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We've been fighting the war on cancer for almost four decades now, since President Richard M. Nixon officially launched it in 1971. It's time to admit that our efforts have often targeted the wrong enemies and used the wrong weapons. Throughout the industrial world, the war on cancer remains focused on commercially fueled efforts to develop drugs and technologies that can find and
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that can find and treat the disease -- to the tune of more than $100 billion a year in the United States alone. Meanwhile, the struggle basically ignores most of the things known to cause cancer, such as tobacco, radiation, sunlight, benzene, asbestos, solvents, and some drugs. Even now, cancer-causing agents such as gasoline exhaust, pesticides and air pollutants are simply deemed the price of progress. Americans in their 20s today carry around in their bodies levels of chemicals that can impair their ability to produce healthy children -- and increase the chances that those children will develop cancer . . .
Although glucaric acid has benefits for men, particularly in the prevention
of prostrate cancer, I consider calcium D-glucarate an essential part of my
women's line of supplements. The compound can play a critical role in total
protection against (1) diseases caused by excess estrogen, (2) xenobiotics,
which are pollutants or chemicals not produced naturally by the body (an
antibiotic is an example of an xenobiotic), and (3) fat-soluble toxins, which
are toxic compounds stored in body fat. There is plenty of solid science to
support the effectiveness and, consequently, the endorsement of calcium
D-glucarate in the areas of cancer prevention and treatment . . .
As backyard vegetable gardens become more common, environmental
officials and scientists are warning homeowners that there may be lead in
the soil. Flakes of lead paint from old homes often create contamination
around houses that vegetables can take up. Remnants of leaded gasoline
might also be in the soil near busy roads. While the problem is pervasive in
urban areas, suburban homes that were built near apple orchards are also
at risk, because lead arsenate was once used regularly as a pesticide. Soil
around homes can contain everything from arsenic to motor oil, but lead is
one of the most common contaminants, and to children, one of the most
dangerous. Even tiny amounts of lead in the blood can cause learning
disabilities, behavioral problems, high blood pressure, and memory loss . . .