After
a century of “modern” medical science, we still don’t
know the cause of cancer, heart disease, and many
other chronic diseases that kill millions of people
every year. The reason for this, in my view, is that
medical science refuses to recognise the role that
microbes (smaller than bacteria and larger than viruses)
play in these diseases.
Much of the fault lies in the dogma left over from
the nineteenth century by such scientific icons as
Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch, who are revered as
fathers of microbiology and bacteriology. At a time
when viruses, nanobacteria and astrobiology were unknown
and when “the germ theory of disease” was in its infancy,
both scientists held rigid views as to what was possible
and not possible in biology. And neither Pasteur nor
Koch could fathom the concept that living organisms
might arise from non-living sources.
Unfortunately, Pasteur (1822-1895) had no medical
training. He was consumed with fermentation experiments
and with proving “air germs” were the basis for human
disease, although he provided no explanation for the
origin of atmospheric germs or how life began on Earth.
Koch (1843-1910), who discovered the bacteria that
caused tuberculosis, was obsessed with classifying
microbes grown in the laboratory into exact species,
depending on their size, structure, physical, and
chemical properties. He insisted the species that
were created were pure and stable; and that species
were unable to change back and forth between each
other. According to Koch, each species of bacteria
produced a separate and distinct disease. Each germ
also had to originate from similar “parent” germs
– which reproduced by dividing in half by “binary
fission.”
Not every physician of that era believed all the pronouncements
of Pasteur and Koch. A few physician-scientists challenged
them because they knew what was often “proven” in
laboratory experiments might not always be applicable
to what was going on with bacteria hidden within the
human body.
Antoine Bechamp (1816-1908) was no slouch in the science
department and was well-known as a scientific rival
of the famous Pasteur. The Frenchman was not only
a Doctor of Medicine and Science, but at various times
was also Professor of Medical Chemistry and Pharmacology,
and Professor of Physics, Toxicology, and Biological
Chemistry. There is also some evidence that Pasteur
plagiarised much of Bechamp’s original research.
Pasteur, however, is credited in history with saving
the French beer and wine and silkworm industries,
and with pasteurisation and vaccine research. Bechamp,
despite his brilliance, was eventually eclipsed by
the younger man. The details of the scientific controversy
and plagiarism accusations are chronicled in E. Dougles
Hume’s book, Bechamp or Pasteur?: A Lost Chapter
in the History of Biology (1923), remarkably still
in print.
Bechamp had his own ideas concerning the origin of
life and the germ theory of disease. In animal and
plant cells he observed infinitesimal microscopic
“granulations” that he considered the incorruptible
elements of all life. After many laboratory experiments
and microscopic examinations of these granules, the
physician-scientist claimed these so-called “microzymas”
were capable of developing into common living organisms
that go by the name of bacteria.
In his view, Pasteur’s “air germs” had nothing to
do with the origin and appearance of these microzymas
in tissue. In fact, Bechamp wrote that Pasteur’s air
germs most likely derived from dying life-forms. Like
Folk a century later [see Part One of this article],
Bechamp found barely visible microzymas/bacteria in
chalk and limestone that he interpreted as survivor
life-forms of past ages. Although all the microzymes
looked similar, they varied in their chemical abilities.
Each tissue, or organ, or gland had microzymas that
differed from each other.
Hume claims Bechamp and his colleagues showed these
tiny microzymas were, in reality, “organised ferments”
with the potential to develop into bacteria. In this
development, they passed through certain intermediary
stages. Some of these intermediate bacterial stages
were regarded by people like Koch as different species,
but to Bechamp they were all related and derived from
microzymas. Adding more heresy to Pasteur’s dogma,
Bechamp wrote that without oxygen, microzymas do not
die – they go into a state of rest. Bechamp preached,
“Every living being has arisen from the microzymas,
and every living being is reducible to the microzymas.”
Like Bechamp, Henry Charlton Bastian’s (1837-1915)
studies investigating the origin of life were closely
tied into his understanding of the origin of infectious
disease. He was also the last of the great scientists
to uphold the theory of “spontaneous regeneration”,
by concluding that life could come from non-life.
Like Reich a century later, he argued that microorganisms
were produced as by-products of the disease process,
not as opportunistic infections, but from degenerating
tissue by a process Bastian termed “heterogenesis.”
Heterogenesis is the idea that living organisms can
arise without parents from organic starting materials
– an idea certainly not in accord with Pasteur and
Koch.
Bechamp and Bastian’s research was also a threat to
the followers of Charles Darwin (1809-1882), whose
evolution theories revolutionalised science. Like
Pasteur, Darwin was not a medical doctor and had no
training in human pathology. And while doctors like
Bechamp and Bastian and others were discovering new
forms of life emanating from human diseased tissue
and from the bowels of limestone, Pasteur, Koch and
the Darwinians simply disregarded all this in favour
of their own research and pronouncements.
Bastian paid dearly for his unorthodoxy (and for some
well-publicised but failed experiments) and his once-famous
name is largely forgotten. Microbiologist and science
professor James Strick has recently revived interest
in Bastian’s books and research and his books on the
origin of life; and a six-volume set reprinting much
of his work has been recently published. Strick is
also the author of Sparks of Life (2000), which
chronicles the famous nineteenth century scientific
and bacteriologic debates over Darwinism and spontaneous
generation.
Pleomorphism
and the Classification of Bacteria
Koch, famous for his tuberculosis discoveries, was
rigid in his belief that a specific germ had only
one form (monomorphism). And he opposed all research
showing some germs had more than one form (pleomorphism)
and complex “life cycles.” Thus, from the very beginning
of bacteriology there was conflict between the monomorphists
and the pleomorphists, with the former totally overruling
the latter and dominating microbiology to this day.
In the attempt to “classify” bacteria as the lowest
forms of life known at that time, there was no consideration
given to any possible “connection” between the various
species of bacteria. The dogma was that a coccus remained
a coccus; a rod remained a rod; and there was no interplay
between them. There was no “crossing” from one species
to another, and the research of the pleomophists suggesting
otherwise was ignored.
When viruses were discovered they were made separate
from bacteria, although bacteria are also known to
be susceptible to viral infection. Viruses were put
in one box; bacteria in another. As a result, the
spectacular number of “filterable” pleomorphic microbial
forms that form a bridge between the “living” bacteria
and the “dead” viruses are still largely unstudied
and considered of no great importance in clinical
medicine.
Most doctors simply want to know the name of the microbe,
if any, cultured in the lab from their specimens;
and what antibiotics the germ is “sensitive” to. Thanks
to Pasteur, common “skin” bacteria like cocci and
bacilli are often viewed as suspicious “contaminants”
or “secondary invaders” or “opportunistic infections”
of no great importance as etiologic agents.
Koch’s postulates became dogma to prove that certain
bacteria cause disease, but the postulates did not
work very well for viruses. And even when “filterable”
pleomorphic bacteria were shown to cause disease and
Koch’s postulates were fulfilled, the research was
still generally ignored because such germs were not
considered “valid” life-forms.
As a result of all this dogma and rigidity, medical
thought was completely turned off to the possibility
cancer was caused by bacteria. But to the minds of
some medical heretics, these century-old scientific
beliefs were wrong, wrong, wrong.
Cancer
and the “Cancer Microbe”
As some scientists are finally realising, there is
a large realm of microbial life-forms that lie between
“bacteria” and “viruses.” It is this relatively uncharted
never-never land of microbiology that lies at the
heart of life, disease, cancer, death, regeneration,
and perhaps even immortality.
In the life of every researcher there is a person
or group of people to whom a great debt is owed. In
my scientific life as a practising dermatologist and
as a clinical researcher, there are four women who
are my icons in medical science. All four I knew personally
as valued friends, and each contributed greatly to
my understanding of the greatest mystery of medical
science: the origin and cause of cancer.
The combined reported research of Virginia Wuerthele-Caspe
Livingston (a physician), Eleanor Alexander-Jackson
(a microbiologist), Irene Diller (a cell cytologist),
and Florence Seibert (a chemist famous for developing
the TB skin test), is indeed a treasure-trove for
anyone seeking to learn about “the cancer microbe”
and the heretical microbiology of cancer. I wrote
about these now deceased women in my book, The
Cancer Microbe (1990), and I connected their cancer
research to Bechamp’s and Bastian’s discoveries in
the nineteenth century, as well as to Wilhelm Reich’s
condemned cancer and orgone research.
In 1950, Wuerthele-Caspe Livingston and Alexander-Jackson,
along with John A. Anderson (head of the Department
of Bacteriology at Rutgers), James Hillier (head of
electron microscopy at the RCA Victor Laboratories
at Princeton), Roy Allen (a cell histologist), and
Lawrence W. Smith (author of a well-known pathology
textbook used in medical colleges), all combined their
talents to write a paper entitled “Cultural Properties
and Pathogenicity Obtained from Various Proliferative
and Neoplastic [cancerous] Diseases,” published in
the December issue of The American Journal of the
Medical Sciences. The characteristics of the cancer
microbe in blood, tissue, and culture, were described
in detail; and the extreme pleomorphic nature of the
organism was revealed in photos taken with the electron
microscope at a magnification of 31,000X.
The cancer microbe (which she later called Progenitor
cryptocides) was filterable through a pore designed
to hold back bacteria. But in the filtrate were “virus-sized”
microbial forms, which grew in time to the size of
conventional bacteria. For the next two decades these
four women and their colleagues continued publishing
details about the microbiology of cancer. Livingston’s
two books, Cancer: A New Breakthrough (1972)
and The Conquest of Cancer (1984) are unfortunately
now out-of-print.
Livingston believed everyone carried cancer microbes
in their blood and tissues. And the microbe was essential
for life. In 1974, she discovered some cancer-associated
bacteria produced an HCG-like hormone – the human
choriogonadotropin hormone, which is an essential
hormone needed to start life in the womb. But she
also thought the microbe was the germ that did most
people in as they aged. The microbe was Mother Nature’s
built-in terminator to force old people off the planet
and to make room for new life on the planet.
At the time of her death in 1990, Livingston was widely
regarded among the cancer establishment as a quack.
Even though her research was published for three decades
in reputable medical journals, the American Cancer
Society still claims her “cancer microbe” does not
exist. An ACS-sponsored Internet web page states:
“One report on the bacteria Progenitor cryptocides,
which Dr. Livingston-Wheeler claimed caused cancer,
found that the bacteria does not exist but is actually
a mixture of several different types of bacteria which
Dr. Livingston-Wheeler labelled as one.” Who was the
author of the report claiming her microbe did not
exist? According to the ACS, the author was “anonymous.”
Over the past four decades I have tried to keep this
research alive by showing pleomorphic cancer bacteria
in human cancer and in certain other diseases of unknown
origin. For readers with Internet access, some of
my photos of cancer microbes are presented on the
web site of the on-line Journal of Independent
Medical Research (www.joimr.org); and abstracts
of my medical publications can be found on the National
Library of Medicine’s “PubMed” web site (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PubMed/).
Simply type in “A Cantwell + cancer bacteria”.
In my research I have observed germs grown in the
lab from cancerous tissue. Frequently they grow as
simple round cocci, or as a mixture of cocci and rod-shaped
bacilli, and rarely as streptococci. From diseases
like scleroderma, I have seen “old” cultures evolve
into peculiar and highly pleomorphic fungus-like “actinomycete”
organisms, or evolve into bacteria resembling tuberculosis-type
bacteria. Not infrequently, expert microbiologists
could not agree on what to name these pleomorphic
bacteria.
I have seen microbes change from one species to another,
depending on what they are fed in the laboratory –
staphylococcus germs that turn into rod-forms of corynebacteria
and back again to “pure” staphylococcus, depending
on the lab media for growth. But most importantly,
I have seen these bacteria in specially-stained (acid-fast
stain) tissue sections made from cancerous tissue,
indicating these microbes are not contaminants falling
out of the air. And decade after decade all cancer
microbe research remains forgotten, ignored, and overlooked
because physicians cannot conceive of such bacteria
as causing cancer.
Milton Wainwright at the University of Sheffield,
UK, is a rare microbiologist who has written sympathetically
about the bacteriology of cancer, titling some of
his recent publications: “Nanobacteria and associated
‘elementary bodies’ in human disease and cancer” (1999);
“The return of the cancer germ; Forgotten microbiology
– back to the future” (2000); “Highly pleomorphic
staphylococci as a cause of cancer” (2000); and “Is
this the historical ‘cancer germ’”? (2003).
In, Can Bacteria Cause Cancer?: Alternative Medicine
Confronts Big Science (1997), David J. Hess charts
the history of bacteria as etiological agents in cancer.
An anthropologist at Renssalear University, he claims
this research has not only been forgotten or disregarded,
but actively suppressed. Hess cites financial and
professional interests, as well as more general cultural
factors to help explain the suppression.
Body
Blood Bacteria
The idea that the blood contains bacteria related
to cancer has been repeatedly raised by various cancer
microbe researchers. But the idea was never taken
seriously because bacteria grown from cancer patients
were never considered anything more than inconsequential
bacteria like staph, strep, and various common bacilli
of no etiologic significance. Furthermore, these bacteria
are believed to be frequent laboratory ‘contaminants.’
Physicians still expect disease-causing bacteria to
be of a specific species type and to cause a “specific”
disease. And medical doctors believe each form of
cancer is “different.” The variety of different species
of pleomorphic bacteria recovered from various forms
of cancer makes physicians highly dubious about a
bona fide cancer microbe specific for cancer.
In a series of papers (1970-1979) using the electron
microscope and various testing procedures, an Italian
team of researchers headed by Guido G. Tedeschi showed
that the erythrocytes (red blood cells) and the blood
platelets of both normal and diseased patients are
cryptically infected with pleomorphic bacteria. Electron-dense
“granular bodies” were found within the erythrocytes,
and a variety of microbial forms and species were
reported as mycoplasma-like and corynebacteria-like
L-forms of bacteria, staphylococcus epidermidis, micrococci,
cocci, and cocco-bacillary forms.
Such microbes are similar to what various cancer microbe
researchers have reported over the past century. Some
of Tedeschi’s microbes were acid-fast, a staining
quality characteristic of Livingston’s cancer microbe.
All of this indicates that human blood is definitely
not sterile, and should raise suspicion these tiny
blood bacteria could be involved in the production
of disease – a conclusion Wilhelm Reich came to a
half-century ago. Like Reich, Tedeschi’s team suggested
the evolution of cocci and diphtheroids taking origin
from cell-wall-deficient forms seems not to be related
to a particular state of illness, but to be the consequence
of a generalised crypto-infection.
A more recent study entitled “Are there naturally
occurring pleomorphic bacteria in the blood of healthy
humans?”, by R.W. McLaughlin and associates in the
Journal of Clinical Microbiology (December
2002), confirms the presence of a wide diversity of
microorganisms within the blood of healthy people.
And with new research showing nanobacteria in the
blood, it is apparent there is much to learn about
the bacteriology of the blood and what it contains
normally and what it contains in disease.
As they have done for a century, microbiologists will
undoubtedly quibble about what to name these organisms.
But what is much more important than a name is to
determine what they “do” – not in the laboratory,
but in the human body. What is the energy force that
allows these microbes to exist in harmony with us?
And what turns them into killers?
Science,
Soul, Spirit, and Immortality
Helena P. Blavatsky (1831-1891) is the controversial
founder of the science of Theosophy, a philosophical
and spiritual group with a keen interest in the origin
of life. In researching this article, I came across
her name on a web page connected to Bastian’s nineteenth
century studies on tiny bacteria in limestone. Her
ideas about the origin of life are amazingly prophetic
in light of current findings of nanobacteria in microbiology
and geology, and her idea of a “vital force” seems
similar to Reich’s “orgone energy.”
Blavatsky wrote: “Life is not the expression of the
organism, but, on the contrary, the organism is the
expression of some prior and indestructible vital
force. Nothing ever dies. Life’s opposite is not death,
but latency. Indeed… one is compelled to ask whether
all humanity, past and future is not imprisoned in
latent form in the rocks and sands of our terrestrial
sphere.”
In The Secret Doctrine (1888), she claims:
“Everything that is, was, and will be, eternally
IS, even the countless forms, which are finite and
perishable only in their objective, not in their ideal
Form. They existed as Ideas, in the Eternity,
and, when they pass away, will exist as reflections.”
Science has little or nothing to say about spirit,
soul, and the hereafter. And skeptics are always seeking
“proof.” But if a disease like cancer is indeed caused
by microscopic bacteria, it would indicate physicians
have been unable to see what was quite plain for some
nineteenth and twentieth century scientists to observe
using simple light microscopy. And with powerful electron
microscopes there is now little excuse for not “seeing”
bacteria. With this in mind, it would behoove scientists,
especially cancer experts, to do a little soul-searching
(pun intentional).
In addition, scientists cannot seem to agree where
life begins. So can we trust them completely to know
when life ends? If human life continues after death,
it must exist largely as energy. And can energy ever
be destroyed? Einstein tells us matter and energy
are interconnected and essentially different forms
of the same thing. And physicists are excited about
the possibilities of quantum physics, which is beyond
my ken. Professor of Mathematical Physics, Frank Tipler,
confidently proclaims physics will lead to the immortality
of humankind. In his controversial book The Physics
of Immortality (1994) he states, “Either theology
is pure nonsense, a subject with no content, or else
theology must ultimately become a branch of physics…
The Goal of physics is understanding the ultimate
nature of reality. If God is real, physicists will
eventually find Him/Her.”
In the Bible, God tells us we came from dust – and
to dust we shall return, which is not terribly encouraging
for those not confident about an afterlife. But what
if dust contained elements and building blocks that
could re-make life over and over again for all eternity?
And isn’t Earth basically a big pile of dust? And
couldn’t this be “God’s little secret” He wants us
to unravel?
And what is life if it is not pulsating with cosmic
energy? If the tiniest of life forms can exist in
meteors millions or billions of years old, and if
we are composed and descended from the tiniest forms
of life, why can’t we live forever?
All we might need is a speck of dust and a little
“faith” to ignite that spark of life that would get
us going again.