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Re: stockmule post# 377190

Monday, 06/14/2021 5:18:25 AM

Monday, June 14, 2021 5:18:25 AM

Post# of 471834
stockmule, AH! Edgar Cayce. So you are into that too. In the late '80s early '90s i had the good fortune to live with a lady who was looking too. She'd been an executive wife, had a family, taught herself to paint well enough to have sold some. A very caring, entrepreneurial type. Part of her trip was a time in a spiritualist church, being me i went with her. lol That was an interesting research time. It really is all hooey, though it does fill a place in many lives.

Cayce rang a bell.

Edgar Cayce (/'ke?si?/; 18 March 1877 – 3 January 1945) was an American clairvoyant who claimed to channel from his higher self.[1]

[...]

Controversy

Cayce advocated pseudohistorical ideas in his trance readings such as the existence of Atlantis and the discredited theory of polygenism.[76] In many trance sessions, he re-interpreted the history of life on earth. One of Cayce's controversial claims was that of polygenism. According to Cayce, five human races (white, black, red, brown, and yellow) had been created separately but simultaneously on different parts of the Earth.[76] Cayce also accepted the existence of aliens and Atlantis, and claimed that "the red race developed in Atlantis and its development was rapid." Another claim by Cayce was that "soul-entities" on Earth intermingled with animals to produce "things" such as giants that were as much as twelve feet tall.[76]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edgar_Cayce#Controversy_and_criticism

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The 'quack' hunter

[...]

The walls are lined floor to ceiling with books, 1,800 volumes on subjects repugnant to Randi's heart. Vampires. Witchcraft. Palmistry. Poltergeists. The Bermuda triangle. Atlantis. Bigfoot. Alien abductions. There are books by spiritualist Edgar Cayce and astrologer Jeane Dixon. Shirley MacLaine's Out on a Limb. Linda Goodman's Sun Signs. Stonehenge Decoded. I am Ramtha. What Color Is Your Aura?

May 2013 - https://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=88212534

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lxCimi, that's what i thought .. Blavatsky, Cayce, et al and your Akashic record jabberwocky .. a slave
to archetypal energy .. a 'special' guy, with special access to special knowledge, in your own mind ..

caught in a mystical land of nod

Nov. 2011 - https://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=69338805

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Imcat, i wonder how many lies are in those youtubes? .. only watched the a minute of the first .. on Wilcock ..
[...]
David Wilcock Tells Us In Reverse That He Is a Fraud .. one bit ..

I had reversed David Wilcock some time ago when he was on Coast to Coast. He claims to be the reincarnation of Edgar Cayce
and presented his case to Noory. I knew from listening in reverse that he was not truthful. I didn’t keep those files.

BTW, Others here have also reversed David and to my knowledge, none of them found him to be congruent.
Dec. 2011 - https://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=69902091

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toddao, added info re Abraham Cherrix treatment, some perhaps not included in yours .. i could
have missed it, as skkkkiiiimmmmed .. please note; ummm, some of the bold bits in particular.

[...]

His latest blood results show no indication of the Hodgkin's disease
he first was diagnosed with in 2005, according to Abraham and his mother.


He gained worldwide attention in the spring of 2006 when social workers took his parents, Jay and Rose Cherrix, to court, accusing them of medical neglect. Abraham, who was living in Chincoteague at the time, had refused to go through a second round of chemotherapy for his lymphatic cancer and also shunned radiation treatment.

He instead traveled to Tijuana, Mexico, with his father for a controversial alternative medicine treatment called the Hoxsey method.

First off, let me just say that no one's happier that my estimation of Cherrix's prognosis was more pessimistic than how things have turned out thus far. I certainly hope that Cherrix is the one to beat the odds. I truly hated the thought of a young man with a potentially curable cancer being lured into eschewing effective therapy by the siren call of quackery. Remember that the first therapy that Cherrix wandered into was indeed quackery, specifically the Hoxsey therapy. Cherrix went to the Association of Research and Enlightenment founded by the infamous psychic "healer" Edgar Cayce. Cayce's center is a center devoted to some serious woo. Now is a good time to review Cherrix's case because if they haven't already purveyors of unscientific treatments will almost certainly point to his reaching eighteen as proof that he has beaten cancer using only alternative therapies. It's not. Not by any means, for reasons that I'll discuss. I still hope he beats the odds but hold no illusions that he is "cured."

CAYCE, UM UM .. THE GUY WHO BELIEVES REINCARNATION IS A CERTAINTY, TOO? .. ignore that, just thinking out loud ..

After Cherrix went through one round of chemotherapy and still had residual tumor when he completed it in February 2006. He had had a great deal of difficulty with nausea and other side effects and decided at that time that he had had enough, even though his tumor was still potentially curable (with an estimated long term survival with treatment of over 70%) and his doctors recommended another course. His parents supported him in this decision and apparently helped him seek out "alternative" and "natural" therapies. It was through Cayce's Association that Abraham and his parents were introduced to the Hoxsey therapy, which involves herbal concoctions claimed to be able to cure cancer. A man named Harry Hoxsey had claimed that the recipe for this "therapy" had been passed down to him from his father, who had received it from his father, who had discovered it. His grandfather, or so the claim goes, had supposedly noticed regression of a cancerous tumor of one of his horses who grazed in a particular field. He then took plants and flowers from that field and ground them up to make a paste to which he also added some other ingredients from home remedies and came up with a concoction that, according to him, could cure cancer. All that appears to be in it is a mixture of antimony, zinc and bloodroot, arsenic, sulfur, and talc as external treatments, and a liquid mixture of licorice, red clover, burdock root, Stillingia root, barberry, Cascara, prickly ash bark, buckthorn bark, and potassium iodide for internal consumption. According to Mildred Nelson, Harry Hoxsey's former nurse and director of the Bio-Medical Center in Tijuana after his death, claimed an 80% success rate for all cancers. (Conveniently enough, the failures were blamed on a "bad attitude," further claiming that a patient's strong belief that the treatment is going to lead to recovery was the best predictor of success. Cherrix chose this to treat the tumors in his neck and chest rather than radiation and chemotherapy.

Nov. 2009 - https://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=43405779







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