Forbidden Cures
By Ken Adachi, (E-mail)http://educate-yourself.org/fc/
Introduction & Overview
There are a number of alternative healing therapies that work so welland cost so little (compared to conventional treatment), that
Organized Medicine
, the
Food & Drug Administratio
n, and theiroverlords in the
Pharmaceutical Industry
(The Big Three) wouldrather the public not know about them. The reason is obvious:Alternative, non-toxic therapies represent a potential loss of billions of dollars to allopathic (drug) medicine and drug companies. The Big Three have collectively engaged in a
medical conspiracy
forthe better part of 70 years to influence legislative bodies on both thestate and federal level
to create regulations that promote the use of drug medicine while simultaneously creating restrictive, controllingmechanisms
(licencing, government approval, etc) designed to limitand stifle the availability of non-drug, alternative modalities. Theconspiracy to limit and eliminate competition from non-drug therapiesbegan with the
Flexner Report
of
1910
.
Abraham Flexner
was engaged by
John D. Rockefeller
to runaround the country and 'evaluate' the effectiveness of therapies taughtin medical schools and other institutions of the healing arts. Rockefellerwanted to dominate control over petrolem, petrochemicals, andpharmaceuticals (which are derived from 'coal tars' or crude oil). Hearranged for his company,
Standard Oil of New Jersey
to obtain acontrolling interest in a huge German drug cartel called
I. G. Farben
.He pulled in his stronger competitors like
Andrew Carnegie
and
JPMorgan
as partners, while making other, less powerful players,stockholders in Standard Oil. Those who would not come into the fold"were crushed" according to a Rockefeller biographer (W. Hoffman,
David: Report on a Rockefeller
{New York:Lyle Stuart, Inc., 1971}page24.) The report Flexner submitted to The
Carnegie Foundation
was titled"Medical Education in the United States and Canada". Page 22 of thereport said: "the privileges of the medical school can
no longer beopen to casual strollers
from the highway. It is necessary to install a
doorkeeper
who will, by critical scrutiny, ascertain the fitness of theapplicant, a necessity suggested, in the first place, but considerationfor the candidate, whose time and talents will serve him better in someother vocation, if he be unfit for this, and in the second, by