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Cancer has been described as a genetic accident, a random mutation, or an unavoidable fate. But what if the dominant narrative is incomplete-and in many cases, dangerously misleading? The Parasite They Call Cancer challenges the standard medical model and exposes the hidden economic and political forces that have shaped how cancer is defined, treated, and marketed. Drawing on research across medicine, history, and public policy, Craig P. Whitlow argues that cancer is less a mysterious inevitability and more a systemic imbalance that has been exploited for profit. He investigates the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Cancer has been described as a genetic accident, a random mutation, or an unavoidable fate. But what if the dominant narrative is incomplete-and in many cases, dangerously misleading? The Parasite They Call Cancer challenges the standard medical model and exposes the hidden economic and political forces that have shaped how cancer is defined, treated, and marketed. Drawing on research across medicine, history, and public policy, Craig P. Whitlow argues that cancer is less a mysterious inevitability and more a systemic imbalance that has been exploited for profit. He investigates the trillion-dollar oncology industry, where toxic treatments are pushed as the only options while alternative therapies are dismissed, marginalized, or suppressed. With clarity and urgency, he reveals how corporate interests and regulatory capture have created a cycle where suffering is monetized, cures are sidelined, and patients are too often left without real choice. This book explores: The role of environment, toxins, and lifestyle in creating cancer-like conditions. How pharmaceutical monopolies shape treatment protocols and silence dissent. Documented alternative therapies and integrative approaches overlooked by mainstream institutions. The ethical and social consequences of a system designed to manage disease rather than eliminate it. Far from fatalistic, The Parasite They Call Cancer empowers readers to question prevailing assumptions and to pursue knowledge beyond the limits of conventional oncology. It is not a medical manual or a prescriptive "one-size-fits-all" solution. Instead, it is a manifesto for transparency, remembrance, and personal responsibility-urging patients, caregivers, and citizens to see cancer not as a random curse but as a condition tied to broader patterns of resonance, environment, and human choice. Provocative, meticulously argued, and deeply relevant, this work dares to ask the questions Big Pharma hopes you will never consider.
Autorenporträt
Craig P. Whitlow is a Marine Corps veteran who served with distinction in the Special Training Section (STS), where he was a Scout Swimmer Instructor and worked with Force Company 2/5 Weapons Platoon, Machine Guns, and ATC. After military service, he pursued civilian trades, completing the Alberta Carpenter Apprenticeship and earning a diploma from North American College. He has worked as a journalist, author, and entrepreneur, launching businesses in media, entertainment, and horse racing.Whitlow holds a Bachelor's Degree in Business Administration and is completing his MBA at Strayer University. His writing blends investigative research with lived experience, challenging accepted narratives in health, politics, and society. His books include The Little Black Book of Credit Repair They Don't Want You to Know and society. His books include The Little Black Book of Credit Repair They Don't Want You to Know and The Parasite They Call Cancer. He is the founder of Whipsaw Truth Publishing & Media and Whipsaw Thoroughbreds, dedicated to producing work that informs, empowers, and inspires