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a cancer doctor from Oxford U says....
by wgoconnel
+1/-2 Reply

If one were to have damaged tissues that became cancerous, couldn't one go to areas on the planet which had a higher or lower amount of gravity, and thereby alter the molecular structures of some tissues to the extent that metastasis was stultified? Can you please write back.

Cordially,
William G. O'Connell

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The reply:

I am afraid I do not think that plausible...gravity is basically the same everywhere. Thirdly I am not aware of any evidence that gravity would affect metastases.

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I'm not naming names, though perhaps I should, and probably will...however, THIS, THIS! is what passes for a scholar; for an educated person. Someone who tells his students,"gravity is basically the same everywhere?"

Yes and the earth is the same way around on the poles and the equator, the speed of light is constant, black people spontaneously got thick skulls from eating too many chicken and watermelons and you, William G. O'Connell, please go piss off and die from cancer which is a disease found on a world I cannot, nor probably will ever understand.

Well, why is this person allowed at a top notch university and I'm not? I've been saying stuff about different levels of gravity for many years now. On the poles there's less, on a plane - less, on a ship at sea - less. The thought process taken to reach this point has not followed any of the structural forms of education available to me. I split the conventional idea of the atom too. No one cares.

Can someone please tell me what, pray, do people pay for when they go to a college or university? I'd be interested to know.

Why don't I have a medical degree at this point? I can be so dumb that I can't connect the idea of metastasis and gravity. I applied to MIT, and I wrote that the earth has different amounts of gravity. Did they care? No.

These people could care less what they tell people, all they want is money. When I was at astronomy class my dumb-assed professor said that astrology was bullshit, and lo and behold, the gravity of stars do effect life on earth.

This person, the professor above, is a pathetic excuse for human being just like all lying insipid college professors are. They could care less whether or not people learn.

But having a cancer doctor say something like this is extremely insulting especially when recently having a lost a father to cancer, and he lost a mother to cancer. Young too.

I'm twenty-six and know what this guy is telling me is complete and utter bullshit. Obviously, this is another reason why I'm leaving America. I don't appreciate being lied to, and then fork over money for that. Is that an unreasonable position to take? The answer is no it's not.
Re: how can I ever be a doctor?
by wgoconnel
How can I ever do anything I want to do when the world is full of complete morons? I'll never be comfortable. I'll never earn enough money to help people or myself because no one can see the elegance of any idea Ill ever have. I'm twenty-six years old,and people are still trying to tell me the world doesn't have different amounts of gravity. What morons.

You know, the longer people are nihilistic, the worse their lives turn out to be. Except for the rev doctor Dr. B of Oxford. Everyone quick - go piss off and die of cancer, the good Dr. hasn't ripped off enough people to satisfy his voracious need for whatever.

You see, its becoming too hard for me to tell the people who know what they're talking about and being a little esoteric, or the people who are flat out f----ing robots.

But even still, from the perspective of a student, why should anyone pay and not get told the truth. Isn't that fraud?
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