EXPENSIVE CANCER THERAPY promoted in New Zealand while ignoring the very CAUSE of their shockingly high rate of lymphoma cases
By sdwells // 2025-05-17
 
It’s been this way across the planet for decades now. Big Food and Big Pharma promote food and medicine that cause cancer while pretending to try to find the cure for cancer. Even when there are therapies right now that prevent and cure cancer, the powers that be do NOT want anyone using them, so they take over the methodologies, ruin them, then patent them, and pretend to care when they sell it for top dollars. That’s the exact case in New Zealand right now, while they promote expensive cancer treatment, they also promote products that cause cancer, including driving the high rate of lymphoma cases there.

New Zealand is facing the highest rise in lymphoma rates worldwide, all while raising glyphosate allowable limits on food crops

Yes, glyphosate is carcinogenic. It causes cancer of the cleansing organs. This has been proven in peer-reviewed laboratory testing of animals. It’s in Roundup. The big Ag farmers spray it on crops to dry them out before harvest, and to kill weeds to make more profits. Humans eat it and get cancer. Period. Big Ag and Big Pharma like this. More profits for them. Then they act like they are addressing cancer therapy with some of the most expensive treatments in the world that aren’t even very successful. It’s win-win for them and lose-lose for consumers. New Zealand is facing a concerning rise in lymphoma rates, the highest in the world, while promoting CAR T-cell therapy as a potential solution. This advanced cancer treatment, though effective for some, is costly and not a guaranteed cure. Meanwhile, the country's decision to raise glyphosate residue limits on food crops, linked to health risks, contrasts sharply with Bhutan's approach, which emphasizes organic farming and has much lower lymphoma rates. Despite the promising results of CAR T-cell therapy, particularly highlighted in media coverage, the treatment remains expensive and not universally effective. It costs hundreds of thousands of dollars per patient, and success rates vary, with some patients experiencing relapses. The therapy involves genetically modifying a patient's immune cells to target cancer, a complex and costly process, making it less accessible and impractical for widespread use. In contrast, Bhutan's focus on organic agriculture, which has been linked to lower cancer rates, offers a different perspective. Bhutan's government supports organic farming initiatives, whereas New Zealand is moving toward more chemical-intensive agriculture, which could exacerbate health issues. The government's push to increase glyphosate residues, tied to deregulating genetically modified crops, raises public health concerns. Critics argue this prioritizes corporate interests over public health, risking a public health crisis. The situation underscores a critical imbalance between expensive treatments and preventive measures, suggesting a need for more holistic health approaches. In conclusion, New Zealand's emphasis on costly therapies like CAR T-cell while expanding glyphosate use highlights a troubling disconnect between treatment and prevention. Addressing the root causes of cancer, such as environmental and agricultural practices, alongside pursuing innovative treatments, is essential for a comprehensive public health strategy. Bookmark Cancer.news to your favorite independent websites for updates on cancer-causing foods and medicine, plus experimental gene therapy injections that lead to turbo cancer and Long-Vax-Syndrome. Sources for this article include: Pandemic.news NaturalNews.com Expose-news.com