The following three paragraphs are from the preface of a book I'm currently rereading called One Answer to Cancer by Dr. William Donald Kelley, D.D.S., M.S. The preface was written by Greg Stirling of Vancouver, British Columbia in March, 1997.
I have believed for a long time that the American Medical
Complex and the Consumer Food and Beverage Industrial Complex have little
interest in the prevention of disease. It makes far better business sense to let
the population eat, drink and smoke to their heart’s content and then offer
seemingly high tech and expensive methods for cleaning up the aftermath. In the
United States, the food industry alone generates 500 billion dollars in sales:
Bacon, eggs, milk, fast food franchises, soft drinks, fried food, dead food,
overcooked food, sweets, treats and canned goods. We have gotten away from
simple diets and become human garbage disposals. Sixty percent of the American
public is overweight. Clearly the large food conglomerates are successfully
marketing to an oblivious public. After feeding your body with dead and
processed foods for 20, 30, 40 or more years, things begin to run less
perfectly. We have overlooked the processing energy required to digest bacon and
eggs each morning, that steak in the evening and the cocktails in between. The
result is the current health crisis where one in three will have cancer in their
lifetimes — not to mention heart disease.
But instead of educating the public on how our bodies function
best, the medical establishment chooses instead to clean out those arteries with
drugs and catheters, perform by-pass surgery or cut the problem out (or off)
altogether. To be fair, the American medical community has done some wonderful
things and made outstanding progress in the last 45 years. But it is simply not
in their best interest to prevent disease. They are in the business of treating
disease. This is where the money is: Surgery, MRI, radiation, chemotherapy,
research and examinations. The doctors don’t want a disease-fee society any more
than lawyers want a perfectly honest one.
Just enough to make you think, huh?
You can read the entire book here: http://www.drkelley.com/CANLIVER55.html
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