Vitamin deficiency we are all born with

I’ve admired Linus Pauling for years. In 1976, the Nobel Prize-winning chemist gave mega doses of vitamin C to 100 “untreatable” cancer patients. He then compared these so-called terminal patients to patients with the same kind of cancer who didn’t get vitamin C. The patients who received the traditional cancer treatment lived for an average of six months. Pauling’s patients lived — on average — for six years. You’d think that the medical community would have heralded Pauling’s research as a huge breakthrough in cancer treatment. But they didn’t. And they still don’t. Despite groundbreaking research like this, traditional doctors still dismiss vitamin C as “unnecessary” and “a waste of money.” And that’s a big mistake because we were all born with a severe vitamin C deficiency. Let me explain… Humans are one of the very few animals on Earth that can’t produce their own vitamin C. The others are apes, fish, fruit bats and guinea pigs. All other animals have an enzyme in their kidneys or livers that produces their daily requirement of the vitamin.1 For example, a 150-pound goat makes more than 13,000 mg of vitamin C a day. And when animals have health issues or injuries, they produce up to 100,000 mg of extra vitamin C to get them through the crisis. Our ability to make vitamin C disappeared about 60 million years ago.2 That wasn’t a big issue for our ancestors. But it’s a big deal for you and me. In our toxic world, our fruits and vege...
Source: Al Sears, MD Natural Remedies - Category: Complementary Medicine Authors: Tags: Health Natural Cures Nutrition anti-cancer leukemia vitamin vitamin C Source Type: news