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Medical Forum / Diseases and Disorders / Cancer / August 2005

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convicted felon's "Natural Cures" tops book charts (long)

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spamfree - 22 Aug 2005 19:25 GMT
Convicted felon's 'Cures' tops book charts By Claudia Parsons
Mon Aug 22, 9:07 AM ET  Yahoo News

He went to prison for fraud and was ordered by the U.S. government to stop
touting health products on infomercials, but Kevin Trudeau's book "Natural
Cures 'They' Don't Want You to Know About" is a bestseller.

Trudeau, who for years sold snoring remedies and memory enhancers through
long-format commercials dressed up as talk shows, says he is a consumer
advocate battling the "unholy alliance" of drug companies and government
regulators.

"It's all about money. The drug industry does not want people to get
healthy," he says in a commercial for his book. Trudeau says he has sold
about 4 million copies of the book in under a year, a huge amount for a
self-published book marketed initially only through the Internet and
television infomercials.

The book -- whose back cover says "Never get sick again!" and "Learn the
specific natural cures for herpes, acid reflux, diabetes ... cancer ... and
more!" -- has topped the Publishers Weekly nonfiction bestseller list for
the past three weeks.

That attracted the attention of the New York Consumer Protection Board,
which issued a warning this month that Trudeau promised cures he did not
deliver.

"This book is exploiting and misleading people who are searching for cures
to serious illnesses," said Teresa Santiago, who chairs the board. "From
cover to cover, this book is a fraud," she said, adding that a doctor quoted
apparently endorsing the book died in 2001.

Trudeau filed a lawsuit to stop the Consumer Protection Board from
approaching TV stations to persuade them not to air his infomercials.

He says he recommends herbs, vitamins and other alternative treatments and,
while urging people to consult doctors, lists cures such as shark cartilage
for tumors and organic dark chocolate for stress.

"There are multiple ways to cure cancer without drugs and surgery," Trudeau
told Reuters, adding that drug companies eschew natural products because
they are unprofitable.

The National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine said it is
spending over $120 million this year investigating everything from
acupuncture to chamomile tea and the National Cancer Institute spends
another $128 million.

'PARANOID FANTASY'

Stephen Barrett, a retired psychiatrist who runs a Web site called
Quackwatch, described Trudeau's book as "a collection of false ideas" that
included dangerous advice such as the claim that sunscreen can cause cancer
so it should not be used.

"The danger of the book is it's an attempt to shape public opinion so people
don't trust science-based healthcare."

Barrett said he too was suspicious about excessive profits in the drug
industry, but said it was "paranoid fantasy" to suggest they would suppress
or ignore cures.

"A lot of people are angry because drugs are so expensive," he said,
explaining the book's draw. "He's promising magic."

In September, Trudeau agreed to pay $2 million to settle a U.S. Federal
Trade Commission lawsuit over his claim that "Coral Calcium" could cure or
prevent cancer but admitted no wrongdoing. Trudeau agreed to stop marketing
health products but he was allowed to market books.

The FTC called the case an example to "other habitual false advertisers,"
prompting a lawsuit from Trudeau.

FTC attorney Laura Sullivan said the regulator was watching Trudeau
carefully but had taken no action over the book.

Sullivan said the FTC sanction barring him from making infomercials for
anything but books was "extraordinary" and followed a string of previous
fraud charges that were settled.

Trudeau, 42, was jailed for 22 months in the early 1990s over credit card
fraud -- something Trudeau dismissed as nothing more than a youthful
indiscretion.

Reader reviews on Amazon.com revealed strong opinions, including complaints
that his book refers readers to his Web site for more information.

Trudeau's site offers monthly membership at $9.95 and lifetime membership
for $499. He said he charges because he takes no advertising and he spends
$1.5 million a week on infomercials.

"I'm doing this virtually as a nonprofit," he said. "I'm not doing this for
the money. It's a passion."
J - 22 Aug 2005 22:09 GMT
> Convicted felon's 'Cures' tops book charts By Claudia Parsons
> Mon Aug 22, 9:07 AM ET  Yahoo News
>
> He went to prison for fraud and was ordered by the U.S. government to stop
> touting health products on infomercials, but Kevin Trudeau's book "Natural
> Cures 'They' Don't Want You to Know About" is a bestseller.

Here's a tip for you.
I post such to sci.med.diseases.cancer so that "pro" arguers don't feel this is
an appropriate newsgroup to argue their points on (and you know very well, there
have been lots of arguing about such, in previous years).

It doesn't hurt cancer patients to watch both newsgroups
news:sci.med.diseases.cancer _and_ discussions of unconventional therapies are
explicitly allowed in that newsgroup's Charter.

J - trying to keep the signal to noise ratio down on this NG
spamfree - 26 Aug 2005 19:31 GMT
> > Convicted felon's 'Cures' tops book charts By Claudia Parsons
> > Mon Aug 22, 9:07 AM ET  Yahoo News
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
>
>  Here's a tip for you.

My posting wasn't about creating controversy. It was a warning. In the US we
are being bombarded with daily 30 min infomercials for this book that are
really slickly produced. The radio is also playing commercials many times
daily for this book. People need to know that the author has a history of
ripping people off and that this book is about making him rich and not about
helping someone get well.       s2d
J - 26 Aug 2005 20:20 GMT
> My posting wasn't about creating controversy. It was a warning. In the US we
> are being bombarded with daily 30 min infomercials for this book that are
> really slickly produced. The radio is also playing commercials many times
> daily for this book. People need to know that the author has a history of
> ripping people off and that this book is about making him rich and not about
> helping someone get well.       s2d

So do thousands of others.
You must have a reading and comprehension problem.
I'm not about to post about the 1,000's of others (same/similar to yours) here.
It will draw the supporters of such claims to this newsgroup. (when we've spent
2 years trying to get rid of most of them off this newsgroup).
news:sci.med.diseases.cancer is the place for such.
J
 
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