DECIPHERING CANCER'S CELLULAR RIDDLE
Biophysicist who cured himself is now helping others to heal
by Teresa Tsalaky
David Walker wanted to live long enough to see his
children graduate from high school. He asked his oncologist if he’d make it
that long. The doctor hung his head and said Walker had no more than three to
five years before the colon cancer would take his life.
Nearly a decade later, Walker is cancer free.
Thanks to his training as a biophysicist, he was able to decipher a
biochemical riddle that enabled him to cure himself. He created a treatment
protocol that consists of herbs, enzymes, phytonutrients, detoxification and a
bio-resonance therapy that recharges depleted energy in cells. He then shared
his knowledge, helping hundreds of other cancer patients eliminate the
disease.
In 2001, the Federal Trade Commission and
Washington State attorney general sued to stop him. A government investigator
reviewed Walker’s records and reported that 14 percent of the people using
his protocol had died. The report did not include the mortality rate over the
same period of time for cancer patients who undergo the approved cancer
therapies: radiation and chemotherapy. That rate is 96 percent.
When the court case ended in 2002, Walker had
become one of thousands of individuals and companies whose effective,
alternative treatments have been stifled.
THE TREATMENT THAT DIDN'T WORK
Walker’s story begins on March 6, 1994 – the
day he had surgery for a ruptured appendix. Surgeons discovered advanced
cancer and removed a colon tumor larger than a grapefruit. The doctor gave
Walker little hope of living beyond five years and prescribed chemotherapy.
Friends and relatives began sending him
alternative health products and books about cancer. They suggested he use
various non-allopathic treatments. But Walker would do nothing of the sort.
"I entered in this treatment of surgery and
chemotherapy with only one thing in mind: to follow doctor’s orders and
dedicate myself to this schedule and treatment," he said. "My
thoughts were that medicine today is the best ever, and if I’m going to beat
this, I’m doing all traditional approaches."
Then he discovered the side effects of
"traditional" approaches. The surgery left him unable to fully use
his left leg. Repairing the damage required six months of physical therapy.
The chemo was worse. It caused open sores in his mouth, and his skin began
deteriorating. When he made a fist, then opened his hand, it bled from every
crack. He could pull the skin off his hands in layers.
"After seven months of chemotherapy, my
doctor sent me home, saying the side effects are too severe and that maybe we
can try again in three months," Walker recalled. "I never returned.
During that three months of detoxing from the chemo, I knew I would rather die
sooner with dignity and quality of life than go through the chemical poisoning
again."
That’s when he empowered himself. If the experts
didn’t have the tools to cure him, he would try to find those tools himself.
"When I sat and thought about it, I tried to
understand what was killing me," he said.
He searched the Internet and watched University of Washington Medical School
videos. He researched nutrients, blood oxygen, cellular energy and cellular
communication. With a doctoral degree in biophysics, with minors in
microbiology and biochemistry, he had the knowledge to understand the research
reports and scientific data.
He said he discovered nothing new. He simply put
what is already known to use to reverse the process that leads to cancer.
"I just found some keys and unlocked some
doors of knowledge," he said.
REPLACING THE CELL CYCLE'S MISSING DOMINOS
In layman’s terms, here’s the information that
Walker used to come up with the cancer treatment protocol that saved his life:
Every day, billions of cells in your body are
damaged and discarded, and billions more new, healthy cells take their place
in an endless cycle of cell regeneration. The new ones are created by the
cells subdividing.
Cells contain energy measured in millivolts. A
healthy cell contains between 70 and 90 millivolts of energy. When a free
radical attaches to a cell, its energy drops to 15 millivolts. (Free radicals
punch holes in cell membranes and damage DNA and enzyme systems. Some free
radicals are created when the immune system does its battles; others come from
pollutants in our food, water and air.)
The cell’s DNA and RNA orchestrate the process
of cell regeneration. The DNA in each cell has something called a telemid
strand, which becomes dormant when a cell loses energy. As a result, the cell
mutates.
The P53 gene, which is in charge of destroying
mutated cells, needs more than 15 milli-volts to do its job. So when the
cell’s energy drops, damaged and mutated cells are no longer destroyed.
But the MYG gene – the one in charge of cell
subdivision – doesn’t need much energy to do its job. Even at 15
millivolts or less, it keeps dividing the cells – even the mutated ones that
were supposed to be destroyed.
This, Walker says, is how cancer gets started and
mutates. And this is why Walker’s protocol includes re-energizing the cells.
Walker also learned in his research that cancer
cells have high toxin counts, and that people with cancer have low blood
oxygen levels and their immune systems’ natural killer cells have been
depleted.
He learned that certain antigens (substances that
cause the formation of an antibody or elicit a cellular response) exist in
high counts in cancer cells, and certain enzymes can keep these antigens at
bay. When these enzymes are depleted, cellular communication fails.
All of this contributes to the mutated cells growing out of control. And
that’s called malignancy.
Walker compares the cycle of cell regeneration to
a set of dominos: "If you took 40 dominos and stood them up in a circle,
a free radical attachment represents a removed domino. If the P53 gene can’t
fire, remove another domino. Take out a couple more failed-communication
dominos, and your cell won’t be regenerated as a healthy cell, only a
mutated mass."
He said he has identified six parts of the
cell-regeneration cycle that have failed in all cases of cancer, as well as in
more than 200 other diseases and conditions.
The trick to stopping cancer, therefore, is to
replace the six dominos so that the cells can operate properly, allowing the
body to heal itself.
And so Walker set out to find the products that
would replace the missing dominos.
He found the products, used them faithfully, and
he felt better and better. After two years, he worked up the courage to go
back to his doctor. The test results came back clear: Walker had no cancer in
his body.
THE TREATMENT PROTOCOL
Walker’s treatment protocol includes numerous
possible supplements and procedures, ranging from colostrums to colonics, but
the following seven are the basic elements that Walker recommends for everyone
with cancer.
1. An herbal supplement called Bio-X that contains
bloodroot, galangal, yellow dock, licorice root, zinc chloride, protoplasm and
water treated with 12 enzymes.
2. Sodium micelle – an enzyme that increases
oxygen levels in the blood.
3. Glycoproteins and phytonutrients: Of the nine
glycoproteins essential for the cell to reproduce itself, only one is made by
the body, so food must provide the rest. Phytonutrients are nutrients
harvested from mature plants.
4. Diet modification: Walker recommends
eliminating red meat, margarine and white processed sugar and flour.
5. Detoxification: Many methods are available for
removing toxins from the body.
6. Inholtra: This over-the counter pain remedy is
recommended to eliminate the need for codeine or morphine.
7. Bio-resonance therapy: You’ll recall that
free-radical damage drops the cell’s charge to 15 millivolts and leads to
mutated cells dividing and multiplying. Several machines have been developed
that bring that charge back up to a healthy range through resonance. These
multi-wave oscillators put out a full-spectrum field of energy. Each cell and
system of the body picks out its optimal frequency and begins oscillating at
that rate. It’s similar to plucking a string of a violin and thereby
producing the same note in a nearby violin.
SUED FOR HELPING OTHERS HEAL
A few people heard about Walker’s success
eliminating his terminal cancer and called asking about his protocol. He gave
them the names of companies that sell the products he used. If they couldn’t
afford the products, Walker paid for them. He had survived a cancer death
sentence, and he wanted to help others do the same.
Word of mouth spread, and soon he had hundreds of
people calling for advice. He put up a Web site and began keeping records of
the people who came to him for help.
The success stories began accumulating, and he
decided it was time to set up clinical trials. He inquired whether the
National Institutes of Health would be interested in setting up a study and
also approached several clinics.
"I got laughed at, kicked out of clinics, and
most medical doctors refused to listen," Walker recalled.
Then a patient with breast cancer told her
physician she had used Walker’s regimen to eliminate her cancer.
"The doctor claimed to have lost $350,000,
because the breast cancer went away," said Walker, who believes the
doctor called the Federal Trade Commission, which, under pressure from the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration, sued him.
Then the FTC, which regulates e-commerce, decided
that Walker, through his Web site, was practicing medicine without a license.
The Washington State Attorney General’s Office filed 240 counts against him.
The state’s health department filed an Investigation for Unlicensed Practice
of Medicine, and the FDA accused Walker of selling illegal, over-the-counter
drugs. By then, he had helped hundreds of people, had records on about 500 on
them, and had gathered about 2,500 testimonials about the products he
recommended.
Most of the people he helped – 86 percent –
had survived their cancers, according to the government’s investigation of
his case.
The FTC decided it was Walker’s constitutional
right to review cancer patients’ medical records and offer treatment advice,
as long as he didn’t sell anything. But the attorney general’s office
pressed on with support from the FDA, prevailing on two counts. Even though
Walker won the other 238 counts, the judgment against him for the two counts
was $860,000. He lost his house and everything he owned.
In spite of the loss, it was worth it, Walker
said. "Material things are nothing anymore – that’s one lesson you
learn when facing the end. To me, they are just a convenience now. What it was
worth is I got to see all three of my kids graduate – something my
oncologist said could not happen."
After the court case ended, Walker was offered
several jobs with titles such as head of product development, director of
complementary and alternative medicine and university professor. But he had to
consider continuing his work helping people with cancer. During the previous
10 years, he had survived advanced cancer, helped hundreds of other people do
the same, and experienced government suppression of alternative treatments.
And, while visiting hospitals, he had seen the devastation that allopathic
cancer treatments cause.
"I visited the cancer wards or just sat
in the waiting room, watching people waiting their turn for poison injections,
irradiation and most of all, hope. Many times, I left or had to leave because
of the emotional impact, memories, and knowing each person I saw was putting
their trust in the slaughtering process," Walker said. He concluded that
oncologists – through no fault of their own – "are nothing more than
legally licensed executioners."
So he made a list of all the pros and cons of
continuing his work with cancer patients. One side of the list had two
entries: "government antagonist" and "self-destruction."
If he continued, he would be antagonizing the government that wanted to stop
him, and it could destroy him. The other side of the list had 500,002 entries,
including the 500,000 new cancer patients every year. The other two entries
were "my contributions to mankind" and "family – the future
of my children and grandchildren."
"Needless to say, it was not a difficult
decision," Walker said.
So he left Washington State and moved to Mexico,
where he’s again helping people who want an alternative treatment for
cancer.
People can either visit him in Mexico, or simply
send their medical records to him. Walker will evaluate the records and design
a treatment protocol. Walker’s consulting fee is $4,480, which is waived if
the person decides not to use the program outlined.
Walker provides a list of products and where they
can be purchased and leaves it up to the client to buy them. He said a
five-month supply for an average program could cost from $2,500 to $4,000.
That’s about one-thirtieth of what Walker spent for his chemotherapy and the
pills to counter the side effects.
Walker may be reached at 011-52-622-227-0291.
"My work will go on." Walker said.
"Too many people have been helped, and I’m not done."
(Teresa Tsalaky, an award-winning journalist,
publishes a daily newspaper in northern California. She may be reached at terannie@tolifeonline.com.
She is the author of "To Life: A Guide to Finding Your Path Back to
Health," available at www.tolifeonline.com.)

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