For reasons explained later in this volume, in the independent review, and in Epigenetics, Wallach became the victim of character assassination shortly after his discovery, resulting in an effective blacklisting of him in veterinary medical circles, academia, and research institutions. As it turned out, that horrible event, roughly coincidental with the death of his second wife Josephine E. Wallach, led Joel Wallach to a different path toward fulfillment of his life’s mission. That turning point eventually catapulted Wallach to levels of achievement, success and notoriety vastly superior to anything he likely could have attained in the academic field of veterinary pathology. Precisely because of that event, Wallach entered the field of medicine, formally crossing the line from the world of animal health and disease to the world of human health and disease, relying on comparative pathology to establish a unique new perspective on the best way to prevent and treat human disease, a way that defines a truly unique and revolutionary medical paradigm that, increasingly, tempts away from conventional medicine those victimized by it.