41 Comments
User's avatar
The Real Dr. Steven Horvitz's avatar

For someone who prescribed meds occasionally there is definitely a shortage of certain treatments.

Unfortunately I don’t see this ending anything soon so while you should stockpile certain necessary treatments if u can, just in case, perhaps work on getting healthier and no longer needing the medications as treatments. It’s not as difficult as you think.

I know, traditional healthcare tells u that u have a chronic irreversible condition that will need medications forever, but, that is not necessarily true. Find a doc who thinks root cause and helps u heal your body and will then be a de-prescriber and give you your life and your health back.

Expand full comment
Moriarty's avatar

Pinning this one for sheer quality and insight (as usual from you !)

Expand full comment
Jbonnell's avatar

Good stuff. I was not aware of the cancer drug shortages and this may explain why many medical professionals are choosing not to diagnose cancers or to delay diagnostic tests.

I do wish there was a way we could contribute individual amounts to Substack writers, I just can't afford to subsidize a dozen people at $70 a year, but I could easily do it for, say, $25-$30.

Expand full comment
Moriarty's avatar

I hate "shilling" so I abstain of inserting this in every substack I write, but people can use KoFi as a one time thing, the amount is up to the person it goes from 1 to whatever. In case people didn't know -> https://ko-fi.com/thingshidden

To be clear support is appreciated but by no means should ever feel obligatory, to anyone reading this at any point.

On Substack itself I don't know if they introduce a new way to do, so now it is either yearly or monthly.

On the subject of cancer, there is also the bias of many, many healthcare worker on NOT diagnosing certain conditions right now because it will become even more evident the connection of mRNA vaccine -> pathology (you can find them openly talking about on social media under certain #, #medtwitter sometimes is one of them.

Expand full comment
Kirsten's avatar

Kofi works great. And it makes you feel happy with little balloons and confetti after you donate. 😄

Expand full comment
Moriarty's avatar

Thank you ! I didn’t know it had balloons and confetti when you donated lol, I guess that is one way to visually reward people haha.

Expand full comment
Kirsten's avatar

Yeah, usually those things don't affect me. But kofi does it in a cute happy way that it's a nice thing (for me anyway).

Expand full comment
Jeanne Moy's avatar

A dear unvaccinated friend of mine has metastatic cancer diagnosed in Feb this year. They are doing standard care including an immunologic drug. Through my online research I've discovered Dr. Thomas Seyfried (PhD - Boston College) who recommends low carb /keto diet as much as possible and fenbendazole - repurposed vet drug. ("Recommends" in the YouTube acceptable manner as saying if I had cancer I would do / take this). So my friend is working on low carb - hard as chemo raises blood sugar - or at least the steroids do and when he is sick from chemo, he craves crackers and cares less about the diet, and recently started fenbenadole along with berberine, turmeric, vit D, vit K2,, Vit C, Zinc, "Spike detox" from Wellness co which has nattokinase, green tea extract, dandelion root and black cumin seed. (Dr. Seyfried also recommends hyperbolic oxygen chamber. He has many YouTube /Rumble videos and Joe Tippens on Fenbenzadole and there is also a fenbenzadole substack. Friend is doing OK - has a metastatic tumor in his neck which he can feel getting smaller very slowly. Not sure what is helping:) He was on cisplatnium for chemo but there is a shortage so saving for the kids and changed him to oxyplatinum. I'm hoping he will take a break from chemo and just go with diet and supplements / fenbenzadole for a while to get stronger and stay away from poison for awhile. If you have any recommendations John Paul i'm listening:)

Expand full comment
Moriarty's avatar

Sorry to hear about your friend, but you mostly covered all the “things” I would suggest to her. My only additions since she is adhering to ketogenic diet is adding BHB (exogenous ketones) to further enhance the effects of ketones and the diet in her body, and definitely adding either NAC or Liposomal Glutathione+Glycine and Serrapeptase with the Nattokinase. And selenium is a must too. Otherwise these, I would have to go “looking” and research more, cancer has so many contradictions it makes really hard to make proper sense and being sure sometimes. I wish your friend the best of luck.

Expand full comment
Jeanne Moy's avatar

Thanks! He is taking selenium - part of the Wellness "Spike Support" - seems everything in that is anti-cancer as well as attempting to detox the effects of spike. I'll look at the others too:) Using organic coconut oil which I think has ketones though will check that - have heard of the exogenous ketones in a product I've seen at the grocery store. Fortunately there are many Keto friendly products available which are helpful in meal planning. Have learned a lot from your Substack:)

Expand full comment
Faith's avatar

Have you checked out using Paw Paw for cancer yet? I read about it and suggested it to a friend with metastatic ca several months ago. She is also taking Essiac and is doing great!

Expand full comment
Jeanne Moy's avatar

I will look into those. Another one I've heard is IP6 (Inositol Hexaphosphate) & Inositol and I did order some but Amazon lost the order and gave me a refund. Since he already is taking a boatload of supplements, I took it as a sign to wait and try late. Right now my friend is doing OK - very little cancer pain and mostly run down but all blood test are good presently. He will have a scan in a few weeks and if things look good I think he will take a break from Chemo to rebuild strength and go with the low carb protocol I mentioned above.

Expand full comment
Faith's avatar

Also, the metabolic approach is helpful as an adjunct but is giving mixed results. There are two problems with it. One is that it turns out that the assumption that all cancers can only metabolize glucose for energy is incorrect: a few can also use other sources, and, Two, is that most of the population these days is metabolically unhealthy and has elevated insulin and often insulun resistance. Higher than optimum blood sugars can be very difficult to get low enough to "starve" cancer cells. Especially because morning blood glucose is driven more by gluconeogenesis (in the liver) than the carbs consumed. This is because of insulin resistance in the liver, primarily because of fatty liver from fructose consumption, and also chronic inflammation ( for multiple reasons, including high BMI, and also consumption of a high Omega 6 seed oil —"vegetable oil"— diet).

Cancers must be "attacked" on multiple levels including cellular microvoltage, and the powerful psychological/belief system aspects.

Expand full comment
Jeanne Moy's avatar

Fortunately my friend was very healthy and active (swam laps for 30 min a day) before the diagnosis and was in better overall health then many patients. While his diet was not as good as it should be, it rarely contained foods cooked in vegetable oils or much processed food - though he did eat some. He is also a physician / researcher, with a specialty in the area of stem cells and had done some cancer work many years ago. He was one of the few doctors locally who spoke up against the Covid vaccine and supported the repurposed drug / early treatment protocols for covid. His State had informed him they were looking into his "misinformation during Covid" activities and threatened his license - the state dropped its review a few weeks ago. So this person has been under incredible stress for several years as well as has a family history of cancer. He was in such pain by the time of diagnosis that there was little time to do a deep dive into treatments - he really thought at the time he had only weeks to live and was primarily looking for pain relief while settling his affairs. The Covid years taught me not to trust the medical system so I went searching for other possibilities. It is only recently that my friend has come around to the idea that even stage 4 cancer can be successfully treated, or at least held at bay for many years if the right factors come together and also that his cancer pain is gone now - allows for time to think things through without the panic of imminent death - but yes, I wish it had been caught earlier when it would have been easier to take the time for research and avoid the chemo.

Yes - Dr. Seyfried mentions the ability of cancer cells to use glutamine as an energy source and the need to find ways to block this pathway.

Expand full comment
Faith's avatar

Tumor shrinkage under the influence of poison ("chemo") means very little. The "daughter", easy-to-kill cancer cells die off, shrinking the tumor on the scans without killing the resistant-or-immune-to-chemo dangerous "cancer stem cells" that mutate too rapidly to control with the vast majority of poison chemicals. Even if the scan looks great and 90% of the tumor disappears, it is meaningless because the body is being weakened and the immune system knocked out by the poison so the body loses its ability to actually clear the cancer. At some point the balance shifts in favor of the cancer mutations, the chemo drug "stops working", the immune system gets overwhelmed, and the tumor comes "roaring back" with a vengence. The doctors say, "Sorry! We tried" and send the patient home to die!

At all costs, the immune system must be protected or the "battle" might be won but the "war" will be lost. Frequent dosing with vitamin C will help, "to bowel tolerance", as do other supplements: selenium, very high dose vitamin D, iodine, etc.

But it will be better not to poison the body in the first place, particularly if that chemo does not KILL the specific type of stem cell responsible for that specific cancer.

Unless some of the tumors start disappearing 100%, it is NOT WORKING! Do not be fooled by ,"Oh look, they are shrinking!"!

Expand full comment
Moriarty's avatar

The best way to describe chemo is "we are trying to kill the cancer before we kill you".

Chemo is overwhelmingly a scam, but this topic is too hard for most people to accept.

"Frequent dosing with vitamin C will help, "to bowel tolerance", as do other supplements: selenium, very high dose vitamin D, iodine, etc."

Wish other people accept this, alas here we are.

Expand full comment
Frances's avatar

The oncologist told a close relative not to use any vit. supplements esp. antioxidants as they could interfere with the chemo.

Expand full comment
Moriarty's avatar

Depends on the cancer and the metabolism the cancer has, you can find evidence for both sides of the argument, using or not using supplements. Each person should evaluate their options and choose, very gray area.

Expand full comment
AmericanVeteran's avatar

I have read that Fenbendazole and Ivermectin both work to remove all different kinds of of cancers. Pubmed has lots of info there about studies and such. I have livestock, so I keep it on hand at all times and I found a dosage chart for covid once upon a time for paste to human consumption.

My friend had stage 4 ovarian cancer. I suggested that she take Fenben and to do her own research. She bought fenben from Amazon - its a dog dosage - and with in 30 days her CA125 blood test went from high numbers to low numbers and her Dr. couldn't believe it! Joe Tippens has documented everything. Here are some articles to read about Fenben and cancer.

https://mycancerstory.rocks/author/joetippens/

https://healnavigator.com/treatments/fenbendazole-cancer-protocol/

https://baltimorepostexaminer.com/human-patients-are-given-fenbendazole-as-a-therapy-for-cancer/2022/10/15

Also, as far as the Antibiotic shortage goes, I purchased many online from calvetsupply.com to have on hand. I looked at the Jase Medical list, but found that CalVet was cheaper with the same quality and it is human grade. I know dosages and what to use each antibiotic for. I try not to use antibiotics in any of my animals or family because of resistance to these meds but they can be a lifesaver in some situations. I know that living a healthy, active lifestyle is first and foremost before medications.

I'm sorry, but I no longer trust doctors or hospitals so I have done enough research to know dosage and usage for each medication that I have. The covid scam has awakened me to a lot of information that I wished I would have known years ago.

Be Well Friends.

Expand full comment
Nancy's avatar

I didn't get the jab, but I still got cancer anyway. I do wonder if it was a trifecta of stress in my life (ending of my relationship), infection in my breast and acquiring Covid last May. Luckily I found the lump early and it's Stage 1, but the protocol is still chemo & surgery, and navigating the health care system in California is pretty scary. Not affected by shortages yet. Hopefully my treatment ends before any SHTF scenario.

Expand full comment
Moriarty's avatar

I often state "The jab is just absurdly faster", SARS-COV-2 can set off certain types of cancer, and without a doubt can accelerate many, but what you just describe fits perfectly a chain of events that could set off one. Ending a relationship is a very stressful event, infection in the breast can lead to tissue damage and the "accelerator" was the Covid infection.

Hope you are never affected by the shortages and glad you caught it early on, you will get rid of it I am sure. =) SHTF isn't a certainty though, just this continuous slow deterioration of many things =(.

All the best to you Nancy.

Expand full comment
Nancy's avatar

I also declined genetic testing. Cancer has been rare in my family tree, and based on your latest post, I think handing that data over is a bad idea right now.

Expand full comment
Moriarty's avatar

I am not one prone to conspiracies, but I also believe giving away genetic data right now is a bad idea before we get some decent legislation and privacy laws.

Expand full comment
Kirsten's avatar

Great post. I love that you were posting the receipts a year ago. Thanks for the heads up. I'm not even sure how to get antibiotics, I will think about that. If anyone has any ideas, please let me know. I have stocked up on other things.

So even mice are "spontaneously dying" after high dose transfection. I think we should tell Mark so he can add it to his next "dying suddenly".

I know five people fighting cancers for the past couple of years, one died. A lot of people or their spouses ill, in and out of the hospital, from this or that.

Expand full comment
Moriarty's avatar

You can legally import most drugs from overseas, if you don’t buy enough quantity to classify it as “wholesale”, a few boxes won’t be a problem, India pharmacies are usually the ones most people use.

High dosage of both mRNA and LNP by itself both can cause and accelerate morbidity

Expand full comment
Kirsten's avatar

Wonderful, thank you.

Expand full comment
Genevieve's avatar

https://drsyedhaider.com/

https://jasemedical.com/case

Both options for antibiotics. I used the former because I was an online “patient” for ivermectin previously.

Expand full comment
Kirsten's avatar

Thank you so much. 🙏💕 I was just going to take a chance on one I didn't know, but it's always best to get a reference.

Expand full comment
An Old Doc's avatar

Not simply shortages of drugs, but massive demand in oncology. A dear friend had a new onset of CLL & got the run-around for over 3 months! I found a fascinating clinical trial in Houston where she lives, and was able to get started. A precious oncologist (after delaying her for almost 2 months) said that they would not start treatment due to questions of med availability.

The endpoint of this entire fiasco is far off in the future, and I am not optimistic as to the general outcome. More mRNA products are on the way, and even without the spike-pathology, the base immunologic impact of this platform is most likely going to continue the fun & games.

Keep up the outstanding work (and I have several things I want to privately discuss via email).

Expand full comment
Moriarty's avatar

The cynic in me wants to believe the shortage is not merely on demand side, even though there has been increasing demand since late 2021,and it will continue to increase, but rather purposeful lower production so certain companies can push tailored, patented, expensive treatments, be they expensive inhibitors or the new genetic approach, gene specific, tailored to each individual anti-cancer therapies.

There is two particular Substack s that I wrote that I often refer to it myself, one talking about how the mRNA platform has a inherent Th17 response, highly inflammatory, overloading people with ROS from the moment you inject them, and the receptors that pick up man made mRNA, which I end with the argument mRNA as it currently finds itself, is unfixable.

The unfixable part of my observation is also shared by none other than one of the fathers of Moderna mRNA, Luigi Warren. I find it entertaining that one of the biggest and most vocal anti-mRNA vaccines person was the guy who basically created it. Lol, lmao even as the kids would say.

Thank you for the complement, and I did reply to your e-mail, let me know if my reply went through, if it didn’t I will send to both addresses you provided me.

Expand full comment
KC & the Sunshine's avatar

We healed Mom’s stage 4 lung cancer (“incurable”) using a 4 ingredient product called Black salve/bloodroot paste/Amazon paste *NOT affiliated with Amazon shopping!!! in about 28-30 days. Couldn’t have been easier! The product costs about $125/ jar in the US from TWO FEATHERS HEALING SALVE in AZ or far less from Alpha and Omega Labs in Ecuador. (Amazon Paste is from AlphaOmega Labs in Ecuador, also found @ alt cancer.net or .com)

There are loads of other brands of the same great stuff but I can ONLY vouch for these 2 as these are they only brands we’ve used.

It also removes other toxins, fixed badly throbbing, infected splinter overnight, and is

generally an all around wonderful thing to

have on hand. Game changer.

Expand full comment
Kirsten's avatar

Thanks for the heads up. I found the one from two feathers.

There are lots of different brands on amazon, which brand are you referring to?

Expand full comment
KC & the Sunshine's avatar

It’s called Amazon Paste— not on Amazon. It is the Ecuador place I mentioned— alt cancer.net or .com or alphaomega Labs

Expand full comment
Kirsten's avatar

Ooookay, thank you!. 😊💕

Expand full comment
Steven Athearn's avatar

Adam Gaertner is proposing a cancer protocol consisting of fenbendazole, ivermectin, ascorbic acid and sodium bicarbonate:

https://veryvirology.substack.com/p/curing-the-incurable-cancer

https://veryvirology.substack.com/p/curing-cancer-success

Expand full comment
Faith's avatar

"Burn, slash, poison": the three Modern Dark Ages approaches to cancer Tx. Brilliant: all three methods destroy one's immune system, which is the ONLY THING THAT CURES CANCER! Chemo can't cure cancer. Almost none of them kill cancer "stem cells", so it comes roaring back. Shrinking the tumor is irrelevant.

"Alternative" treatments to the Big Three have a MUCH better "track record" than those "Standard of Care" abominations!

Expand full comment
Faith's avatar

"Despite their undisputed success in decreasing COVID-19-associated hospitalizations and mortality . . . "

And you trust any research that starts off telling such a boldfaced LIE????

And then you quote CNN? When do THEY ever tell the truth????

Expand full comment
InfoHog's avatar

"throwing everything you think might work"

is apparently what this guy did, after someone else, who put together a protocol & achieving healing for himself, talked him through it. (changing intervals of fasting , very low calorie diet, and a bunch of supplements)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YzPrxku1x5Y

Expand full comment
Lookatit's avatar

Big Pharma poisons are the last thing you should take!

Expand full comment
Moriarty's avatar

Ok fight a nasty infection without antibiotics and come back telling me how it went .

Expand full comment
Lookatit's avatar

That’s it a drug.

Expand full comment