Medical Forum / General / Alternative / January 2008
Tim Bolen----is there a Reunion Scheduled?
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Debbee - 20 Jan 2008 20:04 GMT Mr. Bolen:
I'm guessing that you have wanted to get a healthy discussion going about one's opinions of the AAPS lawsuit against the Texas Medical Board going.
I have one question for you--
Will any of the posters that have posted for or against MCS, and against the doctors that treat such patients be involved in any type of reunion or meeting as a result of our own personal opinions on the subject matter? In other words, I have personal experience in the subject matter, and I was a patient of Dr. Rea's, and Dr. Alfred Johnson (who I just found out has a disciplinary action against him now also). If I have spoken out in defense of MCS and as a patient, and those individuals that have spoken out against Dr. Rea, or against the diagnosis of MCS are we subject to the possibility of being involved in some way?
I want to understand this so that in the future days ahead if posts are made for or against MCS, that it is possible that those of us that are known to openly state our opinions if there is any possibility that we might be reunited as a result of our postings? I think it might help all of us that have posted pro and con about the subject matter, and the treatments etc., to know this in advance. I am only stating this because of the possibility of those individuals that have posted against MCS and or doctors that treat such may not realize that the information they have may or may not be what it is in the real world. I would hate to think that anyone without any real personal experience would find themselves having to explain where they got the information, and why they were posting against something they had no real knowledge of.
I think you'd probably get a better discussion going on this topic if the people that post here on a regular or semi-regular basis without any real personal experience with the matter, or without any real conflicts of interests, knew if what they posted was not going to be used against them in any way.
I'd appreciate an answer to this question at your earliest convenience.
The One True Zhen Jue - 20 Jan 2008 20:14 GMT > Mr. Bolen: > [quoted text clipped - 14 lines] > the diagnosis of MCS are we subject to the possibility of being > involved in some way? Your contentions that you set off airport metal detectors due to your blood levels of heavy metals can and will be reposted to demonstrate your lack of credibility. If you wish to withdraw that ludicrous statement by accepting my modest proposal, then you won't hear it from me any more.
> I want to understand this so that in the future days ahead if posts > are made for or against MCS, that it is possible that those of us that [quoted text clipped - 9 lines] > information, and why they were posting against something they had no > real knowledge of. Your veiled threat against me is just as silly as your contention that you set off metal detectors due to heavy metal poisoning. Somatization disorders are real diseases, Debbee, they just aren't organic illnesses. MCS is caused by the fear of chemicals, not the actual chemicals in question. You've seen the many studies that I and others have posted. Sexual abuse seems to be highly correlated with this particular somatization disorder, but I doubt that it is a necessary condition, merely a sufficient one.
Now, lets see what your definition is and what research supports your contention.
(Sound of rustling wind blowing tumbleweeds through cyberspace) (Sound of Crickets Chirping in the distance) (Sound of a Coyote howling 1.5 miles away)
> I think you'd probably get a better discussion going on this topic if > the people that post here on a regular or semi-regular basis without > any real personal experience with the matter, or without any real > conflicts of interests, knew if what they posted was not going to be > used against them in any way. Debbee, you may print out my postings on 30 grit sandpaper and use them for toilet paper.
> I'd appreciate an answer to this question at your earliest > convenience. Debbee - 20 Jan 2008 20:40 GMT > Your veiled threat against me is just as silly as your contention that > you set off metal detectors due to heavy metal poisoning. [quoted text clipped - 4 lines] > this particular somatization disorder, but I doubt that it is a > necessary condition, merely a sufficient one. Yes, that is what you would think. There is no veiled threat against you.
You are wrong about the intention of my post. My ONLY concern was for the people that post here on a regular or semi regular basis that have spoken out for and against MCS.
Before jumping to conclusions it is always best to ask what they were before posting misinformation about my post in the first place.
Mark Probert - 21 Jan 2008 03:23 GMT >> Your veiled threat against me is just as silly as your contention that >> you set off metal detectors due to heavy metal poisoning. [quoted text clipped - 12 lines] > that post here on a regular or semi regular basis that have spoken out > for and against MCS. It is not for or against MCS. I doubt that anyone thinks that it is not a real problem. It is just some of us that believe that it is psychosomatic and not physiological.
> Before jumping to conclusions it is always best to ask what they were > before > posting misinformation about my post in the first place. Debbee - 21 Jan 2008 04:15 GMT > It is not for or against MCS. I doubt that anyone thinks that it is not > a real problem. It is just some of us that believe that it is > psychosomatic and not physiological. And I am not sure what the Zhen boy believes.
The One True Zhen Jue View profile More options Sep 20 2007, 2:08 pm On Sep 20, 4:40 pm, "Paul T. Holland" <pholl...@bellatlantic.net> wrote: - Show quoted text -
Its too bad that this clown (Dr Rea) didn't lose his license years ago. He's done enough harm for one lifetime.
Jan Drew - 22 Jan 2008 02:35 GMT >>> Your veiled threat against me is just as silly as your contention that >>> you set off metal detectors due to heavy metal poisoning. [quoted text clipped - 16 lines] > real problem. It is just some of us that believe that it is psychosomatic > and not physiological. Psycholobabble...
The entity *somatization disorder* is psychobabble and is obtained from the DSM-IV manual and is used by psychologists and psychiatrists.MD's have borrowed the entity for their own uses. It is a spurious diagnosis with no laboratory indicators.
that somatization disorder is a kind of junk category into which physicians dump patients presenting with mind/behaviorialsymptoms and/or a history of such which the physician does not fancy or understand, especially if the patient does not present with symptoms or symptoms which are not separate diagnoses (also anon-scientific way of separating symptoms and causality) . I mentiont his because mercury and lead are both known to cause primarily "psychiatric" symptoms, with a history of emotional instability, etc.in patients.
So a "scientist" is someone who makes "a priori" judgements about what neurological symptoms a heavy metal poisoned patient can and cannot have. A "scientist" demands laboratory indicators whenever his fraternity does so. When the fraternity does not do so, the esteemed scientist Rx's Prozac like *mad*. But if the patient's complaints appear in some kind of package which don't meet the prejudices of the male clinician/voodoo doctor, then it's necessary to pull out theDSM-IV manual and wax on about scientific discipline and create from thin air a "somatization disorder".
It's just another way of saying that one can create a loose definition of a nebulous condition and then stretch it to label anything which appears bizarre, so that rather than actually diagnose and solve problems you can dump the ones you don't like into the recycle bin andlet the DSM-IV manual thumpers profit from the stash. That way everybody is happy. The male voodoo doctor gets to see himself as a scientist and the psych therapist gets another client.
I believe that SD is used by doctors who do not like the idea that conditiions which affect the brain cause certain mental states and behaviors which are not in keeping with their own requirements for how disease is supposed to manifest in the human body. I believe the medical profession has an alliance with the psych profession because they share a common belief system.
No, the starting point is to go back to college and unlearn the psychobabble taught to physicians in med school. But that cannot be done--with all the psychological investments involved in the career and selfhood and one's supremecy of being--so instead one wages war on the Chronic Fatigue, Fibromyalgia, and Multiple Chemical Sensitivitysyndromes, since these syndromes are diseases of both body and brain,in which affective disorders are documented in all three. But since the Freudian-psychobabble-educated physician suffers cognitivedissonance when presented with these, the syndromes must be attacked. Continuing education is not an option. Instead, reality must be shaped to fit the psychological needs of the profession, and the patients need to be hazed.
So rather than counsel with a psychotherapist over issues of selfhood and megalomania and deep insecurity which interfere with the process of continuing education--which is also the scientific process itself--it is necessary to reformulate these disease syndromes so that they fit into the 20th-century mind-body conceptual dualism taught to physicians, in which brain diseases are separate from diseases of thebody and mind states are separate from both. This needs to be done despite the fact that poisons such as lead and mercury have been known for 100 years to poison the brain, body, and mind all at the same time. So Science needs to be bent and manipulated to serve a profession which maintains a conceputal framework which is not rooted in Science, and those teachings must be maintained for those sychologically inclined to conservatism and intellectual dominance,all properly wrapped in the impressive rhetoric of scientific and clinical objectivity.
A lot of your responses are flak garbage which you use to exhaust pariticpants. I made my position perfectly clear. Decades of psychobiological research, including century-long scientfically acquired knowledge on the effect of poisons such as heavy metals on the brain, show that mood and mental states can and do derive fromorganic origins. Meanwhile state-credentialed MD's are writing books and articles about how biological psychiatry is "pseudoscience", a"myth", and a "fraud". On *this* subject the present generation is corrupt, and is not going to give up its intellectual commitment to the psychobabble it received in med school.
On the issue of MCS, ascribing "affective disorders" to "psychologicalf actors" is an opinion which is rammed through as Science. It is accompanied by dismissive descriptions of mind states and behavior of the patients, with all kinds of unscientific judgements andassumptions as to 1) whether those mind states and behavior arelegitimate (e.g. fear of chemicals, stress of chronic illness), and 2)whether the mind states and behavior have an organic or non-organic origin.
MCS *will* receive a fair hearing only when the medical profession gives up its intellecutal commitment to the teachings of psychology as the only explanation for how mind states and behavior alter with disease.
You asked me for evidence of "mind-body conceptual dualism" and I just gave an example from a psychobabbling physician in this thread. Your technique is to bait and throw out idiotic flak, so that now we can have a separate existential debate as to whether there really is adualistic mind-body conception in modern medicine.
Yes, physicians do recognize a connection between the two--they call it somatization disorder. That is, your boyfriend broke up with you and you are self-pitiful due to your past child raising and have along history of maladaptive behaviors and you have sunken into depression and can't concentrate and now your immunity has sunk and now you have an infection etc etc. They may *also* talk about a"psychological component" as being the result of chronic stress from the illness.
But the medical profession is selective about when the connection operates in one direction vs. the other.
The fact is, there isn't an economy for the problem of chronic mercury and lead exposure causing maladaptive dysfunctional unhealthy minds and behaviors. Not because the science doesn't exist to support it. But because the economy doesn't exist to produce the professional intellect to study, talk about, and treat it. The psychotherapists and psychologists would be in less demand. There would be no drugs to patent. Hence the facts are dropped from consciousness. That mercury and lead f**k up people's emotions and minds (in addition to a hundred other symptoms) is so dropped out of consciousness that MD's can write books that argue that Biological Psychiatry is a fraud.
As a result, one must conclude that MCS is not caused by poisons--which just about everyone who has the illness and has clinical experience treating it argues--but rather is a somatization disorder.
This is how economy and professional cultures distort reality and allow ingrained assumptions and bias to manipulate and distort the process of scientific inquiry.
No, many physicians recognize that they are often dealing with illnesses that involve both the mind & the body. It would seem as if you are attributing their admission of this fact to some sort of denial instead. Incorrect. But commonly the same conclusion that some patients erroneously arrive at if the doc declines to attribute the illness to physical factors alone.
This thread is in the context of MCS. Within the context of this subject physicians *do not* generally conceive or discuss depression*or* anxiety in any terms other than the psychologist's, regardless *how* the psychologist constructs the relationship, it is the*psychologist's* constructiona and the psychologist's ideology. The very own terminology employed by the author of the medical textbook cited, who is at the pro-MCS end of the debate *within* the mainstream, is that it is an illness with "psychological factors".
Since you mention arthritis in the context of this thread on MCS (which is a disease its propopents argue is the result of*poisoning*), I will say that poisons such as lead and mercury commonly causes brain symptoms *first*, because these poisons are emically attracted to brain tissue. The first stage of these poisonings is commonly brain symptoms only. Patients may suffer depression or anxiety for *years* before the symptoms originating in organs *below neck* emerge in sufficient degree to cause the patient to seek care. So the depression in these cases does *not* follow arthritis and the depression is not something "psychological" *asdistinct* from the physical. The depression is not of the"psychological" domain. It is a physical symptom no less than arthritis. It is not a "component" and it is not a "factor". It is a*symptom*.
The problem is conceptualizing depression and anxiety as being in adifferent category than "physical" symptoms. This division in thought is reflected by your own use of language and the very manner in which you discuss depression in relation to other symptoms. Depression commonly bears no relation to the other symptoms except they both share a similar cause in some *poison* which has attacked the brain together with other organs in the body.This conceptualizing is largely responsible for the opposition to these diseases by the medical profession.>
Depression is not a *component* by "a priori" assumption. If doctors want to assume the nature of the pathology in a conceptual framework and language *originated by psychologists*, then they should seek psychology as a career and *not* human physiology. If doctors want to educate us about how depression affects human health--but *not* how mercury and lead affect affect brain and emotional and mental health--then they should be psychologists and lecture on Ophrah Winfrey, but *not* manipulate the research and interpretation of MCS research by projecting their own indoctrination onto reality.>
Depression needn't be a *component* and it needn't be a *factor *simply because psychologists (and physicians loyal to their ideology) insist that it be so.
I do not agree that I am arguing with myself and I do not agree we are simply talking about terminology. I have a good first-hand understanding of the disease, I have a good understanding of non-mainstream discussions of the disease, and I have good understanding of mainstream discussions of the disease. Within the mainstream the depression/anxiety is presently discussed as being a"factor" or "component"--*not* a symptom. Ten years ago the depression/anxiety was discussed as being *causative*. There has beena gradual shift in language as the disorder has been *grudgingly*accepted as being somatic, but the acceptance has been gradual, in which the depression/anxiety has altered from being "primary" to being a "factor" or a "component". No this is not simply terminology but reflects changing conceptions of the disease as the medical society isslowly accepting that chemical intolerance exists, but cannot shake lose its belief system for how depression and anxiety play a role in these diseases.
You say that much is not understood about the disease. Then I expect that the medical society which you defend *suspend* its assumptiosn about depression/anxeity being primary *or* a "component" or "factor"in any causative way regarding chemical intolerance, and to cease using language which communicates that very conception.
A neurologist who has decribed what actually happens in MCS is that the brain is abnormally stimulated by the chemical and an electrochemical reaction occurs in the brain in which the neurotoxicant glutamate is released and brain cells swell and the patients suffers debiliitating symptoms. He further states that this process is a process of ongoing injury to brain cells, a disease of pre-existing brain cell injury with continuing brain cell injury uponchemical exposures. He reached these conclusions after studying changes in EEG measurements in which patients were exposed tochemicals such as paint, gasoline, perfume, lacquer, etc. He found wildly altering EEG measurements upon chemical exposure and found evidence of dementia in the patient in various areas of the brain, with brain function deteriorating upon exposure. This neurologist'sattempt 10 years ago to gather a scientific audience for his findingsresearch was frustrated and obstructed while at the same time descriptions by mainstream medical scientists and professionals of "affective disorders" being primary or a causitive "factor" or"component" are accepted without question. I think that if one examines the *neurological* observations made and explanations advanced for what is happening in the brain upon chemical exposures, one would find the descriptions of "affective disorders" and "somatization disorders" as being causitive "components"/"factors" to be asinine in their utter vacuity with regard to the subject.
So I do not even agree with the primacy which is given to anxiety/depression in these diseases because examinations of the disease which actually have some neurobiological depth find that anxeity/depression have little to do with the disease process. It is a sideshow produced by persons who know nothing of the disease and are prefectly content to send both the patients and neurological investigations into their disease into the garbage chute. What has been occuring has been a type of medical and sociological final solution to a disease and its sufferers which appear to be bizarre to many uninformed.
But because the numbers of affected is so high, the culture and the society is forced to make some kind of adjustments in its willingness to admit the reality of the disease, but because it resists explanations outside of the intellectual box it has been taught, it still cannot accept chemical intolerance because it cannot fit the emical intolerance together with the affective disorders, because it is not willing to alter its dogma regarding how affective disorders present themselves with other brain symptoms in body-brain diseases.
No I'm sorry but this is not simply about terminology.
Don't kid yourselves. If you think the debate is resolved by physicians who like to throw around big terms like "somatization" as if they are experts on the topic, don't kid yourselves. Go get your Shrink's license and do the kind psycho babbling and psycho labelling instead of passing yourselves off as honest scientists. In that role, rather than as the frustrated shrinks you presently are, you can get all the hard-ons you want writing profiles for Abnormal Psychology journals.
By the way, I just recently spoke to a mother of an autistic child who said her child has "raging" chemical sensitivities. This I think will demand some more inventive, delusional, and self-elevating psychobabble from frustrated psychologists in the physicians lounge. Autistic children make good meat for physicians contemptuous of new diseases which stretch their education.
Fibromyalgia, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, and Multiple Chemical Sensitivity syndromes are beyond the medical education and intellect of the present generation. The medical textbooks which properly deal with these diseases medically and scientifically will be written by the next generation. The present generation of sci/med professionals generally will protect its intellectual turf until it retires, and hese patients will be scoffed at, ridiculed, marginalized etc. until fresh yound minds, which will not find these diseases to be strange, will give these diseases the study and respect they deserve
>> Before jumping to conclusions it is always best to ask what they were >> before >> posting misinformation about my post in the first place. Mark Thorson - 22 Jan 2008 02:57 GMT > Psycholobabble... As in the Psychlos?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battlefield_Earth_%28film%29#Plot
I saw that movie. It wasn't quite as bad as everybody says.
Jan Drew - 22 Jan 2008 02:28 GMT <Andrew_Kingoff@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:dc3827d1-127d-410f-9aff-016f0e6d3d0b@s12g2000prg.googlegroups.com...
> Mr. Bolen: > [quoted text clipped - 14 lines] > the diagnosis of MCS are we subject to the possibility of being > involved in some way?
>demonstrate your lack of credibility. http://groups.google.com/group/misc.health.alternative/msg/e09f62b1b04cb4b7
Andrew Kingoff Defames Himself
Subject: Re: Andrew Kingoff defames himself
>From: ils...@aol.comAdorable (Cant We All JUST Love Ilsa9) >Date: 3/24/2004 3:26 PM Pacific Standard Time >Message-id: <20040324182626.27471.00000...@mb-m12.aol.com>
>>So llsa admits yet again that she/he is Andrew. >>Anth
>Are you piss-drunk, Anth? Poor Andrew.
>All I said was that Jan sent me, and a few other MHA >regulars, picture(s) of herself. How you derive from that the notion that >I >am >somebody else is pure blarney. I sent IIsa NO picture.
Here is a post Andrew made, I guess he forgot, the post he made under his fake name is pretty much the same.
From: andrew_king...@my-deja.com (andrew_king...@my-deja.com) Subject: Re: Anxiety and Depression Original Format Newsgroups: misc.health.alternative Date: 2001-01-31 17:20:18 PST
What a coincidence. That's exactly how Jan & I met. She also accused me of being Aaron Fox, & accused Alarca & Polfus of being me. I think there's a term for that, but I wouldn't want to give even the impression that I was diagnosing anyone. ;)
From: MHA Needs More Skeptics (ils...@aol.comSKEPTIC9) Subject: Re: Kofi Annan vs ... Mr "David Wright" Original Format Newsgroups: misc.health.alternative Date: 2004-03-22 14:37:33 PST
Let me chime in, if I may. You see, Jan has a nasty habit (ok, she has several) of accusing people of being other people. Case in point: Jan thinks that I, Ilsa, am a guy named Andrew, a Licensed Acupuncturist. Jan thought that Andrew was another guy, named Aaron Fox and before that, she thought Andrew was here own "atheist Phd brother".
Now it's time for a another KABOOM.
From: JKingoff (jking...@aol.com) Subject: Re: Get lost, Bill View this article only Newsgroups: misc.health.alternative Date: 2002-03-09 07:36:43 PST
In 2000, Jan also asked for a photo of me and sent me one of herself.
(I sent her one of a deceased cousin of mine, FWIW. I didn't want that dysfunctional bundle of paranoia knowing just how radiant, handsome, and GQ I am....well, actually, I just didn't want Jan to have a proper image of me to fixate upon.)
To me, Jan looked EXACTLY as I expected her to. She looks angry, hostile, disoriented, rode hard and put away wet. She claims to have had cosmetic surgery, which if true, may explain her hatred of conventional medicine.
If you want a fair idea of what Jan looks like, take Minnie Pearl, dye her hair auburn, and give her a cheap face lift. My apologize to Minnie Pearl for the unfavorable comparison.
Bottom line, nobody will ever want to see Jan hiking in the nude... ======== Andrew Kingoff, poor despicable and pathetic liar.
EXPOSED!!!!!
(watch Richard H Jacobson hide behind his rock).
Jan
From: jking...@aol.com5in
From: John Bain (jbai...@aol.com)
- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -
> Subject: Re: Aspartame: Any Truth to the Stories? > Newsgroups: misc.health.alternative > Date: 2002-09-22 04:26:41 PST
> ils...@aol.com5554 (Ilsa Nein) writes: > >Jan, I'm sure that this Andrew is a fine piece of beef-cake, but I don't > >see > >why you air this fixation on MHA. Oh, and if you don't quit calling > >me > >"fake ilsa", I'll report you to Karuna's knee-jerk ISP.
> But Andrew, you are not very good at maintaining your separate personas. > Do you remember this interchange where you forgot which account you were [quoted text clipped - 13 lines] > > >most 'proper' treatment I have ever received. I have used it SOLELY > > >for 6 years.
> > So, you've been taking it for 6 years and you're not cured?
> Dear Ilsa, > how many years do you use regular medicine? how many years do you take [quoted text clipped - 6 lines] > than > ask questions.
> greetings > Kris [quoted text clipped - 5 lines] > View this article only > Date: 2001-10-09 06:08:38 PST
> >Dear Ilsa, > >how many years do you use regular medicine?
> I haven't needed regular medicine much. I have had my vaccinations, eat > properly, exercise, and don't take silly risks.
> > how many years do you take > >antibiotics
> I have taken antibiotics once. I was Rx'd a single pill.
> >. Did that cured you permanently?
> Well, I felt much better the following day and haven't taken one since and > that > was bout 6 years ago.
> >If you start thinking, even a couple of seconds, you will find out that > >people don't cure forever.
> Duh. However, some conditions are resolved and in the absence of > re-infection > they don't reoccur.
> >A good advice: read Organon of Samuel Hahnemann. When you haven't read > >that > >book you will not understand what homeopathy is all about. Read it and > >than > >ask questions.
> I've read it and I've read more modern books on it. Its pure hokum and > the [quoted text clipped - 3 lines] > FAVORABLE > to homeopathy.
> >greetings > >Kris
> Show us a replicated, controlled, peer-reviewed study which show that > homeopathy is efficacious. Homeopathy was Hahnemann's way of acting-out > against "the system". It is nothing more than superstition, > pseudo-science, > and sympathetic magic.
> In the 21st century, we have real medicine and don't need to cling to the > vanity of a long deceased, disaffected 18th century doctor of voodoo. ===
> I want to understand this so that in the future days ahead if posts > are made for or against MCS, that it is possible that those of us that [quoted text clipped - 9 lines] > information, and why they were posting against something they had no > real knowledge of.
> I think you'd probably get a better discussion going on this topic if > the people that post here on a regular or semi-regular basis without > any real personal experience with the matter, or without any real > conflicts of interests, knew if what they posted was not going to be > used against them in any way.
> I'd appreciate an answer to this question at your earliest > convenience. jurimed2@yahoo.com - 21 Jan 2008 17:28 GMT > Mr. Bolen: > [quoted text clipped - 37 lines] > I'd appreciate an answer to this question at your earliest > convenience. Debbee:
I don't want to give away what I know about the Texas situation, but it is clear, and obvious that there is an organized attack is happening against certain classes of advanced medicine doctors in favor of maintaining the status quo. But it is more than that.
Every action taken by the Texas team has a reason - and the primary focus has been to direct the attention of the Texas state system of accountancy towards the malfunctioning Texas medical board system, and its employees. There is no question that the medical board operators are corrupt - they are.
I know it seems to you, because of Bill Rea that the issue is about MCS, but it is not about that, per se. It is obvious that someone, outside of the state, decided to take advantage of that corruption for their own needs. The problem is way beyond just an attack on Bill Rea, although it appears that portion will play an important role.
We had a similar situation in California, with our medical board, several years ago, but we cleaned it up. We had to put a "monitor" in place for two years.
At the moment, in Texas, not only is the Governor's office, the legislature, and the Attorney General looking into the scandal, but so is the media - in a big way. I point ALL of them, constantly, at New York. In short, Probert will get subpoenaed, hopefuly, first, by a Texas law enforcement agency. So will Probert's main client...
The key, in Texas, is the answer to the question "who, exactly, filed those anonymous complaints?" I suspect this story will end up on "60 Minutes." And, if I have my way, and I probably will.... the "quackbusters" will engage in in even higher level of Tim Bolen hatred - and I will smile.
Texas is going just the way I want, almost as good as the California dental NICO project.
If you like, and I bet you will, I can send you an article section, privately, I am circulating among health leadership, and their legal teams, nationally, right now. The portion you'd be interested in is called "The fourth component," and is one section of the six components of the current 2008 "quackbuster operation." It will ring familiar to you, for I'm documenting how discussion groups are infiltrated by quackbuster scum/filth, belittling advanced health care options. Send me a private email if you want to see it.
Smiling in California...
Tim Bolen
Debbee - 21 Jan 2008 17:42 GMT On Jan 21, 9:28 am, jurim...@yahoo.com wrote:
> Send me a private email if you want to see it. > > Smiling in California... > > Tim Bolen No thanks.
Mark Probert - 22 Jan 2008 03:41 GMT > On Jan 21, 9:28 am, jurim...@yahoo.com wrote: >> Send me a private email if you want to see it. [quoted text clipped - 4 lines] > > No thanks. Hmmm....Debbee has taste.
Debbee - 22 Jan 2008 08:21 GMT > Hmmm....Debbee has taste. As I have told you...."I don't do email* with anyone from here--.
D. C. Sessions - 22 Jan 2008 13:12 GMT > Hmmm....Debbee has taste. Sorry -- too much time with lolcats.
| Bogus as it might seem, people, this really is a deliverable | | e-mail address. Of course, there isn't REALLY a lumber cartel. | | There isn't really a Santa Claus, but try www.santaclaus.com. | +--------------- D. C. Sessions <dcs@lumbercartel.com> --------------+
Jan Drew - 24 Jan 2008 08:19 GMT >> On Jan 21, 9:28 am, jurim...@yahoo.com wrote: >>> Send me a private email if you want to see it. [quoted text clipped - 6 lines] > > Hmmm....Debbee has taste. Which is more than we can say for you. Keep sticking both feet in your mouth.
*It is the fact you sent the email which is not polite.* Mark Probert.
Wonder if Peter Bowditch sees any hypocrisy??
Debbee - 23 Jan 2008 04:12 GMT On Jan 21, 9:28 am, jurim...@yahoo.com wrote:
> If you like, and I bet you will, I can send you an article section, > privately, I am circulating among health leadership, and their legal [quoted text clipped - 4 lines] > infiltrated by quackbuster scum/filth, belittling advanced health care > options. Send me a private email if you want to see it. I read this post to a friend in the media. She is very interested, as a member of the press herself of getting the information so she can get the information out to "the people." She will contact you via email; you will know who she is "by the song that she sings." You might even find her code name in this post if you look hard enough, then again, may be it is not here.
Mark Probert - 23 Jan 2008 13:11 GMT > On Jan 21, 9:28 am, jurim...@yahoo.com wrote: >> [quoted text clipped - 8 lines] > > I read this post to a friend in the media. Are you back to those imaginary friends? You were doing so well.
She is very interested,
> as > a member of the press herself of getting the information so she can [quoted text clipped - 5 lines] > name in this post if you look hard enough, then again, may be it is > not here. Debbee - 23 Jan 2008 14:07 GMT > Are you back to those imaginary friends? You were doing so well. Actually she is in New York, and works as an editor for a magazine. I met her at Dr. Rea's clinic years ago. I'm sure she will find your comments interesting, that you reduced her to an imaginary friend.
Thanks for caring, Mark.
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