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Cancer Warriors

522 members • Free

5 contributions to Cancer Warriors
Priorities In The War
This is just a piggy-back off of Bernardo’s recent post, and I’m hopeful it can serve as supplemental to the information that he already provided in it, as I believe his post was articulate, detailed, well thought out, and very helpful. I thoroughly appreciated reading it! I don’t get on here that much recently as things in my personal life have ramped up a lot, but as a refresher, I started an account here because my mom and dad have cancer (my mom’s was stage IV small cell ovarian cancer and my dad’s was less serious — papillary thyroid cancer which they were able to remove via surgery) I wanted to learn, and hoped that Lord willing, I could be of help to others who have/had cancer as well. I am in contact with Bernardo off this platform here and there, and appreciate his dedication to this as well. I recognized that he had spent hours and hours and hours of research as well, and we have bounced things off of each other on occasion. To the point. With my mom, (as I pretty much did all the research and my parents trusted the results—which was very humbling and also could become very stressful for me because it felt like her success was largely in my hands….this led to the necessity to remind myself of the basics which I’ll explain in a moment and resting in the Lord as ultimately in control) Through all the time I spent studying, I was very intentional not to get lost in the tunnel vision of “cancer only”. (I’ll explain later—this is important, and I believe Bernardo did a good job mentioning this) I wholeheartedly believe cancer is metabolic, and I believe that genetic mutations merely make certain people more susceptible to cancer due to the body’s normal defenses, which would protect from mitochondrial damage, being compromised, (e.g. BRCA-1, BRCA-2, Tp53) These genetic mutations do not cause cancer, they simply compromise the body’s natural defenses to damaged mitochondria. It is the damage to the mitochondria that leads to dysfunctional mitochondrial activity and insufficient oxphos.
The Strongest Cancer Stem Cell Blocker No One Knows About - and the Paradigm Shift in Cancer Care
AI Ranks it Higher than EGCG, Vitamin D & Omega 3 JUSTUS R. HOPE SEP 07, 2025 ∙ PAID Thanks to Dr. Paul Marik and the IMA, the word is getting out that Cancer Stem Cells are the roots of cancer and must be blocked to avoid cancer recurrence. It no longer is enough to simply remove the cancer with surgery, then zap it with radiation and chemotherapy, and forget about it. Because Cancer Stem Cells have a nasty tendency to regrow the entire tumor and spread it all over the body in resistant form months or years later. And then it is often too late. Block Cancer Stem Cells Early & Often (I went ahead and named the CSC blocker, NICLOSAMIDE, now, as the article is written to name it only after getting a PAID subscription, but still read the entire article, as they include a lot of useful information) NICLOSAMIDE - The Worm Medicine That Destroys Cancer Commanders Dr. Marik and I have written about the urgency of blocking CSCs early and often. And with the strongest CSC blockers. We recently published on the rise in Turbo Cancersand mentioned the ROOT4™ Protocol which can pre-emptively suppress the main CSC pathways. We believe use of this protocol can help prevent Turbo Cancers from developing in high-risk patients. The ROOT™ Protocols The components of the ROOT4™ protocol include EGCG, Curcumin, Omega 3, and Vitamin D. When combined they suppress all of the 7 major Cancer Stem Cell growth pathways. AI estimates that the ROOT4™ protocol can prevent the formation of the most common cancers by about 50%. However, with the addition of more agents, we have also developed the ROOT6™ and ROOT9™ Protocols which AI estimates can more effectively prevent these cancers. AI estimates that the ROOT9™ protocol can prevent the formation of the most common cancers by nearly 90%.
0 likes • Sep '25
@Stuart Briscoe would you still recommend taking salicylic acid with IVM and FBZ, just with breaks?
1 like • Sep '25
@Stuart Briscoe That makes sense. He wrote a part in Dr. Marik’s book “Cancer Care” He’s a doctor, and Justis R. Hope is his penmanship name.
PET/CT Scan Results 8/25
Results just were sent. The only improved result is my lung, all the other metastases are worse. Waiting on liver biopsy scheduling to see if the genetic typing is different.. I've enquired about clinical trials, but don't want chemo. It could be 2-4 more weeks to hear back from Immunity Bio, my preferred option.
1 like • Sep '25
@Egg Scrambled @Egg Scrambled I’m really sorry to hear that about the immunotherapy. Some people seem to have great success with it, but my thinking is that if it were so great at “immuno-therapy” then it wouldn’t cause so much damage. My mom was given a monoclonal antibody that caused her arms to swell to unrealistic looking proportions, she couldn’t use them or her hands, and had pain that nothing helped expect for fentanyl patches they finally prescribed. They deny it was the monoclonal antibodies (probably because the $63k treatment drops to $5k without the monoclonals), and they were pushing for another round without even trying to find the culprit, but we turned down monoclonals on the next round of chemo, and the swelling and pain disappeared. They either don’t fully know what they’re doing to people, or they don’t care. When they were giving her a blood transfusion, her heart rate was kinda all over the place. A nurse asked my dad to go look at it, and asked if her heart rate has ever done that before, he said no. The next day, they said it’s probably no big deal and that she’s probably had it before, and they didn’t check any of her vitals the entire chemo treatment that day. They always check her vitals when doing chemo. Not after that time. We are at a new provider now. I’m sorry that you are going through this, but I’m glad that you are on the right track it appears, and that you have a great community of others who are doing it too. I do not have cancer, so I hope that nothing I say is offensive to anyone. I understand that it is different in your shoes, but I care about all of you struggling through this, my mother’s situation has impacted me to the point where I have a compassion and zeal for cancer patients that I never had before. That’s why I research and that’s why I’m here.
0 likes • Sep '25
@Egg Scrambled Thank you!
Cancer Warriors ❤️
This group exists so no one has to walk this path alone. Share as much or as little as you feel comfortable: - Your diagnosis or a loved one’s journey - What brought you here - Questions you’re exploring - Therapies or strategies you’re researching - Or even a photo — faces help turn stories into connection Every share matters. It helps others feel less isolated and strengthens the collective wisdom of the group. 📌 Post Categories — How to Share To keep the community organised and easy to navigate, please choose the category that best fits your posts: 📢 Announcements: Official updates from the Admin team. 👋 Introductions: Say hello and share as much (or as little) as you’re comfortable with about your journey. 💬 General Discussion: Open conversation on cancer, healing, mindset, and community-related topics. 💡Research & Education: Research, studies, resources, protocols, and learning materials. ❓Q&A: Questions and thoughtful answers from the community. 📝 Journeys & Results: Personal stories, protocols being explored, progress updates and testimonials. 🎭 Miscellaneous: Anything that doesn’t clearly fit another category. If you’re unsure, don’t worry — just choose your best guess. The goal is sharing, learning, and supporting each other, not perfection.
Cancer Warriors ❤️
3 likes • Sep '25
Agreed!
If I Had Cancer, This Is What I Would Do
⚠️ Note: What follows are my personal opinions and insights based on everything I’ve studied and learned so far. This is not medical advice. I’m simply sharing my own understanding in the hope that it may help someone else think about their options. If I had cancer, I would build my strategy on one simple principle: 👉 Apply continuous metabolic pressure (press) to weaken cancer every day, and add oxidative stress surges (pulse) to kill cancer cells at intervals. My understanding is that adjudts and antioxidants (press) do not cure cancer on their own — they starve it, decloak it, and weaken its defences. Pro-oxidants (pulse) create the stress that pushes cancer cells into death. Both are needed, working together. ✅ The Foundation (Press) - Therapeutic Ketogenic Diet + Fasting → limiting glucose and insulin signalling. - Metabolic Regulators: Berberine (or Metformin), EGCG, Curcumin, Quercetin, Resveratrol, Sulforaphane, DIM. - Mitochondrial & Hormone Support: Iodine + Selenium, Melatonin (for circadian rhythm, mitochondrial health, and selective oxidative stress against cancer). - Immune Modulation: Mushrooms (AHCC, Reishi, Turkey Tail), Akkermansia, probiotics, prebiotics. - Repurposed Drugs for Continuous Pressure: Ivermectin (IVM) and Mebendazole (MBZ) may also be part of the daily press strategy, as highlighted by some clinicians (ex Dr. Makis), because they continuously disrupt cancer survival pathways. - Liver Protection: Milk Thistle and/or Tudca to support and protect the liver while on multiple therapies. - Other Adjuncts: Modified Citrus Pectin (MCP) for metastasis control, Low-Dose Naltrexone (LDN) for immune balance. This is the constant press that weakens cancer cells and keeps them vulnerable. ✅ The Pro-Oxidant Pulses (Kill-Phase) On specific days, I would add therapies that spike oxidative stress inside cancer cells: - IV Vitamin C (high dose) - Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) - Methylene Blue + Near Infrared (NIR) Light - increases oxidative stress in cancer cells while supporting mitochondrial function in healthy ones - Artemisinin (Wormwood) - Fenbendazole - Ivermectin (when pulsed at higher doses) - DCA (Dichloroacetate) - CDS (Chlorine Dioxide Solution) - something I would personally consider. It releases chlorine dioxide, a strong oxidizing agent. It’s controversial and not well studied in cancer, but I’ve noticed interesting patterns, and even Mel Gibson have spoken about it on Joe Rogan’s podcast
4 likes • Sep '25
I’ve read in studies, as well as with Makis and Duraj, that some antioxidants can actually be counterproductive, (e.g. vitamin E, glutathione, etc.) because there are studies that show that certain antioxidants protect cancer cells from oxidative stress. Kudos to the efficacy of the antioxidants, but unfortunate if your goal is to induce oxidative stress. Now, with that said, this morning I also read that there are conflicting results in studies with antioxidants, and that antioxidants may be selective in protecting healthy cells with properly functioning mitochondria, while overloading cancer cells with vulnerable mitochondria pushing them to apoptosis. Not sure where I’m at on this yet, but my mother has stayed away from certain things due to the conflicting data. Thank you for your post, and I believe I would do much of the same if I were diagnosed with cancer. I would like to think that I would start with a pretty prolonged water fast. On Anktiva though, has anyone discovered a way to get it? My understanding is that it’s through Dr. Shiong in LA, and that he is swamped. There are trials for DRP-104 (a DON prodrug) that are showing much promise, as they’ve tweaked the makeup of DON in such a way that the serum levels are 11-fold higher in the tumor tissue than in GI tissue. They’re only currently doing it for certain cancers that they say are glutamine dependent. This reveals a continued misunderstanding of cancer, but a potential step in the right direction for all cancer patients.
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Jordan Small
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@jordan-small-8286
Here to learn. Here to share. Here to help.

Active 2d ago
Joined Sep 6, 2025
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