May 23, 2006 (Press Release) --
Historian Fred Harding, is the author of the book 'Breast Cancer "Prevention and Cure" Your Choice! (ISBN: 1846851726). In the book he traces the history of breast cancer and discovered that contrary to popular belief, the disease is of recent origin. Furthermore, he says that the causes of the disease and other cancers have been known for a long time and argues that breast cancer can be prevented. However, he says, there are those who have vested interests in keeping this information from becoming common knowledge.
Harding says that there is more to breast cancer than meets the eye. Beneath a smokescreen of denial and deception, the truth that breast cancer can be prevented is hidden behind the misguided rhetoric that 'early detection is the best prevention'. This established and universally touted policy, he says, is an erroneous and dangerous fallacy. It is a fallacy because by its very nature, if a woman has been diagnosed with breast cancer, in whatever stage it may be found, it is by then already too late. It is like closing the barn door after the horse has bolted. So all the medical services can do is to apply treatment in one form or another in a belated attempt to stem the spread of the disease.
Of course such treatments come with a price tag and it is for this reason that the cancer industry has flourished into a billion-dollar business under the guise of a benevolent benefactor. However, as the book demonstrates this industry is rife with corruption and conflicts of interests, and the promotion of any preventative methodology in the true sense of the word, is the last thing the industry wants to do, for obvious reasons. Prevention does not make money!
Although the book is to some extent an expose of the cancer, chemical and pharmaceutical industries, this is not its primary purpose. The book's main objective is to highlight the fact that contrary to popular belief breast cancer is a disease of fairly recent origin and that it can be prevented. Tracking the development of the disease throughout history and comparing lifestyles when it first arose provides a key to understanding how breast cancer can be prevented. Even the most hardened sceptic will find the evidence presented in the book compelling and sound, and it is built upon numerous peer-reviewed references.
The author also claims a world exclusive by explaining why nuns were more prone to breast cancer that other women - a riddle that the medical profession has failed to answer.
Fred Harding is an avid student of history, author and the writer of award winning software. He is is involved with chemicals and the risks involved in their usage, distribution and handling. He currently works for Sypol Ltd, a recognised leader in the UK in the field of chemical risk assessment and COSHH (Control of Substance Hazardous to Health Regulations).
Harding says that there is more to breast cancer than meets the eye. Beneath a smokescreen of denial and deception, the truth that breast cancer can be prevented is hidden behind the misguided rhetoric that 'early detection is the best prevention'. This established and universally touted policy, he says, is an erroneous and dangerous fallacy. It is a fallacy because by its very nature, if a woman has been diagnosed with breast cancer, in whatever stage it may be found, it is by then already too late. It is like closing the barn door after the horse has bolted. So all the medical services can do is to apply treatment in one form or another in a belated attempt to stem the spread of the disease.
Of course such treatments come with a price tag and it is for this reason that the cancer industry has flourished into a billion-dollar business under the guise of a benevolent benefactor. However, as the book demonstrates this industry is rife with corruption and conflicts of interests, and the promotion of any preventative methodology in the true sense of the word, is the last thing the industry wants to do, for obvious reasons. Prevention does not make money!
Although the book is to some extent an expose of the cancer, chemical and pharmaceutical industries, this is not its primary purpose. The book's main objective is to highlight the fact that contrary to popular belief breast cancer is a disease of fairly recent origin and that it can be prevented. Tracking the development of the disease throughout history and comparing lifestyles when it first arose provides a key to understanding how breast cancer can be prevented. Even the most hardened sceptic will find the evidence presented in the book compelling and sound, and it is built upon numerous peer-reviewed references.
The author also claims a world exclusive by explaining why nuns were more prone to breast cancer that other women - a riddle that the medical profession has failed to answer.
Fred Harding is an avid student of history, author and the writer of award winning software. He is is involved with chemicals and the risks involved in their usage, distribution and handling. He currently works for Sypol Ltd, a recognised leader in the UK in the field of chemical risk assessment and COSHH (Control of Substance Hazardous to Health Regulations).

It is said that breast cancer is ancient in origin, cannot be prevented and that the causes for the disease are unknown. These are blatant falsehoods says historian Fred Harding
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