Cure for All Diseases
26/09/10
The Cure for All Diseases
- ISBN13: 9781890035013
- Condition: USED – Very Good
- Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed
All diseases have simple explanations and cures once their true cause is known. Doctor Hulda Clark explains the causes of both common and extraordinary diseases and gives specific instruction for their cure through natural remedies and an electrical device you can build at home. 4 cassettes.
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(out of 152 reviews)
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Review by gcbranco@worldnet.att.net for The Cure for All Diseases
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I am a finance professional from New York City and had suffered from symptoms similar to the ones present in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, although I never had CFS officially diagnosed. As soon as I started looking for a solution I came to the conclusion that I was not going to find it in traditional medicine, but in alternative medicines.I ran into a photocopied sheet with the recipe for the parasite program, which I did. I then started looking for the book where the photocopy came from.The most striking thing is that Dr. Clarke doesn’t seem to be in this for the money. She explicitly allows reproductions or copies of this book (for free!) without requiring additional permission from the author. How many authors or books allow this? She also describes how to pick up the parts to build a zapper from cheap hardware store parts. Of course if you don’t have the patience to build one yourself, you can buy one from one of the available services for about $70.I have been following most of her advices with excellent results. I have taken all the metal from my mouth, performed over 10 liver cleanses, and done the parasite program on a regular basis. Every time I have a health problem I go to back to the book for reference and invariably find the way to approach the problem.I cannot say enough good things about this book, although it is not for everyone. If you need absolute scientific proof for everything she says, then… it’s not for you.
Comment by gcbranco@worldnet.att.net — September 26, 2010 @ 1:41 am
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Dr. Clark’s research and suggestions are being followed by my family: 9 children and 7 adults residing in two states. The results are amazing and remarkable! The biggest gift we were given is one male adult’s 35-year case of psoriasis are going away before our eyes! It is incredible because medical doctors have never managed such excellent results. So far, two adults did the kidney and liver cleanses with EXCELLENT results including relief from indigestion, psoriasis improved quicker, weight loss amongst other improvements. In addition, migraines have disappeared in the female adults, commonly occurring ear infections and stomach flu in the children have also disappeared when the parasite program started. Using colloidal silver has caused toe, toenail and fingernail fungus to clear up completely. Doctors have been amazed at the results; their recommendation was to continue doing whatever we’re doing! I cannot praise this book enough, and it is a “must buy” for everyone! Tell your friends and family if you care about them. Being the writer of this review, I must add that I have NOT been sick since I started zapping and doing the parasite program. Everyone around me at work was sick during allergy and flu season this winter except me. I also gained great relief from the liver cleanse and can’t stop talking about it. Hurry……empower yourself and make your own decisions for your health instead of allowing the government and powerful drug companies to make decision that ultimately kill us and make them rich!
Comment by Anonymous — September 26, 2010 @ 2:30 am
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I’ve known about this book for years, since it came out, but I was always turned off by the hideously new-agey cover and the similarly crackpot sounding title. I read extensively about health and alternative medicine, but am very critical of all new-agey approaches that emphasize the idea that the source of illness is spiritual or psychological (not that this is not possible, but I believe it is rare – not at all the cause of the vast majority of illnesses). I’m not sure what compelled me to finally buy the book, maybe curiosity. But I was surprised and delighted to find that it is based on physical, biological issues in the body (namely, toxins and parasites). The methods of ridding the body of these disease-causing elements are both eccentric (using electricity) and traditional (herbal formulas). I have not built the infamous zapper yet, but out of curiosity I might, since I am familiar with some of the other uses of electricity in medicine (eg, the Rife machine), and know it has benefitted people in those circumstances. So far I have found the pet parasite elimination program very helpful, as well as the mold-reducing hygiene tips (soak grains and dried fruit in vitamin c solution to de-mold them – and they taste so much better! non-soaked items now taste musty to me). My caveat is the following: I was compelled to do some research on this book, and on Hulda Clark. (I am a professional researcher working on a PhD in the humanities, so it’s my instinct to check resources as best I can). What I have discovered so far is this: I have read that Hulda Clark died recently (though I haven’t confirmed the details on this), and that she seems to have signed off certain rights to a person by the name of David Amrein, who is now the president of the “Dr. Hulda Clark Research Association.” The problem I have is that David is a MBA-weilding Scientologist (this is confirmed by several sources, including a Scientologist-run website), and is using the methods of Scientology to profit off of Hulda’s work, and is implementing questionable marketing tactics in the manner of aggressive, multi-level marketing style ploys that the Scientologists traditionally engage in, and in effect is destroying the potential for integrity and recognition that this work might otherwise be able to attain. What this means is that when you try to do a search on Hulda Clark, you get dozens if not hundreds of websites that are all marketing stuff – stuff that is not necessary to purchase (Hulda has instructions on building the necessary equipment yourself at hardly any cost, and the herbs are all available from any herbal medicine supplier). The whole work of Dr. Clark’s is sadly going through a major cult-branding (to see this dynamic on another – although toxic – substance, run an internet search on Klamath lake blue-green algae, and you’ll see a similar pattern. And there are numerous products out there that are traceble back to Clearwater, Florida, and Scientology marketing gimmiks). There is no record that Dr. Clark herself was a Scientologist, and by the absence of marketing in her work it seems she was not. This is unfortunate, because this kind of marketing is misleading, and clogs up internet search engines for people trying to do legitimate research on a product. If you do do research, note you will also find information written by anti-alternative medicine people and organizations (quackwatch) about the “scandalous” fact that Dr. Clark had a medical degree from a correspondence school. So what? Her previous graduate education was accredited. She’s a trained researcher, whether or not she’s a licenced doctor. Many MDs are ivy-leage certificated, but morons when it comes to healing people. I base my judgement on the integrity of the research in relation to other work in the field (ie, alternative medicine), as well as on it’s ability to affect positive change in my own biological existence, which this work has. It’s just a shame that it’s been turned into a marketing monster.
Comment by Anonymous — September 26, 2010 @ 3:27 am
Review by Blake Watson for The Cure for All Diseases
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I came across this book in the mid-’90s and pursued it to treat a condition one of my children was having. There was dramatic improvement and, although we have recently found the condition to be genetic, the guidelines in the book have helped to increase my daughter’s abilities beyond where medical doctors (who expected her to die) said they could go. (We also used her methods to prevent and cure a variety of smaller problems in our family, such as allergies, colds, headaches, and so on.)We went to her clinic in Tijuana, since it’s not terribly far, and she never charged us more than $50. I can’t say with certainty that she charges everyone the same, but we got a lot for our money. Dr. Clark sat down with us on each occasion and managed to actually spot some toxins in our environment we hadn’t even considered. (We also got X-rays at one point, but not from her, and it’s Tijuana, so they don’t cost much.)While in her clinic, however, I met a lot of people who had before-and-after test results for cancer and AIDS, and many, many people who had only come to her after their MD had written them off.Obviously one should be sensible about one’s health, but that goes both ways. It’s just as foolish to believe blindly that the medical establishment is always right about everything as it is to believe every quack that comes down the road peddling snake-oil.You can do this treatment entirely yourself for a couple hundred bucks so that Dr. Clark doesn’t get a dime — down to borrowing the book from the library and photocopying it. You can take the easy way out and buy supplies from reputable dealers, and it might cost you a hundred bucks more (but require less time investment). Nothing in her program conflicts with standard medical treatment, so it’s not like you have to give up going to your M.D. For some people, there’s no worse shame than being “suckered” or spending a dime more than they have to. (Though I have to admit, we’ve spent nothing on doctors for the past several years, saving way more than we spent on the program.) Ultimately, it’s you who has to live (or die) with your choice.
Comment by Blake Watson — September 26, 2010 @ 3:58 am
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i have read this book thoroughly several times since buying it in late 1998. she does have a lot of nutritional knowledge that is missing from our “allopathic” western mainstream medicine.e.g. ornithine (amino acid) for insomnia. WOW. does that ever make your eyelids heavy. i have gotten hold of a professionally-made ZAPPER, and either i am being constantly reinfected, or i have an undocumented problem that does not show up in any blood tests. in two months, i have not noticed any improvement in the basic symptoms, but i have found the liver cleanses to be very rejuvenating and purifying.she is correct that doctors will not acknowledge that liver stones form FIRST, THEN turn into gallstones if allowed to accrete in the gallbladder. but i have some advice to those who are doing liver cleanses by using her variant: don’t use the EPSOM SALTS, which in most cases are available in only the “for external use only” grade. buy a bottle of magnesium citrate, 300 ml size, glass, used by internists/radiologists as a purge b4 exploratory radiography! it costs only $3, tastes really good(like a citrus pop), and does not give nausea like the epsom salts. there is 15 grams of mg in that bottle, more than enough to force open all the bile ducts. i know; i use it. in canada, it is called citro-mag, available in any pharmacy. now to some holes left. there is no mention of the ZAPPER being used to cure MALARIA. the malaria parasite morphs and hides in various places (red blood cells, then the endothelial lining of blood vessels), so this ZAPPER should be a superb test of its efficacy, no? yet no mention of that. also, i agree that all milk products must be sterilized by boiling (or baked, in the case of cheese on a pizza). but she does not mention if this destroys the vitamin d3 added expressly for the purpose of aiding the calcium absorption! so i take 1000 i.u. a day with the milk. she does mention what very few people ABSOLUTELY SHOULD know: cheeses are a LOUSY source of calcium(great source of fat and protein, though) because the calcium stays IN THE WHEY! i use a whey protein natural supplement, and sure enough, when i checked the composition, there was a high amount of ca shown. so she’s CORRECT. also, she says never to use milk that is less than 2% b.f., since the fat is needed for absorption of calcium. yet no nutritionist will tell you that, i bet. so much for 1% or skim milk. as for dental amalgam, i know that there is something fishy about the ADA stating that it is perfectly safe, in use for over 100 years, blah, blah, but why then does the EPA require dental offices to dispose of removed amalgam as HAZARDOUS WASTE? and why has it been BANNED TOTALLY for over 10 years in several scandinavian countries?? she makes a good case for the mercury portion being contaminated with thallium and thulium, which are deadly in extremely small amounts all at once. also, i am aware that there are several SCORES of scientific studies on the poisoning effects of amalgam, even though it is stifled on this side of the atlantic. the book’s index could be more detailed. with a 550+ page book, it can be frustrating to find something previously read. i have counted over 40 additional notes added into my copy’s index. i do wish some lab somewhere would prove her hypothesis that arginine/ornithine work by neutralizing ammonia in the brain, which is a metabolic waste product of parasites only, and is a toxic irritant to the brain. humans produce only urea as a waste.that should be easy to prove. the herbal parasite killer program is a MUST for anyone! i had a very bad gut for years, yet was told no ulcer. within a few weeks on the killer herbs, i had a big surprise–i passed a large amount of blood, yet with no pain, all in a few hours, with no warning signs, and then the gut pain was gone.and every bowel movement after that was totally bloodless and painless ever since. i figure it was a stinking intestinal fluke or worm, engorged with MY blood, that burst when killed. my gut has not felt this good in over a dozen years. btw, use a battery eliminator(a.c. adapter wall plug-in, available for about $10-15, with selectable voltage output), NOT A BATTERY, or you’ll go broke buying batteries for it. i bought a top-line alkaline name-brand battery to see how long the voltage would stay up, using the ZAPPER as suggested (ON for 21 minutes a day total). it lasted barely 10 days, and it was down to less than 7 volts unloaded! and that was with a ZAPPER whose output waveform i measured on a scope as having a 45% duty cycle(ratio of time at high voltage output to time at zero voltage out). this was even less than the 80% duty cycle calculated from the circuit diagram she gives, taken from the resistor value ratios.i.e. if the d.c. WAS 80%, the battery would have been even deader after those 10 days! $4 every 10 days for a battery is too much. i can tell you that i have even found an internet site that sells pre-built ZAPPERS that claim to be able to make a battery last for MONTHS! you can’t get something for nothing. the only way they can do this is to cut down the duty cycle DRASTICALLY( to maybe 2%), and possibly use a very low current LED indicator. but hulda clark gives no advice as to whether this drastically lowered ratio will produce an efficacious result! the duty cycle is simply r2/(r1+r2). so the circuit shows it to be around 80%. USE A BATTERY ELIMINATOR! ENOUGH FOR NOW. i’ll post more later as i learn and read other sources to cross-reference this book.
Comment by Anonymous — September 26, 2010 @ 4:43 am