What is the cancer conspiracy? People believe that these big cancer medical industries are holding the cure to cancer because if they release the treatment then the treatment would destroy the cancer treatment industries. Which would result in a multi billion-dollar industry being gone. So the conspiracy suggests that the government is so concerned about keeping the business running that they hide any discovery that would free up hospital resources. What is cancer? Cancer is a term used for diseases in which abnormal cells divide without control and are able to invade other tissues. Cancer begins when the growth of a cell goes wrong, when the DNA of a cell mutates it affects the normal cell division. When this happens the cell do not die and new cell keep forming in the body when unnecessary, forming a mass called a tumor. Cancer is not just one disease, there are more then 100 different types of cancer, and it can be very dangerous. There are an estimated 1 million 600 thousand cases of cancer, about 577 thousand deaths. A lot of people say “we should have the cure for cancer with all the advancements in technology”, and with not having a cure these people start to wonder who is to blame, like the government. Well cancer is not just one disease, its many different diseases just gathering around a single umbrella. It’s a very complex disease that not just one simple medicine can. So asking why we don’t have a cure for cancer yet is like asking why we don’t have a cure for infection yet. One of the biggest points in this conspiracy is that the Government is keeping the cure suppressed because they will lose money from all the cancer treatments, and medicine. Well this theory pretty much falls apart when you think about it logically and reasonably. The government and a lot of government agencies actually fund a lot of the cancer research being done. The United States primary cancer research organization is a part of the US department of Health and Human Services and they spends around 4.8 million dollars a year on average. Even voluntary organizations fund cancer research. And they only help fund the research they think will actually work. Al