Well, then your precious doctors diagnosed my whole family wrong. We did have meningitis and the doctors have no idea how we managed to survive with our mental processes intact
Did you have the bacterial type or the viral type?
Oh, and by the way, my medical records and firsthand account are admissible in court, so your hardly veiled accusation that I'm a lair has no weight.
1) Chill.
2) I never called you a liar. I had just assumed you never went to the doctor to get diagnosed because of how you seem to completely disdain doctors and think you can treat yourself.
And yet there is such a word as "conspiracy" in our language and pretty much every language. Why is there a word for it if it never happens?
It does happen. It's just never on such a huge scale that a single entity controls hundreds of thousands of individual people from around the world that have no relation to another other than profession. Especially in science, where the biggest rewards come from shooting down well established thoughts on how things are done. The pharmaceutical companies are not all powerful, all controlling, and all knowing. They want to make money, yes, and I wouldn't be at all surprised to find them trying to censor information that would harm their sales, but there's no way to do that for this sort of thing. In order to even entertain the idea of such a huge conspiracy, you need to first assume that all the doctors have no motivation to help anyone and only want money, that all the medical research being done is a farce, and that pharmaceutical companies have near or total power over the media.
And yet you pride yourself on your researching capabilities. I am sensing a contradiction.
The contradiction is that you claim Nascent Iodine does all these things, yet the most I can find are independent health sites regurgitating each other's beliefs and a few tidbits about how it helps with radiation absorption and treating hypothyroidism.
Where are the studies proving it does what you say? Where are the accredited institutions or groups giving this information? I can't find them. That's the kicker. I should be able to find them, if they exist.
Why don't you give me one or two?
Then why did you not go to the sources? If the sources are valid, then provide the valid sources, not wikipedia.
I can't find any sources about it
at all. There isn't even a
wikipedia article on Nascent Iodine. The closest I could find was the Atomidine one. Every other mention of "Nascent Iodine" comes from blogs or sites trying to peddle the stuff, claiming tons of healthy effects. From all appearances, it looks like a hoax.
Thank you, you just proved my points. You admit that the doctors and pharmaceutical companies are poisoning the general populace through medication.
1) There are side effects. This is known. It's required by law that these be known, and medication can't even be used in human trials until after a long period of animal testing. Patients who take the medication are told about the side effects.
2) It's not an intentional conspiracy to poison everyone. It's people trying to help others, and medication having a different effect on different people to some extent.
3) I'll repeat this one since it's so important.
It's known that the medication has these potential effects. When it becomes known that certain ones cause these birth defects, they're either halted or carefully used.
Now for the really fun part. Do you know how viruses work in your body? They both lower your body temperature and acidify your body. This creates a favorable environment for them to move within your body. The same thing happens with cancer. But by making your body more alkaline, you can stop the spread of the viruses, which allows your body to neutralize the problem more easily.
I will admit that my working knowledge on this particular area is not sufficient for me to reply to at this time, and I'll look into it shortly.
Trans-Dermal?
I'll concede that. Though I can't say whether the stuff you're talking about in particular can be absorbed through the skin or not.
The clay helps pull the foreign entity from your body as the magnesium works on healing your body.
I looked up that clay stuff. The effects it was claimed to have, such as absorbing "toxins" was so vague that it was extremely suspicious. It sounded like pseudoscience. I looked it up again in a different place (not one of those homeopathic websites) and the only effect in common which it was said to have was dermatological ones. How does the magnesium heal your body?
Because iodine has been removed from the food supply for so long, you are now deficient in it,
Except it hasn't been removed from the food supply, and the vast majority of people in first world countries are not deficient in it.
which means you have to make up for lost ground.
By taking a dozen times the required amount every day? I don't think so.
If you don't do this then the iodine doesn't do everything that it needs to do.
Here's the biggest thing, for me, which makes me believe this is pseudoscience. Apart from the conspiracy-esque mindset those who follow homeopathy almost always display, you place -so- many different abilities onto these substances. If they were such super-cure-alls, the medical industry would be all over it. The mark of a lie or false belief is often exaggeration. It's suspicious, at the very least, that all of these things are somehow supposedly more potent than modern medicine, when they're just common compounds you can come by anywhere. To be blunt, it sounds like a scam. Someone selling a necklace with a charm on it can make all the same claims and have people crying out how it works so well, and how it supposedly does all of these things and sounds so supported - until you think about it and it doesn't really make much sense.
you may or may not be right, but what most people don't acknowledge is that you can pretty much do anything and still get better most of the time. That's why homeopathy appears to work. Staying hydrated and resting can possibly cure just about any illness.
This. A hundred times this. Homeopathy is simply placebo effect, correlative health, and basic nutrition in the form of proper nutrients via supplements. All this stuff you're claiming it does...isn't supported or proven. It's personal testimony from people who already think the health industry is bogus and that this type of self medication works.