Heather in Canada wrote to Dedman:
> Besides.....if an alleged doctor has to hit the news groups to
> advertise his so-called expertise, he is not much of a physician,
> IMO. Up here that sort of thing is highly frowned upon and with
> good reason. It used to be that way with lawyers, until we got
> more *Americanized*.....don't much like that either and I worked
> in law for decades.
Both the American Medical Association and the American Bar
Association once forbid advertising in their bylaws or rules.
A lawyer and another quack similar to doc ruck challenged their
respective organization. The supremes in black robes in D.C.
declared that those bylaws/rules were anti-competitive and in
violation of America's Taft-Hartley Law.
It also happened when a guild of Radio-TV broadcasters was
challenged by an extremely small group of TV stations that did
not like the requirements the guild's standards/bylaws/rules
they had to obey in order to display the "family" seal of the
broadcasting organization.
Thus.....you became more *Americanized* thank to those
black-robed justices in Washington. <VBG>
___ Blue Wave/QWK v2.12
I.P. Freely - 19 Apr 2008 21:03 GMT
I've PLONKED the sock puppet and his sycophants, so they no longer exist
to me, but I suspect that forwarding his crap to his website chat line,
his state medical board, his Alcoholics Anonymous chapter, his mommy,
and any other appropriate agency might place his sanity under legitimate
official and customer scrutiny and extract a price for his behavior. I
wouldn't want the best uro in the business working on me if I thought he
were bonkers.
I.P.