Linus Pauling — "Everyone should know that the 'war on cancer' is largely a fraud."
Everyone should know that the 'war on cancer' is largely a fraud.
Everyone should know that the 'war on cancer' is largely a fraud.
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"I have always been a rebel, and I believe that it is important to challenge authority."
"I have always been a lover of nature, and I believe that we should all strive to protect our planet."
"I have always been a scientist, and I believe that science is the best way to understand the world."
"The greatest discoveries of science have always been made by those who were not afraid to challenge the existing paradigms."
"I have always been a teacher, and I believe that education is the key to a better future."
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The quote charges that the official 'War on Cancer'—the government-funded campaign to defeat cancer—was more spectacle than substance: overpromising cures, misallocating research funding, and protecting institutional interests rather than genuinely pursuing effective treatments. It implies the public was being misled about real progress, and that financial and political incentives shaped cancer policy more than honest science, leaving patients worse off than a transparent, rigorous research program would allow.
Pauling, a two-time Nobel laureate (Chemistry 1954, Peace 1962), spent his final decades championing high-dose vitamin C as a cancer therapy, co-authoring 'Cancer and Vitamin C' with Ewan Cameron in 1979. The oncology establishment dismissed his findings without serious replication. Having also fought government authority over nuclear testing, he was predisposed to challenge official campaigns. His scientific stature made this critique especially pointed—and polarizing—within the medical community.
Nixon signed the National Cancer Act in 1971, promising a cure by the U.S. bicentennial. By the late 1970s those promises had collapsed while chemotherapy and radiation remained brutal and often ineffective. Post-Watergate distrust of government ran high. Critics argued the NCI entrenched chemotherapy-centric research while dismissing prevention and nutritional approaches. Pauling's statement landed in a climate of failed institutional promises and growing public skepticism toward the medical-industrial establishment.
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