Nexus - 0404 - New Times Magazine-pages

Page 38 of 85

Page 38 of 85
Nexus - 0404 - New Times Magazine-pages

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Radical Cancer Treatment Electromagnetism Using For many years, Jerry Jacobson has been promoting his paradigm-busting approach to treating cancer, AIDS and other diseases, yet his attempts to secure sufficient funding for experimental trials have been stymied. an electromagnetic fields, only one ten-millionth of the Earth's gravitational field in strength, cure cancer by ‘jiggling’ masses from the subatomic to the mol- ecular in such a way as to provoke the oncogenes in malignant cells to revert to normal genes? No, says conventional medical wisdom. Yes, says Dr Jerry I. Jacobson, 50, head of the Perspectivism Foundation in Jupiter, Florida, USA. At least two world-class medical researchers think Jacobson is right. "Jerry Jacobson should receive the Nobel Prize for Medicine," says Prof. Bjérn Nordenstrom, M.D., Ph.D., of Stockholm, Sweden, chairperson of the Nobel Committee on Medicine in 1985- 1986. Dr Nordenstrém is the inventor of balloon catheterisation and the needle biopsy (a technique using X-ray guidance to insert a needle through the body wall into a suspected tumour to remove a tissue sample). For Dr William S. Yamanashi, Professor of Medicine, Cardio-Vascular Section, at the University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma City, USA, Jacobson is a trailblazing thinker who should be taken with great seriousness. "Jerry has had an important insight into electro- magnetism and its application to biology," declares Korea-born Yamanashi, himself an early pioneer in magnetic resonance imaging research and developer of the first interstitial yperthermia performed under an MRI device. Jacobson's insight, affirms Yamanashi, has "far-reaching implications, even beyond those in medicine". Both researchers acknowledge that the proper application of what is now, in scientific circles, termed "Jacobson Resonance" will be difficult. Jacobson has shown that healing can only be effected if the precise amount of electromagnetism required, in the function of articular diseased cells, is calibrated using no less complex a yardstick than Einstein's theory of relativity. Jacobson says this entails calculating the interrelation of inertial velocities such as the orbital velocity of the Earth, the length of the organism (i.e., the atient), magnetic fields such as the Earth's steady magnetic field, and critical molecules in biological systems. For close to two decades, and in particular over the last five years, Jacobson, originally from Brooklyn, New York, has been trying to secure venture capital to put into practice is revolutionary techniques which, he says, can also cure AIDS and other diseases. But the tall, wiry Brooklynite with the curling grey hair and misty black eyes already has two strikes against him. The first is that, although he has had more than 50 peer-reviewed papers explaining his ideas published in the world's most reputable medical journals, and, in the bargain, has published two books with the prestigious Philosophical Library Press in New York, he still lacks the conventionally acceptable academic qualifications, for Jacobson is not a medical doctor, but a dentist; and, though he has taken two dozen cours- es in the field, he does not have a Ph.D. in physics. The second difficulty Jacobson must contend with is that not only do his concepts go completely against the grain of accepted scientific wisdom, but they are deeply threaten- ing to the medical profession. If the now-retired dentist's ideas were successfully imple- mented, they would render obsolete the work of literally millions of doctors. And that possibility, claims Jacobson, provoked a harsh response from the American Medical Association (AMA) when he first sought to promote his ideas. In 1981, when then-Brooklyn-based dentist Jacobson called a major press conference in New York City to announce his revolutionary cure for cancer, not a soul attended. Invitations had been sent out to several hundred dignitaries. Some, like New York State by John Chambers ©1996 22491 Vistawood Way Boca Raton, FL 33428, USA Telephone: +1 (561) 482 5971 Fax: +1 (561) 852 8322 E-mail: jdc@flinet.com 22491 Vistawood Way Boca Raton, FL 33428, USA Telephone: +1 (561) 482 5971 Fax: +1 (561) 852 8322 E-mail: jdc@flinet.com JUNE - JULY 1997 NEXUS - 37 A GENIUS INVENTOR/THEORIST FIGHTS THE FORCES OF SUPPRESSION by John Chambers ©1996