The Persecutions Of The Pioneers Of Oxidative Therapies Similar To Chlorine Dioxide. The persecutions of chlorine dioxide practitioners are simply a continuation of what befell pioneers of similar oxidative therapies. One difference: the earliest pioneers were assassinated. By Pierre Kory, MD, MPA (03/08/25)
pierrekorymedicalmusing…
Why don’t we hear more about safe, effective, inexpensive off-patent or natural treatments for what ails us? This longish but fascinating article helps explain the mystery of the ages (aged?).
Through the magic of copy/paste, Grok ai, and a little editing from our friends, we’ve boiled the article down for the impatient. But, as always, we encourage you to get the story straight from the horse’s mouth — in this case, Dr. Kory.
Here’s a taste of Dr. Kory’s writing from the Conclusion of his article:
I also believe that the safety, low cost, and efficacy of chlorine dioxide in cancer is just one reason why chlorine dioxide research is so restricted and its safety so propagandized. Cancer is a big business. Infectious illness is a big business. Dementia is a big business. Should I go on?
Note that I did not even bother to calculate a Kory Scale score for Glyoxilide but assassination alone merits a 100 points and a Wikipedia page that relegates your life's work to quackery is another 50 points. I think I will stop there.
Contents
The Persecutions of Dr. William F. Koch and Dr. Eugene “Fritz” Blass in the 1900’s
The Persecutions Of Dr. William F. Koch and Suppression of Glyoxilide Therapy
The Life, Career, And Persecutions of Dr. William F. Koch
Koch’s Reputation Amongst His Contemporaries
Evidence Of Glyoxilide’s Efficacy
Efficacy of Glyoxilide In Veterinary Medicine
Efficacy of Glyoxilide Therapy In Humans
FDA Actions/Accusations
FTC Actions/Accusations
Media and Journal Attacks
CONCLUSION
SUMMARY (Grok ai, edited; images from article)
Overview
Dr. Pierre Kory discusses the historical persecutions of pioneers in oxidative therapies, focusing on Dr. William F. Koch and Dr. Eugene "Fritz" Blass, who developed early treatments like Glyoxilide and Homozon.
These therapies, similar to chlorine dioxide, were seen as threats to the pharmaceutical industry due to their affordability, safety, and broad efficacy against various diseases.
Kory’s "Kory Scale" suggests that the more effective and accessible a therapy, the more it faces coordinated attacks from regulatory agencies and media.
The systemic suppression of these historical therapies — including assassinations, legal battles, and media smear campaigns — parallels modern restrictions on chlorine dioxide.
Key Concepts
The Kory Scale: Measures the intensity of attacks on therapies based on their effectiveness, safety, affordability, and accessibility.
Broadly effective, safe, and cheap therapies face severe opposition from regulatory bodies and media.
Chlorine dioxide and similar oxidative therapies score high due to their potential to disrupt the pharmaceutical industry.
Historical Context of Oxidative Therapies
Definition: Oxidative therapies include ozone, hydrogen peroxide, chlorine dioxide, and others, used for infectious, inflammatory, and degenerative diseases.
Pioneers:
Dr. William F. Koch (1885–1967): Developed Glyoxilide, a catalytic oxidative therapy. Dr. Koch died by poisoning.
Dr. Eugene "Fritz" Blass (1880–1967): Created Homozon, an oral oxidative therapy. Dr. Blass was murdered outside his lab.
Early Development: Ozone therapy began in 1870, with Nikola Tesla’s ozone generator in 1896, advancing medical applications.
Persecutions of Dr. Koch
Career: Koch, a highly credentialed scientist (B.A., M.A., Ph.D., M.D.), developed Glyoxilide, which was effective against cancer and other diseases.
Attacks:
AMA Investigation (1919): Wayne County Medical Society prematurely ended a study of Koch’s treatment, dismissing positive results.
FDA/FTC Actions: Faced court trials (1942, 1946), injunctions, and accusations of selling "distilled water."
Media Smears: JAMA and Colliers labeled Koch a quack; Wikipedia calls him a charlatan, despite contrary evidence.
ED NOTE
Wikipedia slaps the "charlatan" label on most think-outside-of-the-box heterodox docs. Those in the know consider the Wiki Wacko designation a badge of honor.
Evidence of Efficacy:
Veterinary: Cured mastitis, acetonemia, and other livestock diseases.
Human: Hundreds of physician and patient testimonials reported cures for cancer and other conditions.
Persecutions of Dr. Blass
Limited Information: Blass’s history is largely scrubbed from the internet.
Contribution: Developed Homozon, a simpler oral therapy, making it more threatening to the mainstream pharma world.
Fate: Murdered in 1967, same year as Koch, suggesting targeted suppression.
Implications of Oxidative Therapies
Potential Impact:
Could reduce reliance on vaccines, hospitals, and pharmaceuticals.
May address chronic diseases, lower medical costs, and improve public health.
Challenges:
Suppression through legal actions, media campaigns, and restricted access to supplies.
Lack of large-scale trials due to systemic barriers, mirroring modern restrictions on chlorine dioxide.
Conclusion
Dr. Kory underscores a pattern of persecution against oxidative therapy pioneers, driven by their therapies’ potential to disrupt the medical industry.
Koch and Blass’s stories highlight the lengths to which regulatory bodies and media go to suppress affordable, effective treatments, a pattern Kory sees continuing with chlorine dioxide.
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