The Kanzius Machine: A Cancer Cure?

John
Kanzius, a man with no background in science or medicine, has come up
with what may be one of the most promising breakthroughs in cancer
research in years. What’s more, he did it with his wife's pie pans.
Kanzius
is a former businessman and radio technician who built a radio wave
machine that has cancer researchers so enthusiastic about its potential
that they're pouring money and effort into testing it out.
If
clinical trials pan out -- and admittedly, there's still a long way to
go -- the Kanzius machine will destroy cancer cells all through your
body without the need for drugs or surgery ... and without any side
effects.
Six years ago, Kanzius was diagnosed with terminal
leukemia, and since then has undergone 36 rounds of toxic chemotherapy.
He decided there had to be a better way. One night, Kanzius got out of
bed, went to the kitchen, and started to build a radio wave machine out
of modified pie pans. He eventually spent $200,000 building a more
advanced version.
The machine sends radio waves from one box to
another, creating enough energy to activate gas in a fluorescent light.
Since metal heats up when it's exposed to high-powered radio waves, if
a tumor was injected with some kind of metal, it can be destroyed with
a focused radio wave beam.