A tiny bee just did what chemotherapy couldn't.
Scientists in Australia discovered that honeybee venom can wipe out 100% of aggressive breast cancer cells in under 60 minutes.
And the healthy cells around them? Barely touched.
The breakthrough came from Dr. Ciara Duffy and her team at the Harry Perkins Institute of Medical Research, working alongside the University of Western Australia.
They tested venom drawn from 312 honeybees and bumblebees across Australia, Ireland, and England.
The target: triple-negative breast cancer and HER2-enriched breast cancer. Two of the deadliest, most stubborn forms of the disease.
The weapon: melittin. The same tiny peptide that makes a bee sting burn.
At one specific dose, melittin tore through cancer cell membranes completely within an hour. Within just 20 minutes, it shut down the chemical signals cancer cells need to grow and multiply.
Bumblebee venom, which lacks melittin, did nothing. Zero effect, even at high concentrations.
Scientists then recreated melittin synthetically in the lab and got almost identical results, meaning no bees need to be harmed to develop the therapy.
Published in the peer-reviewed journal npj Precision Oncology, the findings are still early-stage. Human trials haven't happened yet.
But one thing is clear. Nature has been hiding answers in plain sight all along, sometimes inside the smallest creatures on Earth.
Source: Harry Perkins Institute of Medical Research / npj Precision Oncology (Dr. Ciara Duffy et al.)
Was not ready for Eric Church to deliver the best commencement speech I’ve ever heard.
Six guitar strings. Six pillars of a life.
Faith. Family. Spouse. Ambition. Community. You.
Tune them when you’re whole, not just when you’re broken.
Watch the whole thing.
IVERMECTIN: FULL DOSAGE SCHEDULE FOR CANCER & PREVENTION
1000s of people use Dr. William Makis MD’s IVERMECTIN dosing chart. Here’s a clear, categorized breakdown based on body weight (mg/kg per day).
LOW DOSE: ≤ 0.5 mg/kg/day
**Best for:**
- Cancers in remission
- Strong family history or genetic predisposition
- Prophylaxis (preventive)
**Side effects:** No long-term side effects reported.
**Example:** Dr. Tess Lawrie reported a Stage 3 ovarian cancer case treated with chemo + 12 mg ivermectin daily. Tumor marker CA125 dropped from 288 to 22 after 2 months and the tumor vanished.
MEDIUM DOSE: 1.0 mg/kg/day
**Best for:** Starting dose for **most cancers** (lung, pancreatic, renal cell, gastric, etc.).
**Side effects:** No long-term side effects reported.
**Example:** Dr. Shankara Chetty’s 70-year-old prostate cancer patient (PSA 89) took 45 mg/day (plus lactoferrin). After two months PSA fell to 10.9.
HIGH DOSE: 2.0 mg/kg/day
**Best for:** Very aggressive cancers (leukemia, pancreatic, brain cancers).
**Side effects:** No long-term side effects reported.
**Example:** Dr. Allan Landrito’s Stage 4 gallbladder cancer patient took 2 mg/kg daily for 14 months — cancer disappeared.
VERY HIGH DOSE: ≥ 2.5 mg/kg/day
**Best for:** Extensive metastatic disease, extremely poor prognosis, or certain brain cancers.
**Side effects:** Possible short-term & transient visual effects (usually resolve in a few days).
**Example:** Dr. Shankara Chetty treated a patient with 2.5 mg/kg/day — no side effects reported.
**Quick conversion example (for a 60 kg / 132 lb person):**
- Low: ≤30 mg/day
- Medium: 60 mg/day (≈5×12 mg tablets or 1 teaspoon liquid)
- High: 120 mg/day
- Very High: ≥150 mg/day
Many anecdotal reports exist of long-term daily use (months to over a year) with no serious toxicity, but individual responses vary.
Always work with a knowledgeable clinician, especially if you have pre-existing conditions (e.g., vision issues or glaucoma). This is for educational purposes only.
Share to spread awareness — information is power. 💊
Please follow my page for more information.
🔊 I SCREAM, YOU SCREAM, WE ALL SCREAM FOR THE Spears School of Business - Oklahoma State University MAJORS AT GPU THIS YEAR! 🔊
These majors are out of the park! Make sure to check them out! Applications are now open and close on April 1.
⚾ Sports Marketing
🍦 Sweet Profits: The Ice Cream Challenge
Apply now at https://t.co/rdl4CDDBfI
#okstate #GoPokes #okstatelegacy
Mayor Mamdani REFUSES to honor this Officer, but we should. 🎖
NYPD Chief Aaron Edwards first joined the force after Muslims attacked his city on 9/11.
23 years later, he was able to save New Yorkers lives from another Muslim attack.
When 2 Islamic terrorist began throwing IEDs into a crowd of conservative protesters, Chief Edwards didn't hesitate to act.
Edwards jumped a barricade and threw himself on the terrorist holding a LIT explosive with complete disregard for his own life.
Edwards tackled the suspect and secured the IED before it could explode, saving everyone in the crowd.
Chief Edwards deserves to be recognized for his bravery and self-sacrifice, even when cowardly Mayors stay silent.
🚨NEW: ICE has arrested a Mauritanian national accused of illegally voting in seven U.S. federal elections since 2008.
Mahady Sacko, who was living in Pennsylvania, allegedly voted in the 2008, 2012, 2016, 2020, and 2024 elections, according to court documents.
Prosecutors say he lied about being a U.S. citizen each time he voted.
He cast ballots in person in most elections and even voted by mail in 2020.
Cases like this are exactly why supporters say the Save America Act is needed — to require proof of citizenship to vote in federal elections.
In the spring of 2023, Kansas farmer Dale Henderson was repairing fence posts along the eastern edge of his property near Russell County when his German Shepherd, Max, came trotting out of the tree line carrying something in his mouth.
Another rock.
Max had been doing this for weeks. He'd vanish into the woodland sometimes for hours, and return with dark, heavy stones clutched in his jaws. He'd drop them at Dale's feet like offerings, tail wagging, waiting for praise.
These rocks were different.
They were heavier than they should be. Covered in a smooth black crust that didn't match anything Dale had seen in forty years of working this land.
When he held them close, they smelled like iron-metal left out in the rain.
By early April, Dale had a collection of nineteen stones piled on his porch.
His wife, Ellen, wanted him to throw them out.
Dale couldn't explain why, but something told him to keep them.
On April 14th, he loaded twelve of the specimens into his truck and drove ninety miles to the geology department at Kansas State University in Manhattan.
Professor James Chen picked up the first stone, turned it over in his hands, and his expression changed.
"Where exactly did you find these?"
"I didn't," Dale said. "My dog did."
Professor Chen ran the first round of tests that afternoon. Density measurements. Magnetic response. X-ray fluorescence.
Dale paced for two hours.
His neighbor, Roy Perkins, called during the wait.
Roy owned the adjacent 160 acres. He'd found similar stones scattered across his fields after spring plowing.
Dale told him to bring them to the university.
Professor Chen emerged holding a printout of analysis results.
"Mr. Henderson, these aren't rocks. They're meteorites. And based on the composition, they're from the same fall event. Probably thousands of years old."
"I need to see where your dog has been finding them."
The geology team arrived at Dale's farm three days later with ground-penetrating radar, metal detectors, and magnetometers. They started in the woodland where Max had been hunting.
Within hours, they'd identified over sixty additional specimens buried in the soil.
Beneath Dale Henderson's 200-acre farm lay the remnants of an ancient meteorite shower— thousands of fragments from a single asteroid that broke apart in the atmosphere and scattered across what is now central Kansas, likely between 10,000 and 20,000 years ago.
Subsequent surveys revealed the strewn field extended across Dale's entire property and onto Roy Perkins's land as well. It was one of the largest and richest meteorite fields ever discovered in North America.
The meteorites were pallasites—an extremely rare type containing crystalline olivine embedded in an iron-nickel matrix. They also showed unusually high concentrations of platinum-group metals: iridium, palladium, and rhodium.
The scientific value was immense. The commercial value was almost incomprehensible.
Museums began calling within a week of the announcement. The Smithsonian. The American Museum of Natural History. Private collectors from Europe and Asia.
A single 4.2-kilogram specimen from Dale's north field sold at auction in September 2023 for $892,000.
Dale Henderson's farm, became the site of one of the most significant meteorite recoveries in American history.
The total estimated value of recoverable specimens across both properties exceeded $47
million.
Dale and Roy formed a partnership. They hired a professional excavation team to conduct systematic recovery while preserving the scientific integrity of the site. The University of Kansas was granted research access in exchange for authentication and documentation services.
Dale kept farming. He said he wasn't going to let space rocks change who he was.
But he did build a new barn. And a new house.
And set up college funds for all seven of his grandchildren.
Max, the German Shepherd who started it all, became a minor celebrity. A geology magazine ran a feature calling him "the most valuable dog in America
@elonmusk Recently Chat made a (what I felt) was a stupid mistake that I caught right away. It was a calendar chart giving the years you could re-use for future years. Both Saturday and Sunday start dates were the same years. It corrected it after being called out. I don’t ask its opinion.
🚨 HUGE: Tom Homan just announced that ICE found over 3,300 missing children in Minnesota.
The last administration lost these kids and wasn't even looking for them.
This is a massive win. Share this because the media won't! 🇺🇸
HOLY SH*T 🚨 Rep. Tim Burchett is smiling as he exposes Democrat Politicians having to use thier Photo ID to vote against Photo ID’s in Elections
"213 Democrats just used their photo ID to vote against photo ID’s in elections”
LMAO YOU CAN’T MAKE THIS UP 🤣