A 70-Year-Old Manitoba Man Was Given a Death Sentence.
Stage 4 Pancreatic Cancer.
His oncologist looked him in the eye and said the words no one wants to hear: "You have months."
But he didn't accept that.
He started researching. Late nights. Reading testimonials. Watching videos. Finding hope in places the system ignored.
In November 2025, he made a decision.
He started his own protocol:
SupplementDose
Ivermectin --1.5 mg/kg/day
Fenbendazole --1,500 mg/day
CBD Oil--100 mg/day
No clinical trial. No doctor's blessing. Just research, faith, and a refusal to give up.
The Results Started Coming In.
His CA19-9 marker – the key indicator for pancreatic cancer – started dropping.
Not slowly. Steadily.
After 7 months, the numbers were undeniable. His body was responding. The cancer was retreating.
Here's Where It Gets Unbelievable.
His oncology team – the same people who told him he was dying – now told him to stop the protocol.
Not because it was harming him. Because they couldn't explain why it was working.
Welcome to Canadian healthcare.
The same system that offers MAID (Medical Assistance in Dying) as a solution...
...told a man getting better to stop trying.
The Irony.
They'll offer you a dignified death.
But heaven forbid you try a cheap, repurposed drug and actually heal.
One oncologist reportedly told him, "We don't recommend this because we can't prove it works."
Meanwhile, the evidence was walking right in front of them.
A 70-year-old man who was supposed to be dead – was alive, improving, and fighting.
This Is Why We Must Share These Stories.
Not to trash doctors. Not to say "don't trust medicine."
But to say: The system is broken.
It's not that oncologists want you dead. It's that they've been trained to only believe what the system validates.
And the system does not validate cheap, off‑patent, repurposed drugs.
Because there's no profit in a cure.
Today, the Manitoba man is still here.
His markers are dropping. His energy is returning. His family is grateful.
And his oncologists are still scratching their heads.
This Isn't About Blame. It's About Hope.
If you or someone you love is fighting cancer – do your research.
Ask questions.
Don't be afraid to try something different. Follow for more updates.
JUST IN: President Trump calls into CNN to share his first public remarks on the passing of Senator Lindsey Graham.
Trump revealed that he had spoken with Graham just moments before his death and said there were no signs that anything was wrong.
TAPPER: “What are your thoughts about Lindsey Graham this morning?”
TRUMP: “Well, it’s devastating. I thought he was fine. He called me last night.”
“He just got back from Ukraine and he had a great trip. He was telling me about the trip. He was pushing very, very hard—you probably know—he wanted to do the SAVE America Act. He was talking about that.”
“He was full of vim and vigor. He was tired. He said, ‘I’m tired because it’s a long trip.’ But other than that, he was fine.”
“And he called me, I guess, just moments before because he called me like at 6:30 or something. And the medical people got there a little bit later, right after that.”
“What a terrible loss it is. He’s a great politician. He was a natural. There are very few of them...he was a natural politician.”
Lindsey Graham came from humble beginnings and became one of the most powerful lawmakers in the most powerful nation on Earth. His story was a fundamentally American one.
Early in my Senate tenure, I remember getting into a shouting match with Lindsey about a Ukraine funding bill at lunch and then learning the very next day that he was pushing rail legislation I really cared about behind the scenes. That was Lindsey Graham. He fought like hell for the things he believed in, and he was just as willing to go to bat for you when it counted.
Lindsey had the best sense of humor in the Senate. He loved the game of politics. He was constantly asking which races were up and down, and how he could help. As he liked to say, “I don't care if you're an isolationist or a religious fanatic, so long as you have an R next to your name, I want you to win.”
We certainly had our disagreements. But I couldn't help but like him. A one of a kind figure in our politics. I'll be praying for him and his family.
A man's wife was murdered in Japan in 1999. Satoru Takaba spent the next 26 years paying $145k in rent to keep the crime scene completely untouched, believing future DNA technology would catch the killer.
He was right.
Ein junger SpaceX-Mitarbeiter fragte Elon, was passiert, wenn sie den Mars zu seinen Lebzeiten nicht erreichen. Der Raum war voller Ingenieure und die Frage landete schwerer, als irgendjemand erwartet hatte.
Es war eine einfache Frage, doch sie traf den Kern, wofür SpaceX existiert. Das gesamte Unternehmen, jede späte Nacht, jeder explodierte Prototyp, jeder Ingenieur, der den Geburtstag seines Kindes für ein Startfenster verpasst hat – alles zielt auf den Mars. Was, wenn es nicht rechtzeitig passiert?
Elon hielt inne.
Er sagte, das Ziel sei nie gewesen, persönlich auf dem Mars zu landen. Es gehe darum, die Infrastruktur aufzubauen, die unvermeidlich ist. Selbst wenn er stirbt, bevor die erste Besatzung landet, würde das System die Mission ohne ihn vorantreiben.
Die Raketen, die Fabriken, das Team, die Kultur – alles sei darauf ausgelegt, jede einzelne Person zu überdauern. Einschließlich ihm. Besonders ihn.
Dann sagte er etwas, das die Leute im Raum bewegte: Wenn er glaubte, der Erfolg hänge davon ab, dass er am Leben sei, hätte er bereits versagt. Der Punkt sei, etwas zu bauen, das seinen Gründer nicht braucht.
Er verglich es mit einer Kathedrale. Die Architekten mittelalterlicher Kathedralen wussten, dass sie sterben würden, bevor das Gebäude fertig wäre. Dennoch entwarfen sie es und gaben ihr Leben für etwas, das sie nie vollenden würden. Die Verpflichtung war der Punkt.
SpaceX ist seine Kathedrale. Er wird vielleicht nie einen Fuß auf den Mars setzen. Aber die Straße dorthin wird existieren, weil er sich weigerte zu akzeptieren, dass niemand sie baut.
Der ehrgeizigste Mann der Welt hat sich mit der Möglichkeit abgefunden, dass seine größte Leistung nach seinem Tod erfolgen könnte.
Das ist kein Misserfolg. Das ist der Glaube an etwas Größeres als sich selbst.
Happy Birthday Elon 🚀💪🔥
In 1972, Steve Jobs walked in on his girlfriend sleeping with another man.
Steve became friends with him.
He taught him a philosophy that allowed him to convince anyone of anything. It's why they both became billionaires.
Here’s the philosophy: 🧵
Alright getting right into the answer. First I will start with the proven concepts then I will talk about the unproven but very interesting stuff that needs more research.
1. Hormones are the biggest factor by far. Estrogen is incredibly protective for the heart. It keeps blood vessels relaxed and flexible and maintains a really good cholesterol profile. Testosterone does the exact opposite. It acts like a slow biological tax that pushes bad cholesterol up and drives plaque buildup inside the arteries over the years....
2. Genetics give men a massive disadvantage. Females have two X chromosomes while men only have one. The X chromosome holds a ton of genes related to cellular repair and defense. If a female gets a damaged gene she has a whole backup chromosome to rely on. Men have absolutely no genetic backup plan so things break down faster...
3. Iron accumulation plays a huge hidden role. Women naturally lose iron every month during their reproductive years. Men just keep storing it up. Over decades that excess iron creates oxidative stress that slowly damages the cardiovascular system from the inside out and wears down the heart muscle...
Now for the unproven stuff.
1. The disposable male theory:- From a pure evolutionary survival standpoint men were built for short bursts of intense physical activity like hunting and fighting. Once reproduction was done the male body was basically designed to age fast and get out of the way so limited food resources could go to the women and children.
2. Testosterone builds bigger muscles and larger bodies.....but biological history shows us that larger organisms simply burn through their cellular lifespan faster. Pushing the body to grow larger means a faster breakdown of the internal organs over time.
FOLLOW ME for more such breakdowns and daily discussions!
This is Richard Morgan, the 93-year-old with the cardiovascular system of a 40-year-old.
Here are 8 lessons from the fittest man his age on the planet:
Must read till end 🧵
Un estudiante de primer año de medicina le preguntó a un doctor: «Señor, si sentimos un hambre extrema pero nos saltamos la comida, ¿por qué desaparece completamente el hambre después de un tiempo? ¿No debería seguir empeorando?»
Al doctor le sorprende que la mayoría de los estudiantes no conozcan la verdadera endocrinología detrás de esto.
La respuesta del doctor le sorprende a casi todo el mundo.
أستاذة في جامعة ستانفورد تقضي 20 عام في دراسة سبب امتلاك بعض الأشخاص حظ أكبر.
استنتاجها:
الحظ ليس صدفة، إنه مثل الريح: يجب أن نضع له شراعًا.
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In 2014, Elon "gave away" Tesla's secrets to BMW.
Everyone thought he was crazy.
But this "act of charity" was actually the most ruthless move in corporate history.
Here's why BMW never saw it coming: 🧵