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this one is probably the scariest and least talked about ANY..

this one is probably the scariest and least talked about ANYWHERE - estrogen and it's link to cancer.

the mainstream view is that melanoma and all other skin cancers are driven by overexposure to sunlight.

The fact that melanoma rates have skyrocketed over the last 20 years (perfectly coinciding with increased sunscreen use)
+ the fact that most melanomas appear on skin spots that never see much sunlight does very little to detract the medical "experts" from advancing the stupid view of the "evil" sun

The study linked below is a good review and summary of why melanoma should be considered an endocrine tumor - i.e. one driven by hormone levels - and it examines the remarkable similarities with breast cancer.

I can't help but notice that this study (and countless others) also calls estrogen a well-known carcinogen yet we continue to hear from FDA and pharma companies about its benefits for both men and women...

Another interesting point from the study is that people with melanoma may be able to live just fine with it??
Of the 9 case studies presented, 3 did just fine with no treatment, and the ones who died all had surgical interventions for the mole.

One "untreated" case lived for more than 25 years with metastatic melanoma that even led to liver failure, yet the patient persisted.

Perhaps most importantly, ALL reported cases developed melanoma while on some sort of synthetic estrogen treatment.

I've been practicing the benefits of progesterone for this cancer (in both sexes), as well as looking into the potentially beneficial role of testosterone in males.

I have a scary mole on my back that's been there forever. Through my research, it seems that about 50-75 mg of progesterone will drown the estrogen out.

If you're a dude, which most of you are, here's my formula for if you have something that looks close to melanoma:

75 mg of progesterone
DHEA 20 mg
(3:1 ratio )
Once-daily about two inches away from the melanomas.

I will report back in about three - six months to see how my mole looks with before and after shots <3


references:
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/4704738/

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