Questions modern medicine hasn't finished answering.
Each discussion lays out the case for, the case against, and what to watch — without pretending the matter is settled when it isn't.
Is cancer caused by parasites?
A century-old fringe claim, revived by ivermectin and fenbendazole anecdotes — and a handful of papers nobody can quite ignore.
Is cancer a metabolic disease, not a genetic one?
Thomas Seyfried argues that mitochondrial damage — not DNA mutation — drives cancer. If he's right, ketogenic diets and glucose restriction become front-line therapy.
Does sugar feed cancer?
Oncologists routinely tell patients 'sugar doesn't matter.' PET scans — which find tumors by their glucose appetite — say otherwise.
Did Linus Pauling discover a vitamin C cure that medicine ignored?
Two-time Nobel laureate Linus Pauling claimed IV vitamin C extended terminal cancer survival. The Mayo Clinic crushed the idea — using oral pills.
Is Alzheimer's an infection?
After decades of failed amyloid drugs, a growing chorus argues that herpes simplex, P. gingivalis, and chronic infection — not plaques — drive dementia.
Does fluoride harden the pineal gland?
The pineal accumulates more fluoride than bone. Whether that matters for sleep, intuition, or melatonin — that's where it gets interesting.
Is sun avoidance killing more people than skin cancer?
Swedish data shows women who avoid the sun die at the same rate as smokers. Vitamin D, nitric oxide, melatonin — the sun does more than tan.
Germ theory or terrain theory — was Pasteur wrong?
Antoine Béchamp argued microbes don't cause disease — terrain does. The microbiome revolution is making the argument feel less crazy than it sounds.
Can a single dose of psilocybin cure end-of-life dread?
Hospice patients given one mushroom trip describe lasting peace at rates antidepressants can't match. The FDA has called it a breakthrough therapy.