On the 6th day of September, 1924, Edgar Cayce gave a reading for a male 
                adult who was dealing with an advanced sarcoma, which the reading classified as 
                a bacilli in the blood. Along with recommending the Abrams machine to produce 
                the resonant bacilli frequency, or counter frequency if you will, 
                Edgar Cayce suggested the use of an herbal tincture blend as a blood 
                cleanser. 
                
                     Not far from Dayton, across the Indiana state line, lived a boisterous young man 
                by the name of Harry Hoxsey. When Harry heard about this herbal blend he decided 
                that someone should secure these ingredients and test out the concoction to see 
                just how good of a blood cleanser it was. After all, if it worked for 4695, then 
                it only stood to reason that it should work for others. As this was Harry's 
                idea, he decided that he would be that person, and that is what he did. Keep in 
                mind back then the term cancer was rarely mentioned, not because cellular 
                malignancy had a different label, but rather because cancer was not that common. 
                Anyway, Harry's motivation was two-fold. He would heal the sick of this 
                devastating and incurable disease, and along with that become rich and famous.
                
                 For the next 25 years Harry would travel the countryside touting his  
                miraculous blood cleanser which imparted unparalleled success. As the global 
                incidence of cancer continued to rise, so did Harry's notoriety.  (note: this 
                was back in the early half of the 1900's)
               
                    Ultimately Harry drew unto him a number of detractors. Some were envious of his 
                    astounding cure rate while others simply 'wanted a piece of the action. But 
                    Harry's secret formula was closely guarded and he cleverly masked it's original 
                    inception with an elaborate story of how the ingredients "were originally passed 
                    down to him by his grandfather. The story went something to the effect that his 
                    grandfather, who was a veterinarian, observed one of his horses, which happened 
                    to have a cancerous condition, and what the horse happened to be eating in the 
                    pasture. Notes were taken, and when the horse cured itself, the formula was 
                    derived. Of course logically, there's no way all of these herbs would have been 
                    growing in a single pasture, not to mention the illusive iodine herb, but most 
                    people, on up to today, believed Harry's story. It was something about an 
                    animal's intuitive ability for self-preservation that really stuck.
                
                
               
                 The Abrams machine has long gone out of production, but as Harry Hoxsey 
                     continues to demonstrate from his grave, the Cayce blood cleanser is, and can 
                     continue to be and effective tonic for alleviating the root cause of malignant 
                     cellular activity: blood toxicity. Individuals could start percolating this 
                     relatively simple herbal blend which could then be dispensed to those in either 
                     a predisposition (marker) state, or a cancerous state. If enough people 
                     benefited from it a homegrown industry could eventually replace the allopathic 
                     model. Conceivably this single idea could derail the trillion dollar cancer 
                     treatment industry, not only salvaging the health and well being of millions of 
                     people but potentially avoiding an almost certain economic collapse which will 
                     likely precipitate from the present belief system. Perhaps even more important, 
                     if a grass roots movement of this kind actually did demonstrate it's viability, 
                     no doubt it would become a model for addressing other health/ illness issues, as 
                     well as pave the way for future political, economic, and social reform. As I see 
                     it we're at the crossroads. We can either get our butts off the couch and into 
                     the lab, or we can have them handed to us in a sling. Of course there's always 
                     the option of the gazillionaire who is going to finance a facility to put this 
                     idea back in motion, but I don't think I want to wait around for that to happen. 
                     What's say we move this party forward and get on with the process of evolution.