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 | Follow me on Facebook | June 16, 2025 Evening Edition |
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What Neil Armstrong REALLY Saw on the Moon [TERRIFYING] | You won’t see THIS in any history book…
But after becoming the first man to set foot on the moon…
Neil Armstrong reported a strange encounter he had in space during a post-mission debrief.
NASA did their best to keep it secret…
But now, unearthed NASA audio is blowing the lid off of everything. | |
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This Dangerous Trend Could Cost You Your Life |  | Dear e-Alert Reader,
If you’ve spent time on social media lately, you’ve probably seen a post claiming some “all-natural cure” for cancer—maybe it’s turmeric shots, a radical raw-food cleanse, or colonics promising detox miracles.
It’s tempting to believe. But believing the wrong voice could cost you everything.
At a recent gathering of top oncologists in Chicago, doctors issued a blunt and heartbreaking warning: People are dying because they’re following advice from TikTok instead of from trained experts.
And here’s the thing—it’s not because natural health doesn’t work.
It’s because too many people are trusting the wrong sources.
(Article continues below.) |
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Weak lungs? | It’s a shocking but little known fact– Weak lungs makes you FIVE times more likely to die from heart disease. Do you know how strong your lungs are? Your doctor probably checks your blood pressure every time you visit, but not your lung strength – even though the simple and painless test to measure it literally takes a single second. And strong lungs mean longer life. And it’s a CRITICAL, but over-looked indicator of your overall health. To learn what it is (and how to naturally improve it), click here. | |
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At the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), dozens of cancer specialists shared stories of patients who delayed treatment to pursue social media “cures.”
These weren’t trivial delays. They were long enough for once-treatable cancers to turn terminal.
Dr. Julie Gralow described how patients declined her recommended care after stumbling across clinics online offering unproven “all-natural” protocols—vitamin C drips, caffeine enemas, and promises of miracle healing. Some returned months later, their tumors untouched… others never came back at all.
This isn’t about dismissing natural remedies. You know better than most that we at e-Alert are strong believers in prevention, lifestyle medicine, and alternative therapies.
But here’s the hard truth: natural medicine must be rooted in facts. Not fantasies. Not influencers. Not cherry-picked science peddled for clicks.
And right now, the web is flooded with dangerous nonsense.
One study presented at ASCO showed TikTok videos about prostate cancer were overwhelmingly low in quality—packed with emotional claims and half-truths. Another found that more than half of viewers didn’t trust scientific info at all.
As Dr. Fumiko Chino put it, “Evidence-based medicine has lost. And we need to regain the battlefield.”
We agree. That’s why we’re in this fight with you.
Our mission has never been to scare you into pills or push false hope. It’s to empower you with facts—and safe, natural solutions that work.
So how do you protect yourself?
Here are a few rules to live by: - Be skeptical of any “miracle cure” with no downside.
- Don’t let strangers on the internet override your trusted care team.
- Look for sources rooted in science—not just emotion or anecdotes.
- Use natural therapies as complements, not replacements—unless guided by a integrative doctor you trust.
If you’re ever unsure about a cancer treatment, a diet protocol, or a supplement someone swears will “cure everything,” don’t guess. Ask. We’ll research it. We’ll dig into it. We’ll tell you what’s real, what’s safe, and what’s total bunk.
Because yes—nature can heal.
But misinformation can kill.
Natural healing isn’t a trend. It’s a truth—when it’s in the right hands.
To stopping misinformation,
Rachel Mace Managing Editorial Director, e-Alert with contributions from the research team
Sources:
Koronka, P. (2025, June 2). Cancer patients are dying after choosing fad social media “cures.” Thetimes.com; The Times. https://www.thetimes.com/uk/healthcare/article/cancer-patients-dying-fad-social-media-cures-2zt07tzm9
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