When 
          the FDA and the Texas Medical Board went after Dr. Stanislaw Burzynski 
          in 1996, Sgt. Rick Schiff, an 11 year veteran of the Tampa Police Dept. 
          testified before a US Congressional hearing on Feb. 29, 1996 about losing 
          one twin daughter to a highly malignant brain tumor that traveled throughout 
          her brain and spine. 
Doctors 
          said they had two options: take her home and let her die, or use massive 
          doses of chemo and radiation simultaneously. In either event she was 
          going to die—and very quickly. The Schiffs agreed to the therapy. 
          Six months later, she was still alive—and still dying of cancer. 
          Schiff and his wife began digging for alternatives. They found Dr. Stanislaw 
          Burzynski. 
Eighteen 
          months later, after being treated by Dr. Burzynski, she was still alive—and 
          she was cancer free. A new tumor showed up. Against the advise of their 
          local oncologist who insisted Burzynski's treatment failed, they put 
          her back on Burzynski's treatment. In 9 weeks, the tumor was completely 
          gone. Schiff's daughter died in July, 1995 of neurological necrosis. 
          
Her 
          brain simply fell apart from the prolonged use of radiation. The autopsy 
          showed she was completely cancer-free. Out of 52 case of that disease—ever, 
          no one died cancer-free, just Chrissie Schiff. Schiff told Congress 
          that she didn't die of a terminal illness. She died, he said "...of 
          my inability to care for her properly. She died from bad advise. She 
          died because there is a government institution that disseminates false 
          information and is not looking out for the best interests of the people."
Those 
          who have crossed horns with the FDA over the years were quick to realize 
          that particular federal agency serves as a corrupt enforcer of both 
          Big Pharma and the American Medical Association. Both—Big Pharma 
          and the AMA—use campaign contributions to control politicians 
          into writing regulations that favor the agenda of Big Pharma, and stifle 
          medical doctor and medical research scientists who are too innovative 
          to make sure their discoveries don't harm the practice of treating disease 
          by eradicating the diseases from which the medical community earns its 
          livelihood. The way Big Pharma and the AMA talk about cancer research 
          you'd almost think they are serious about eradicating cancer. They are 
          serious about finding new, more effective treatments for cancer, and 
          for prolonging the life of cancer patients, but regardless of the medical 
          rhetoric, finding a real cure for cancer is not on the Christmas wish 
          of the AMA since treating cancer is big business. Curing cancer—particularly 
          as quickly and effectively as Burzynski's cancer gene therapy does—would 
          drain a large chunk of the massive amount of revenue received by cancer 
          treatment centers for chemotherapy and radiation treatment.
Big 
          Pharma, on the other hand, is working hard to find a pharmaceutical 
          "cure" for cancer, and have several drugs now which are used 
          to treat specific types of cancers. Today Big Pharma uses Zolinza 
          (to treat T-cell lymphoma), Xeloda (to treat metastatic breast 
          cancer and for colon cancer patients whose colon has already been removed), 
          and Avastin (used to treat kidney cancer, brain cancer and lung cancer—and 
          metastatic colon cancer but only when used with intravenous chemotherapy). 
          
However, 
          Dr. Stanislaw Burzynski, an internationally known cancer research physician 
          was one of the early, and most successful, pioneers of cancer gene research. 
          Burzynski is credited with the discovery of the molecular switch that 
          allows him to turn off cancer cells without destroying normal cells. 
          Unlike Big Pharma, however, Dr. Burzynski discovered that killing cancer 
          is not a "one size fits all" treatment. For example, the cancer 
          drugs noted above were created by Big Pharma to treat very specific 
          types of cancer, suggesting the FDA believes that these drugs will not 
          work on other types of cancer, so under FDA protocol, they are used 
          only to treat the types of cancers for which the FDA has defined them 
          to be prescribed.
Dr. 
          Julian Whitaker, MD, of the Whitaker Wellness Institute has 
          examined Burzynski's case studies and the findings of the National Cancer 
          institute with respect to those case histories. He is on the record 
          as saying: "It was obvious to me that Dr. Burzynski had made 
          the most important discovery in cancer treatment—ever! It's what 
          we have been looking for." 
Burzynski 
          is a native of Poland. He attended Lublin Medical University 
          where he graduated first in his class on Feb. 18, 1967—at 24 years 
          of age. He received his Ph.D in biochemistry the following year. While 
          working towards his biochemistry Ph.D, Burzynski made a profound discovery—a 
          string of peptides in human blood and urine that had never been discovered 
          in biomedical research. As he continued his research, Dr. Burzynski 
          also discovered that people with cancer lacked these peptides in both 
          their blood and urine, while those who are cancer-free have an abundance 
          of them. Whitaker viewed that discovery as being similar to waking up 
          one morning and discovering a whole bunch of islands just off the coast 
          of Miami, Florida. His discovery has led to a branch of medicine in 
          what is now known as personalized cancer gene therapy.
Under 
          the Burzynski protocol, the approved gene therapy drugs are customized 
          based on the molecular characteristic of that patient's genes and the 
          cancer itself. While the medical community today is just beginning to 
          explore this technology, Dr. Burzynski has been practicing it for almost 
          two decades—one of them in court fighting the FDA and the Texas 
          Medical Board. The Texas Medical Board has been trying 
          since 1986 to revoke Burzynski's medical license for, I guess, curing 
          cancer instead of just treating it like the rest of the medical community. 
          
His 
          clinic performs a molecular cancer genome on the patient. From the results, 
          they create a molecular profile to identify which genes are allowing 
          cancer to grow in the patient's body. Based on the data received, Burzynski 
          prescribes the best personalized combination of drugs from a wide array 
          of FDA approved gene-targeted medications providing his patient with 
          a uniquely-individualized treatment. 
The 
          patient in the primary video (above), Chris Onuekwuski, a geo-tech engineer 
          who lives in Austin, TX. He had colon cancer. Based on the type of cancer 
          he had, and the fact that he refused to have surgery or chemotherapy, 
          none of these drugs were FDA-approved to treat his cancer. But, based 
          on Onuekwuski's genetic markers, the computer model picked those drugs 
          to kill his cancer in 2007. In less than three months after he began 
          personalized gene-targeted cancer therapy, Chris Onuekwuski was cancer-free. 
          The MD Anderson Cancer Center told him that without colon surgery, 
          he was going to die.
After 
          a ten year court battle that ended in the Texas Supreme Court in 1996 
          that resulted in a "not guilty" verdict for Dr. Burzynski 
          the Texas Medical Board, pressured by the FDA and the AMA, 
          is back for another try. 
The 
          Texas Medical Board has scheduled a new hearing to revoke Burzynski's 
          medical license. If it succeeds it will, very likely, result in Antineoplaston 
          not gaining FDA approval. This, of course, will set personalized gene 
          therapy back another decade. If it's not approved, you can bet that 
          once Burzynski's patent-rights to Antineoplaston expire, Big 
          Pharma will grab the patent rights and claim they have discovered a 
          universal cancer cure—that only the elite and the favored can 
          afford.
The 
          FDA fought to destroy the herbal cancer cure "discovered" 
          by a horse on John Hoxsey's farm in Illinois around 1890, managing to 
          outlaw the Hoxsey cancer cure in the United States in 1968. They are 
          now knee deep in their second battle to revoke Dr. Burzynski's medical 
          license for no other reason than his success in curing cancer using 
          personalized gene therapy. The FDA insists it's because he is using 
          non-FDA approved gene therapy drugs. What they mean is that he is not 
          using them to target the types of cancer they approved the drug for. 
          He is using them, very successfully, to kill the cancers killing his 
          patients through personalized cancer gene therapy that matches specific 
          drugs with the genetic makeup of the specific cancer cells attacking 
          a specific patient.
Burzynski 
          knows its because one of his patients, Chris Onuekwuski, declined the 
          colon surgery recommended by the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer 
          Center. He was told the surgery was the only thing that would prolong 
          his life. Onuekwuski told a physician's assistant from the MD Anderson 
          Center that the Burzynski Clinic would use gene therapy to treat his 
          cancer. Onuekwuski said that when he told the PA that "...everything 
          went quiet. You could hear a pin drop. And that was it. So, I said, 
          forget MD Anderson."
Burzynski 
          won his original ten year fight against the Texas Medical Board, 
          being found not guilty by the Texas Supreme Court. Next April the Medical 
          Board will try again to pull his medical license for using a host of 
          gene therapy drugs in ways not approved by the FDA—in particular, 
          the use of non-approved drug—a substitute for his non-FDA approved 
          Antineoplaston—by using the FDA-approved drug, Pheylbutyraten 
          (also known as PB), for it. Pheylbutyraten is FDA-approved 
          for a specific type of leukemia, but it's not FDA-approved for colon 
          cancer. Nor were any of the other gene therapy drugs Burzynski used 
          to cure Oruekwuski's colon cancer. They were prescribed based entirely 
          on Oruekwuski's genetic markers.
Richard 
          Jaffe, the defense lawyer for the Burzynski Clinic, said that cancer 
          establishment's idea is that "...once we tell you that you 
          are going to die, you have to die. You can't do anything else. When 
          you have 550 thousand people who are dying of a disease every year, 
          why should the cancer-chemotherapist tell you there's nothing more you 
          can do? Why shouldn't that be your choice rather than the cancer establishment? 
          And that's really what's involved in this case."
In 
          July, 2006 Bettye White, who had previously been diagnosed with Merkle 
          cell cancer at the University of Tennessee Medical Center, 
          and who had received chemotherapy without lasting results, was told 
          by Dr. Eric Carlson, MD, the head of Oncology at the Medical Center 
          she needed another chemotherapeutic treatment for her recurring Merkle 
          cell cancer. At that time, she and her husband did some research on 
          the Internet and found Dr. Burzynski's clinic in Houston.
After 
          building a a molecular cancer genome on Mrs. Wright, Burzynski prescribed 
          Sutent, a gene-targeted cancer medicine that is FDA approved 
          for kidney cancer, stomach cancer and some forms of pancreatic cancer. 
          But not Merkle cell throat cancer. Along with Sutent, the protocol also 
          added PB. When the Wright's returned to Dr. Carlson's office for their 
          post-treatment follow-up visit, all of the tumors under Bettye Wright's 
          chin and in her throat were gone.
Carlson's 
          view of Dr. Burzynski? "I think he's out of the box, and that's 
          what Mrs. Wright needed. She needed some fresh ideas, and that's what 
          has resulted in her success. Someone took a chance and applied an off-label 
          use to a medication that is used everyday in our cancer center, but 
          not in this application and it has shown some lasting benefits."
Someone 
          "took a chance?" Meaning, even though the computer 
          molecular cancer genome indicated the best chance to save the lives, 
          and cure the cancers that were killing people like Bettye White and 
          Chris Onuekwuski and scores of other gene therapy patients who found 
          the Burzynski Clinic, was the off-label use of FDA-approved 
          cancer therapy drugs—simply because the FDA did not prescribe 
          them for the types of cancer they were used to cure, it became an offense 
          justifying the revocation of a trained physician's medical license—for 
          saving lives? If that's the case, it is time to get rid of the FDA. 
          Now. That needs to be a pledge made by each and every GOP candidate 
          for President. And, Congress needs to make the same pledge—and 
          carry through on it.
Has 
          science in the United States returned to the days of Copernicus and 
          Christopher Columbus where innovation—scientifically-correct innovation—is 
          punished and mediocrity is both protected and rewarded? When the medical 
          bureaucracy becomes more powerful than the people it's time for the 
          people, using whatever legal, constitutional forced is necessary, to 
          rid themselves of the bureaucracy. 
"This 
          stuff," Dr. Carlson said, "is not taught to you in medical 
          school. The medical curriculum we all go through is traditional and 
          very vanilla. And they don't teach you this level of thinking. It goes 
          one step beyond."
Burzynski's 
          lawyer, Richard Jaffe said, "What we know is that ten years 
          from now there will be...multi-agent gene-targeted therapy. There's 
          going to be that. Everyone's going to get genetic testing, but that's 
          ten years down the road." Ten years too late for hundreds 
          of thousands of people who will needlessly die from cancers that can 
          easily be cured today but for an archaic medical monitoring system that 
          is so full of itself because it possesses the self-empowered authority 
          to deny lifesaving medical care because the princes of the medical care 
          industry are content with an outdated status quo that allows them to 
          play God. 

 
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