The Cancer Stage of Economic Parasitism, 3

We can consider parasitism and cancer as different degrees of the same thing; and we can consider the difference in terms of the speed and the prognosis of its course. And in terms of its goal, too.
What parasites and carcinogenic cells have in common is that both can place on the shoulders of the host organism any degree of burden, from the imperceptible to the unbearable. At least at the beginning, in that the differences turn up afterwards during the course of the disease.
We can consider that a certain percentage of parasites settle for an imperceptible burden, and that a certain percentage even takes care not to kill the host organism with too unbearable a burden, hence in parasitism a certain percentage of host organisms survives more or less indefinitly in more or less unbearable conditions, and a certain percentage of host organisms is killed rather slowly.
And then we can consider that the cancer uncontrolled growth rate at cellular level is way above the parasite growth rate at reproduction level as organisms, and that roughly all carcinogenic cells do not settle nor care, hence in cancer the course speed is usually faster, and the prognosis is most certainly lethal.
Because we can consider the parasite and the carcinogenic cell as having a different goal as well: the parasite wants to exploit the host organism; the carcinogenic cell wants to kill it. We may call that a poetic license in relation to biopathology in a narrow sense, and indeed our knowledge of the difference between a mere criminal and a suppressive falls outside of it, just as our field of investigation does.

Ok, so there’s some parallelism of sorts among moneypulation, parasitism, and cancer. So what?
So each dot, brought to light and connected, helps us bring to light and connect many other dots, until all together they reveal, clear and unmistakeable, the logic scheme connecting seemingly unrelated facts, and the purposes they serve behind their seeming haphazardness and senselessness.