gerson Institute was founded by Dr. Gerson's daughter Charlotte and continues to afford avenues into the natural therapies they promote. It's all new to me at this moment, but the movie blew me away by its 'innocent as doves' expose' of corruption in high places.
As the movie opened up I was blown away to discover it was produced by folks in Haines, Alaska (a place near and dear to me by virtue of having lived there, with friends still living there today). The movie focuses on Garrett a 15-year old boy living in the Alaskan wilderness caretaking orphaned animals and the sensitivity he has to the balance of life therein. Amidst this circumstance and pondering diseases of the outside world Garrett stumbles onto the teachings of Dr. Gerson and the movie takes off on an adventure to verify the truth.
Incredibly the movie delves into water fluoridization, mercury tooth amalgams, The American Cancer Society, genetically engineered foods, and the host of ponerized politics that have orchestrated the health care mess we're in. In the most guileless approach to these topics I've encountered "The Beautiful Truth" lays bare the evil poisoning society to the bone while verifying the veracity of the Gerson Therapy.
While Wikipedia will tell you Dr. Max Gerson fled Germany as a German Jew back in 1933 it does not tell you that Dr. Gerson cured Albert Schweitzer and the rapport they had or how Dr. Gerson nearly died while working on his seminal book "A Cancer Therapy; Results of 50 Cases" and then discovered his manuscripts missing apparently stolen by his secretary on behalf of some sort of corporate espionage. Wikipedia won't tell you it took Dr. Gerson another year to heal and recreate his final book only to discover he was ill again poisoned by arsenic which killed him. Fortunately there's no stopping truth, and "The Beautiful Truth" helps make it bare.