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The Six Components of the 2008 Quackbuster Operation...
Opinion by Consumer
Advocate Tim
Bolen
February 22, 2008
Do not, for even a second, think that the US "Quackbuster" operation, a plot to stop anyone, and everyone, from changing the broken US health care system, is run, or even maintained, by delicensed MD Stephen Barrett out of his 2421 West Greenleaf Street, Allentown, Pennsylvania address, or his condo at 287 Stoneview, Pittsboro, North Carolina. It would be foolish to assume that this bitter, nasty, old man, who stumbles through life, tripping from one professional failure to another, is running a cleverly set up plot. He's just the "front man." The one they want you to focus on. He's ill. He'll die soon, and someone else will take his place as the frontispiece.
So, who really is running it? And why? And, how is it being done? Keep reading, and all will be revealed.
SUMMARY:
The 2008 Quackbuster operation is involved in “info wars” on the internet. It is a public relations "black-ops," run out of a New York misinformation agency. It has six components designed to do two things: (1) provide false and misleading negative healthcare information, primarily through the internet, to (a) the general public, and (b) employees of health insurance companies, medical malpractice insurance companies, health agencies, County, State, and Federal enforcement agencies about those trying to fix/change the health care system, and people, therapies, products, etc., that compete with the current status quo, and (2) block, or diminish sources of substantial information about positive aspects of those people, therapies, products, etc, that compete with the status quo.
The plot is pervasive, well funded, and well run. And, it's time to break it up. This article will give you the information on how it works, and tips on how to stop it from affecting YOU and your interests.
The New York agency's intent is to not just defame, but to make that defamation, through organization, appear at the top of the search engines like google. Below, I’ll show you how they do that. They have organized to manipulate the online encyclopedia Wikipedia information about health care. They also, through people trained in disruption, troll Usenet (google) discussion groups, badmouthing advanced health care, regularly.
I emphasize that all of this attack is “organized”… and can be traced back to the same people – about five, or six, of them.
In other words, it is not just about Quackwatch. Worldwide, there are four major “quackbuster” centers: the US, Denmark, Canada, and Australia. In the US we are familiar with Barrett, Baratz, etc. In Australia we have “ratbags,” Peter Bowditch. In Canada we have Terry Polevoy. In Denmark we have Paul Lee PT (quackfiles).
The up-and-comer in all this is Paul Lee PT from Denmark, for it is he who manages both the Wikipedia information manipulation system, and the search engine top ranking system I’ll describe below. Although, the TWO systems, in place, give the quackbuster operation “info wars” advantage they also, because of how, and where, they did it, bring Lee, Polevoy and Bowditch, and all of the foreign operations under the jurisdiction of the US Court system. In other words - they made a big mistake, in their eagerness to corrupt.
Why? Because Wikipedia is based in Florida. The search engine placement system they use, called “webring” is based in Ashland, Oregon. Since they do business with these US companies, they are subject to be sued for their activities in this country.
THE COMPONENTS:
(1) The Quackbuster Communication Network has five parts:
(a) The Consumer Health Digest is a newsletter with mailing list of over twelve thousand names. The newsletter is sent out weekly to the mailing list. The list is made up of lower and middle level employees of county, state, and federal health administration and enforcement agencies, and employees of health insurance and medical malpractice insurance company employees. The so-called "Digest" is a simple tool to do two things: (1) propagandize those lower level employees into believing that the targets of the so-called articles are "bad people," criminals, doubtfuls, etc., and (2) convince those employees that they should devote time to investigating, prosecuting, or, at the very least, watching, the targets constantly.
If you, or yours, are the subject of any article on this newsletter - beware, for the readers of these articles are not the brightest people in the world, and would tend to believe what they read.
(b) The Health Fraud Discussion Group has two functions: (1) People making inquiries of information on "quackwatch.org" are "invited" to ask questions on this discussion group where, supposedly, "experts" will give the inquirer more information. Those "experts" are just more quackbuster operatives relaying more of the same lies and misinformation. (2) The discussion group provides a format for the quackbusters to showcase subjects, or people they want to defame or deride.
(c) The Skeptics Discussion Group is simply a means for the quackbuster propaganda system to tie into the worldwide "Skeptic" organization by trying to interest the Skeptic movement in being super-critical of the issues the quackbusters promote. Frankly, I don't know how well this works, or doesn't work, for them, because the involved so-called "skeptics" I see publicly are, for the most part, dolts - pseudo-skeptics operating in a pseudo-intellectual mode, trying to impress others with their claims to Mensa status - and not doing very well at it.
(d) The James Randi Discussion Group is an odd thing. James Randi, who bills himself as "The Amazing Randi," is, it appears, a fifth-rate magician who seems to play the Motel-6 Lounge Circuit in the US. He gets himself on television promoting various "doubts" about various things. Randi is not very impressive, and when you batch that together with his gargantuan ego, and his pompous presentations, you get just about what you would expect.
(e) SSR.com is the lair of Scott Ballantyne and the ScottSoft Research group out of New York City. SSR.com is the HOST for all of the above. Ballantyne is a relative unknown, and there is no obvious reason apparent why Ballantyne provides expertise, time, and labor to host, and manage, the four activities above. I suspect he is funded directly out of the New York misinformation agency.
Note - for those of you who wish to subpoena information (and you should) from SSR.com (Ballantyne), about the activities of these entities above in regards to individual clients, contact me, and I'll provide the data you need for subpoenas - and more. Ballantyne, I think, is in a panic (and he should be), lately, for he destroyed all of the archives of the Health Fraud Discussion Group, as he says, "for legal reasons."
(2) The Quackbuster manipulation of Wikipedia, the online encyclopedia:
Wikipedia is an odd thing. It is made up of a so-called "volunteer system." Several years ago, a team of quackbusters infiltrated various levels of the Wikipedia operation, and are now entrenched in the middle, and lower, level volunteer management system. If you try and put any positive information about advanced medicine, or the problems of US health care, on Wikipedia, or change false or misleading information the quackbusters have installed, you will fail. You will be blocked from further "editing" and the pages of Wikipedia will now carry information about what a "terrible person you are." The only way to have ANY influence over what Wikipedia says about subject is to approach them with a legal threat letter at the highest levels. Nothing else works. Even that has problems, for Wikipedia management operates on a financial shoestring, and apparently has no ability to police its own encyclopedia. Unfortunately, people use the encyclopedia - and they get very bad information about health care.
Below is a paragraph from the editor’s section of Wikipedia. The editor, here, is discussing the problem of the quackbuster slime, acting to control the information flow on Wikipedia - and what to do about it. so you understand the abbreviation POV stand for Point of View, and NPOV stands for No Point of View, which Wikipedia wants. The part in red is for emphasis. Read this:
I guess it depends on what purpose the External Links section serves. Do the links have to serve the NPOV interests of the article or can the links section be a place where specific points-of-view can have a chance to be expressed? As it is now, the chiropractic link section is broken down into Advocacy and Critiques. I think that this warns the researcher that they are leaving the NPOV environment that Wikipedia tries to provide and will be entering a POV external site.
If these links are truly just linking to the page for marketing reasons and don't serve a primary function of adding to the knowledge-base, I would then say to axe them. I haven't checked every critical link, but they do seem to link to essays or research on pages that don't directly try to sell you anything (other than their POV). If they are all offering the same POV with no really distinguishing differences, then they should be reduced in number.
The soapbox point is interesting. These are external links so it would seem that Wikipedia is not being directly exploited as a soapbox. However, the abundance of critical links could be seen as an attempt to present bias... using the amount of negative criticisms to invoke a negative POV about chiropractic. My solution up until now has been to add to the advocacy links to balance out the criticism. You can certainly try to delete the critical links and claim NPOV but I can almost guarantee you that you be quickly (and improperly) accused of "vandalism" by one of three specific chiroskeptics who police the chiropractic page all day long as far as I can tell. They love to throw "vandalism" accusations around - and usually are vastly overstating the matter. That being said, I have suggested a "disarming" strategy, where both sides would remove links in a balanced way, but my suggestion was met with silence.
Now as far as the link farming goes. Yes, virtually all of the critical sites are linked together through the SkepticRing, Anti-Quackery Ring, Chiropractic Subluxated Ring and other ways fashioned specifically for the purpose of boosting Search Engine ranking. A lot of those sites are operated by Stephen Barrett and his buddy Sammy Homola - Chirobase.org, Quackwatch.org, and NCAHF. They're three organizations all saying the same thing. What's really slimy is that they state opinions then reference their sister-sites support to that opinion. A lot of the links are operated or moderated by Fyslee (one of the three chiroskepics users who regularly accuse people of vandalism for removing links to his sites). Check out his userpage to see which sites he operates and moderates for. These chiroskepitics are working together to actively employ search engine tricks such as artifically boosting Google ranking by adding external links to their sites all over Wikipedia. I have documented this. Their goal is for a researcher curious about chiropractic to encounter their anti-chiropractic sites first on a Google search. Given these organizations' objective, I can certainly understand why they would want to do this. Unfortunately, the tactics that they employ are objectionable to both Google and Wikipedia. Hopefully these organizations will get wise to the chiroskeptic ring and ban their sites.
I'm not sure what to do in the meantime. One thing that I would like to suggest is that a website is linked to only once in the external links section. As it is now, they are linking to Chirobase and NCAHF several times throughout the article and in the external links section. Talk about boosting external link popularity!
I think that if you showed that some of these links are not providing anything new and are just marketing tools, you should be able to justify deleting them on the discussion page... just prepare yourself for an attack and false accusations. If you can handle all of that with a cool head, I say, "Be bold with your edits!"
I welcome your continued participation on the Chirorpactic and chiropractic-related articles. I think that you have a lot of great insight to offer Wikipedia and you seem to have a vary good graspe on Wikipedia's guidelines. I look forward to your future edits and discussions.
As a side note, I think the reason the chiroskeptics are "shouting" so loud is that they are realizing that nobody is listening to them. Chiropractic is growing faster than ever and more and more patients are receiving the benefits everyday. Levine2112 00:41, 14 February 2006 (UTC)
Note - for those of you who wish to subpoena information (and you should) from Wikipedia, about the activities of these entities above in regards to individual clients, contact me, and I'll provide the data you need for lawsuits, subpoenas, cease and desist letters - and more. Wikipedia is already on notice about the problem. Frankly, their system is goofy, and I can see how they got manipulated. The articles in the media criticizing Wikipedia are on target, and there needs to be more of them. Wikipedia deserves the criticism.
(3) The Quackbuster manipulation of internet search engines (Google, Yahoo, etc.):
Ever wonder how the crap quackbusters spew about people, therapies, or products they don't like appears FIRST on the internet search engines? I'm about to tell you how they do that, how to stop it, and how to sue them individually, and together, for having done it. You're going to love this.
There is, on the internet, a whole industry surrounding the idea of getting YOUR information on the first page of search engines like Google. The quackbuster operation uses a company to get their defamation, and false and misleading information on the first page, and the first several pages, of a search engine. If you are a target of theirs, you need to know this, and how it works.
How do they manipulate search engine placement? They use the services of a company called Webring which, for a fee, ties their webring together in such a way as to give each and every of theirr websites top google placement. The Anti-Quackery webring has 85 websites banded together. Their Skeptic webring has 150 websites. Their Chiropractic Subluxation webring has about five websites. They all work together.
Here is how the company Webring explains their service:
WebRing offers a unique and effective means of searching, locating and navigating between web sites with similar themes. WebRing allows web site owners to group their sites together into ring communities, and provides a navigation tool that links web sites together called a NavBar. Linked sites not only eliminate the necessity of repetitive searches, but the NavBar also accumulates hits from all of the sites so that a hit to one site is a hit to all sites. Additionally, the NavBar acts as a link so your web site is linked to every other site in the community. So now your site is benefiting from higher search engine results because it has more hits and more links.
I’m going to give you a short tour of how it works by having you click on a URL. This will take you to a page on the Webring website reserved for the “Anti-quackery webring” manipulated by Paul Lee PT. When you scroll down to see the list of the 85 members, you will notice that there are but a few major websites. Most of them are one-page “made up” stuff. Go here: http://g.webring.com/hub?ring=antiquackerysite
Note - for those of you who wish to subpoena information (and you should) from webring.com about the activities of these entities above in regards to individual clients, contact me, and I'll provide the data you need for subpoenas - and more. But, for sure, subpoena all personal, and business, information gathered by Webring for each and every member, and ringmaster, of the “Anti-quackery webring,” the “Skeptic webring,” the “Anti-quackery links,” and the “Chiropractic is Subluxated” webring.
(4) The Quackbuster infiltration of (Usenet) Internet AltMed Discussion Groups:
Ilena Rosenthal, the head of the anti silicone breast implant Humantics Foundation has been a victim of the New York agency's campaign for years. How has she been victimized? Two ways. (1) First, she's a target by an organized group that seeks to deride her, personally, so as to nullify her efforts to show the severe health problems of silicone breast implants. The New York agency's tactic is to attack her in the internet discussion groups. Their favorite internet tactic is claim that this happily married woman has constant sex with huge numbers of men, and animals. They get away with this, for the most part, because they use "fake" internet IDs, difficult to trace, and because those who are known live outside the US, and they know Rosenthal does not have the money to sue them in several different foreign countries simultaneously. (2) Stephen Barrett of quackwatch.com, and Terry Polevoy from Canada filed a false lawsuit against her - and, even though the lawsuit rebounded against them, and they had to pay her attorney fees of over $500,000, the fight took its toll.
The New York based group invades every internet discussion group it can find, and using similar tactics to those used against Rosenthal, derides and defames those trying to upgrade the health system. There are not that many of them, and we can now identify who most of them are, and who they work for.
Note - for those of you who wish to subpoena information (and you should) from discussion group files, and hosting companies, about the activities of these entities above in regards to individual clients, contact me, and I'll provide the data you need for subpoenas - and more.
(5) Blacklisting certain health practitioners:
In the early 1990s, now deceased John Renner MD, then president of the infamous National Council Against Health Fraud (NCAHF) had put together a "blacklist" of health professionals which he was distributing to Health Insurance companies and State licensing Boards. There were about 2500 names on that list at the time. The idea of the secret list was to, obviously, damage these health professionals behind the scenes without those professionals knowing about the attack. Renner, I think, was trying for secrecy so he wouldn't get his ass sued off. The list did make an appearance, though, and Renner, and his minions began to have trouble.
Then, a second list appeared, this time assembled, and marketed, by an attorney named Grace Powers Monaco who had started a company called Emprise, which received some of its funding from a $500k annual grant from the National Institute for Health (NIH). Emprise was killed after two things happened - (1) a group called "Act UP" went after their funding, and (2) Emprise got named in a RICO suit in Texas. NIH, among other things, pulled their funding.
So, what happened to the secret list? Do you think the New York agency just dropped that idea? Of course not.
I know where the list is, and how its being used today, and who's doing it. There are over 40,000 names on that list now, probably the names of health professionals who have side-stepped away from the drugs, drugs, and more drugs paradigm, and use successful methods on their patients.
The list is part of a "clearing house" operation used by insurance companies to make decisions about payment. When either a practitioner, or a patient, files a claim for insurance benefits, the data is fed into a computer which then checks the name of the practitioner involved in the transaction. If the name of the practitioner is on the 40,000 list, the claim is re-routed through the "fraud unit" of the insurance billing system, who then handles the claim as though it were fraudulent. From there, it gets bundled with other claims having gone the same route, and goes to a special unit that has connections to the Federal Health Fraud Task Force. Soon, the practitioner gets a visit, not just from a Federal Investigator, but a State Licensing Board Investigator. Why? What has the practitioner done wrong? Nothing, of course. Someone just put him or her on the secret list so that they would be the subject of intense suspicion and scrutiny, constantly.
As I said above, I know how its being done, and by whom. But, I don't have enough information to, yet, prove it in Court. What I need is a related Federal Court case with subpoena power available. If someone has that, I can provide the information on who, what, where, and why, certain things need to be subpoenaed. Why "Federal?" Because the operation is spread over several States.
(6) Blocking health information from the internet
Having trouble finding legitimate research papers that back up the science of advanced health care? Of course you are. There is a systematic attempt to make those kinds of scientific research NOT available on the internet. I'm not going into detail here, for the investigation of how this works, AND WHO, SPECIFICALLY, is behind it is ongoing. But, it is happening.
MORE:
There is an awful lot of money and power playing in the US healthcare system stakes. The system is badly broken, and there are those who want to keep it that way because, simply, the money flow is tremendous, and a healthy American public is not in the interests of big pharma, and other multi-national groups. Alert, healthy people tend to make reasonable demands of their government.
Our US health care system is broken, and there is a misinformation group, based in New York City, that for a price, will attack anyone, or any company, or group that exist. Just write the checks, and they'll begin. Their customer list is impressive.
Stay tuned...
Tim Bolen - Consumer Advocate
Copyright 2007 by Bolen Report

Courts
Seize "Quackbuster" Bank Accounts, Property...
Opinion by Consumer
Advocate Tim
Bolen
February 22, 2007
A few days ago, Christopher Grell, one of the Plaintiffs,
and the attorney for the Plaintiffs
Stephen Barrett and
Terry Polevoy, filed an emergency Ex Parte Motion with
the Alameda, California Trial Court in the Barrett v. Clark
(Rosenthal)
case asking for a Temporary Restraining Order preventing
Defendant Rosenthal from collecting attorney fees awarded to
Rosenthal by the Courts. The Court denied the Motion, and
"collection" has begun in earnest.
Rosenthal,
you will remember, in a six year legal battle, soundly
thrashed the trio all the way to the California Supreme
Court. Rosenthal, the head of the
Humantics Foundation, a group pointing out the dangers
of silicone breast implants, had been sued by the trio in
2000 where they claimed she was some sort of conspirator
supposedly defaming them on the internet. Rosenthal, in her
answer to the suit, filed a Motion to Dismiss the suit
against her claiming that the trio's action constituted a
violation of California's anti-SLAPP law. The Court agreed,
dismissing the case against Rosenthal, and awarded her
attorney fees.
The Barrett
v. Clark (Rosenthal)
case garnered international notice when virtually ALL of the
big names on the internet jumped in on Rosenthal's side,
filing "Friend of the Court" Briefs on Rosenthal's
behalf. You can read all about that by clicking on
"Quackbusters CRUSHED by California Supreme Court..."
But the
really good part of all this, the one that makes me smile
broadly, is that California's anti-SLAPP law, designed for
just this sort of situation, worked just like it was
designed. The anti-SLAPP legislation, whose full title is
"anti Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation,"
was designed to stop Plaintiffs from filing scurrilous
lawsuits against Defendants just to shut them up on a public
issue, by overpowering them with litigation they cannot
afford. The law provides for the Defendants, by allowing
them to collect their attorney fees from the Plaintiff
almost immediately upon winning a Motion to Dismiss. The
trio were able to forestall that original payment only
because they appealed the original Judge's decision to the
California Appeals Court, then to the California Supreme
Court - where they were soundly, and publicly,
horse-whipped.
The trio,
apparently, aren't willing to acknowledge their debt, nor
their loss. Now, the "collection" process has begun,
and the Courts are allowing a ruthless approach to that
collection, "as follows:
Levy on any & all bank deposit accounts held in name or
interest of judgment debtor as well as accounts receivable,
lines of credit, general intangibles, and/or proceeds
thereof in which he has an interest individually or jointly,
include contents of any safety deposit to which he has
access; SSN:113-44-9446"
It gets even better - Court
documents say:
INFORMATION FOR JUDGMENT
DEBTOR
1. The levying officer is
required to take custody of the property described in item 1
in your possession or under your control.
2. You may claim any
available exemption for your property. A list of exemptions
is attached. If you wish to claim an exemption for personal
property, you must do so within 10 days after this notice
was delivered to you or 15 days after this notice was mailed
to you by filing a claim of exemption and one copy to
levying officer as provided in section 703.520 of the Code
of Civil Procedure. If you do not claim an exemption, you
may lose it and the property is subject to enforcement of a
money judgment. If you wish to seek the advice of an
attorney, you should do so immediately so that a claim of
exemption can be filed on time.
3. You are not entitled to
claim an exemption for property that is levied upon under a
judgment for sale of property. This property is described
in the writ of sale. You may, however, claim available
exemptions for property levied upon to satisfy damages or
costs remaining unpaid.
4. You may obtain the
release of your property by paying the amount of a money
judgment with interests and costs remaining unpaid.
5. If your property is
levied upon under a writ of execution or to satisfy damages
and costs under a writ of possession or sale, the property
may be sold at an execution sale, perhaps at a price
substantially below its a value. Notice of sale will be
given to you. Notice of sale of real property (other than a
leasehold estate with an unexpired term of less than two
years) may not be given until at least 120 days after this
notice is served on you. This grace period is intended to
give you an opportunity to settle with the judgment
creditor, to obtain a satisfactory buyer for the property,
or to encourage other potential buyers to attend the
execution sale.
6. All sales at an
execution sale are final; there is no right of redemption.
So, what does this all mean?
Does this
mean that Ilena
Rosenthal will, fairly soon, have
"quackbuster" Barrett and Polevoy "souvenirs"
to sell on the internet? Will
Terry Polevoy, Canada's well known "pimple doctor"
soon be relieved of his "pimple cream sample kit" or
his box of disguises he wears when he attends health
conventions?
Will
Stephen Barrett's basement
full of "files" suddenly be on the market?
Maybe.
Stay
tuned...
Tim Bolen -
Consumer Advocate
Copyright
2007 by Bolen Report

Tim Bolen
- Where've You Been?...
Opinion by Consumer
Advocate Tim
Bolen
Posted January 2007
I've received a lot of inquiries about my newsletter's
absence over the last several months. Where've I been?
Right here, trying to figure out who, and how, someone was
messing with my newsletter broadcasts - and what to do about
it.
Activist groups across America - beware. This is going to
happen to you.
I've had several VERY IMPORTANT articles to broadcast for
months now - and I suspect I was blocked because of those
articles. It wasn't that big of a secret that I was working
on these exposes. A lot of people knew.
In short, one of the strangest, and most "secret"
groups I've ever come across, a group I call "the Ku
Klux Klan of the internet," decided to block my
broadcasts because they didn't like what I had to say. They
decided to falsely label me as a "spammer" so that
tens of thousands of Internet Service providers (ISPs) would
block my broadcasts to my subscribers.
When that only slowed me down a little, last February of
2006 they went to my server company in Missouri and blocked
email service to ALL 12,000 of their customers until they
turned me off. I moved my computer operation back to
California to be protected by the toughest computer
protection law on Planet Earth (California Penal Code
Section 502 - Computer Crimes), and began to broadcast
again. You can read the article I wrote about this group's
February "interference," called "US
Internet "Free Speech" Tightly Controlled by Secret
Group..."
But, it didn't stop. It got worse.
In July of 2006, despite warnings to these people that they
were violating State and Federal law, they, at first,
interfered with my broadcasts, then, went to my California
server host and blocked all email to their 1,600 customers
until they shut me down. One of those criminals even
demanded that my server host "destroy all of my data"
as a condition of removing the server company from their
blocklists - but the server host didn't do this.
You can read a concise summary of their activities to damage
me, by accessing a copy of one of the Affidavits I filed
with State and Federal law enforcement agencies. Click
here.
In short, I've
uncovered a criminal conspiracy. And, the fun has begun.
The US Federal Trade Commission (FTC), after my formal
complaint was filed (with it's accompanying Affidavit) , has
opened an investigation into this group's activities.
If your email is being blocked, or your friends can't reach
you, and you find it difficult to communicate on the
internet, then click
here for a guideline on how to file a criminal
complaint against the Spamhaus/SPEWS Project with Federal
and State Agencies.
It was apparent, right from the start, that at least one of
the sleazy
"quackbusters"
was involved in this assault. There is no question
that my articles raise the ire of the
"quackbuster"
conspiracy. They don't like to have a light
shined on them.
For years these nitwits have been emailing, and writing,
bullying letters to my internet providers threatening them
with all sorts of actions. Some of those companies felt
threatened but most told them to "buzz off." A trio
of
"quackbuster" bullies
went all the way to the California Supreme Court (Barrett v.
Rosenthal) in their attempt to silence those that criticized
them - and they lost.
I haven't yet determined the real identity of the
"quackbusters"
involved in this most recent action, but I'm working on it -
and they're going to need all the help they can get once I
find them - I promise.
The problem is wide spread...
I found that I'm not the only victim. There are, literally,
tens-of-thousands of victims in the US alone. Activists all
over the US are finding their emails to their allies blocked
regularly - and this same group is responsible.
The primary target, however, of this criminal organization,
seems to be legal internet marketing companies sending out
lawful, and US government approved, advertising to their
subscribers.
The "vigilantes" claim they are stopping "spam,"
but that turns out to be a lie. When you trace back who is
hiding under those internet "white-sheets-with-eyeholes,"
the anonymity, the "fake" email addresses, you find
that they, the so-called anti-spammers, are simply people
who are using this "secret" organization to shut down
their marketing competitors - and control who gets to email
broadcast on the internet.
So, who has this kind of power, you ask? And, how is it
they can scoff at US laws?
Good question.
It has taken me a while to sift through the morass and
figure it out. In short, "health care" is a
worldwide battle that has been going on for years. We can
pretty well sort out the good guys and the bad guys - and we
do. But the internet is relatively "new" and there
is, right now, a huge battle going on over who controls what
- and one of those battles is over who can send emails to
who, and who cannot.
Without knowing anything about anything on the internet - I
got right in the middle of that battle. And, here I am.
I've got a medium sized subscriber list - about 285,000. Of
my 285,000 newsletter subscribers - I have about 12,000
media, 85,000 employees of government agencies involved in
health care, 30,000 health care activists,15,000
environmentalists, 130,000 health care or health industry
professionals, and the rest miscellaneous.
The "spam" laws in the US, both State and Federal,
are very clear about what constitutes "spam," and
what doesn't. The deciding law in the United States is
called the Can-Spam Act of 2003 - and it is very specific
about what is legal on the internet and what is not. The US
Congress went to great lengths to hear testimony on all
sides of the "spam" argument before it finalized the
Act. Of course I follow the law.
So, how then did I get the anti-spammers attention? Keep
reading.
Meet the "Ku Klux Klan of
the Internet."
I have been attacked, because of my political positions, by
an anti-spammer vigilante group, calling themselves the
Spamhaus/SPEWS project. You may remember that name from an
Associated Press worldwide news article on September 15th,
2006, titled
"12 million ordered from anti-spam group." I was
attacked by the same group of lawless scumbags. Of course,
I began to investigate. And, of course, I began to look
around, and make alliances with, other victims of this
conspiracy. I'm no stranger to war.
I have discovered that Spamhaus/SPEWS, in reality, is a
"vigilante" type organization falsely
characterizing themselves as an "anti-spammer" group.
They make up their own definition of "spam" and that
definition appears to change from day-to-day. Their
definition(s) differ, considerably, from the ones enacted
into both US and State laws. In essence anyone they
choose gets labeled as a spammer and significant damage
is done to those victims. The Spamhaus/SPEWS membership, or
whatever they call themselves, is a secret. Those members,
or "volunteers," use "fake" email addresses
and identities to conduct their business.
I have learned, for instance, with much effort, the
identities of several of the Spamhaus/SPEWS "volunteers,"
and have discovered that many of them have business
interests that compete with those victims they select for
"blocking." I have also learned that several of their
"volunteers" are acting in their capacity to benefit
their employers.
The best singular example of the operation of the combined
Spamhaus/SPEWS criminal conspiracy is to examine the process
that the SPEWS faction of the conspiracy uses to harass its
victims. First, no one knows who SPEWS actually is (until
now), nor who its members are, nor who they represent.
Everything about it is hidden, including location of its
offices, names of its directors and employees, location of
its website, and who funds it.
Second, when SPEWS lists a victim on its blacklist there is
no way to contact SPEWS, no place for an attorney to send a
certified letter demanding removal. More, SPEWS will NOT
communicate directly with a victim. The only contact is for
the victim's ISP to go on one, or both, of two Google news
groups (NANAE, or NANABl) and ask to be removed from the
blacklist. The members of those groups use "fake"
internet email addresses (white-sheets-with-eyeholes) to
communicate with the ISP victim, then use foul language,
suggestions of odd sexual activity, and any number of ugly,
improper, techniques - to create fear. For the unsuspecting
it's like falling into a cesspool attached to a leper
hospital.
Third - The most important facet of the Spamhaus/SPEWS
conspiracy is that use of anonymity as a tool to create fear
in those they intend to dominate. I believe that there is
little, or no, difference between the tactics employed by
the Spamhaus/SPEWS "vigilantes," and the infamous
North American Ku Klux Klan. In both cases, the intent is,
and was, to dominate by fear.
In the heydays of the "Klan" an innocent family, who
happened to be of color, religion, race, or political belief
(something different from the Klan members) would suddenly,
in the middle of the night, be confronted in their home with
gunfire, a burning cross in their yard, and a group of
screaming individuals covered in
white-sheets-with-eyeholes. The family would be dragged out
into the yard, the women raped, the men cut up, and their
remains hung from a tree - all, supposedly, because the
family had, somehow, broken some "unwritten law" this
group of vigilantes wanted enforced.
It is exactly the same situation with the Spamhaus/SPEWS
vigilante conspiracy. The anonymity provided by "fake"
email addresses has enabled the exact same type of behavior
by the "vigilantes." The white-sheets-with-eyeholes,
the anonymity, has created a whole new class of criminal
behavior on the internet. This anonymity is the basis for
the anti-spammer vigilante operation, attempting to enforce
their own "unwritten laws."
And, they are out to destroy lives. From reading the
communications among these conspirators it becomes clear
they very much enjoy hurting others. The US Attorney
General's office needs to get involved, right soon.
Even more interesting is that the leadership of this
"vigilante" organization, determined to undermine the US
economy, is NOT in the United States - or at least, using
fake email addresses, they give the appearance of not being
in the US.
So, what's next?
Well, I assume that the "vigilantes" will attack me
again. They, virtually have to, for as usual, I've become a
big problem for them, quickly. How did I do that? Well, in
my usual style, I went after them. I went right into their
lives, looking to find who was under those "white
sheets." I got right in their faces, demanding to know
who they were and what they were up to, and what right they
thought they had to damage Americans. They didn't take my
counter-assault kindly. They've threatened my life, my well
being, and have promised to destroy my business interests.
All from anonymity - "fake" emails on the internet.
But the weirdoes have quite a few problems themselves, right
now. Remember earlier in this article when I said "I
began to look around, and make alliances with, other victims
of this conspiracy." Yup - I did that - and great
allies they turned out to be.
One of those allies is a company called e360 Insight, a
legitimate email marketing company operating under the laws,
and the blessing, of the United States Government. e360 was
attacked at about the same time I was. Like me, they didn't
accept Spamhaus/SPEWS' version of internet spam law - they
preferred the definition that "we the people" decided
on - so they sued Spamhaus in an Illinois Federal Court -
and wiped up the floor with them so deftly that, in
mid-case, the Spamhaus President, Steve Linford, fled home
to Britain, walking/running/skipping/hopping/jumping away
from the court action.
He ran off like a scalded pup.
When Spamhaus ran home, e360 applied to the Court for, and
got, a "Permanent Injunction" preventing further
interference from Spamhaus, and then got a "Default
Judgment" for 11.7 million US dollars.
But, it's not over.
Spamhaus, and their "secret" group, are belittling
the Federal Court Judge, calling him "senile, looney,
befuddled, dishonest, etc.," and are refusing to follow
the Federal Judge's Order. So, I expect, very soon, the
appearance of US Federal Marshals.
Planned, or on the table in front of the Judge, is a series
of proposed "Orders" for the Judge to sign, virtually
guaranteeing the destruction, and impoverishment, of the
entire US "vigilante" anti-spam movement.
I'm all for that.
Stay tuned...
Tim Bolen - Consumer Advocate
Copyright 2006 Tim Bolen

Quackbuster Citadel Crumbling - They Face Massive
Litigation...
Opinion by Consumer
Advocate Tim
Bolen
December 31st, 2006
The conventional healthcare system in the US, rated 72nd in
quality but first in cost by the World Health Organization,
(WHO) and declared in the authoritative study
"Death by Medicine" to be the number one killer of
Americans is finally beginning to suffer the consequences of
its policies.
Americans are challenging, not just the concept of "five
minute medicine," but the absurdity of the "drugs,
drugs, and more drugs," approach to dealing with health
issues.
Everywhere in the land, the health care system is being
challenged. State legislatures, like California and others,
are so fed up with the greedy-maw-with-trash-offering of
organized health-care, that many are considering forcing
health care into State-run systems, in an attempt to force
some honesty and integrity into the morass. Consumer groups
across America are railing over health issues, loudly,
proclaiming their anger at vaccinations infested with
pollutants and toxins, deadly radioactive fluoride in their
water, testing of their children in schools to justify
forced drugging, and more.
There is a major revolution brewing in the US, and the pot
is at boil. There is no question America is angry - and
well it should be, for the rip-off has been of major
proportion, and its time to point fingers and issue arrest
warrants.
One of the more despicable facets of the conventional
health care system is the New York ad agency run
"quackbuster" scheme,
designed to vilify America's emerging health care leaders -
those offering new paradigms. For years the New York ad
agency's "black-ops" division, whose obvious
front-man de-licensed MD
Stephen Barrett, operating out of his Allentown,
Pennsylvania basement, railed against "alternative
medicine," or anything competing for health dollars
against the "drugs, drugs, and more drugs" offering.
Chiropractors on the March...
One of those groups who've had enough of Barrett and company
is the age-old Chiropractic Profession. It looks to me,
that finally, the Chiros are picking up the sword,
sharpening it to a razor's edge and heading for Allentown,
Pennsylvania where they'll drag stinky old Barrett out of
his basement "quackwatch" lair, haul him into the
daylight of the LeHigh County Court of Common Pleas, and
flay and fillet him (so to speak), in front of a jury of his
hometown peers.
Barrett is getting used to be flayed and filleted in front
of jurors - and, from what I'm hearing from sources, he's
going to get EVEN MORE experience at it.
Barrett, some of you may remember, brags that he
"gathered the AMA files," after the American Medical
Association (AMA) shut down their covert operation against
the Chiropractors because of the Wilk v. AMA Federal Court
Decision, and re-stored them in his basement at 2421 West
Greenleaf Street, Allentown, Pennsylvania. The AMA, the
Court determined, had been trying to stamp out the
Chiropractic Profession - and the Court told them to stop
doing that.
In this newest case Plaintiff Donald D. Harrison, who in
1980 founded a chiropractic technique known as
Chiropractic Biophysics, is suing Stephen Barrett, Allen
J. Botnick, Chirobase, and Quackwatch on three Counts: (1)
Defamation - Defendant Botnick, August 2005 to present,
(2) Defamation - Defendant Botnick, pre- August 2005, and
(3) Defamation - Barrett.
The case is actually very simple. Botnick wrote a bunch of
things on the internet some of which were published on
Barrett's sleazy "quackwatch," and/or "chirowatch"
websites. When Harrison challenged those Botnick changed
his mind about what he said and told Barrett so in a
letter. Barrett, basically, took Botnick's name off of the
article, and re-published it on his own.
But there's more... I've included some interesting
excerpts:
7.
On or about (November 2003?), defendant Allen J. Botnick
wrote an article entitled “A Close Look at Chiropractic
Biophysics (CBP)” which was published on the web site of
defendant Chirobase. This article portrayed as fact false
statements about the manner in which plaintiff practiced
chiropractic.
8.
The Chirobase web site referred to plaintiff by name
throughout, was made about and concerning the plaintiff, and
was so understood by those who read the article.
9. The article contained false statements about plaintiff
and the form of chiropractic he founded,...
10.
Defendants repeatedly cited obscure and discredited research
on chiropractic to defame Plaintiff when they knew that the
prevailing scientific view and overwhelming scientific
evidence was contrary to the defamatory statements being
made.
11.
Defendants falsely portrayed Plaintiff’s chiropractic method
as unsafe, ineffective, over-priced, and misrepresenting its
capabilities with the goal of persuading patients to abandon
further treatment or persuading potential patients from
seeking treatment.
12. On May 26, 2004, plaintiff demanded a retraction from
Defendant Botnick of the defamatory statements made by
Defendant Botnick and published by Defendant Barrett
14.
On or about August 28, 2005, Defendant Botnick signed an
open letter retracting the above-described article. In this
letter Defendant Botnick made the following statements:
“After reading
Dr. Deed Harrison D.C’s response to the article quoted above
I have decided to retract the article and provide some
explanation to both chiropractors and the public at large.”
“… after reading
Dr. Harrison’s response I am concerned that the article I
wrote was actually steering patients away from care that was
proving to be more effective than other treatments, both
chiropractic and medical, for chronic pain syndromes. I
wrote earlier that I was concerned that the postural
improvements might not last but the research has proven me
wrong.”
“While all of
the research is not yet done, I agree with Dr. Harrison that
there is good science supporting the idea that misaligned
joints associated with reversed spinal curves are a risk
factor for musculoskeletal pain and warrant attention so
that patients can maintain healthy joints for as long as
possible.”
“In conclusion,
please accept my apology for these inaccuracies. I applaud
the work of Dr. Harrison and the rest of the CBP research
team. Their focus on sound scientific methodology has made
significant contributions to advancing chiropractic methods
and challenging sacred cows in the shared research
literature. I believe that their unique work will help many
patients who would otherwise have been condemned to lives of
suffering and musculoskeletal dysfunction. These
individuals deserve recognition for their hard work, not
ostracism as quacks.”
15.
Defendant Botnick sent the above described letter to
Defendant Barrett on August 29, 2005, informing Defendant
Barrett of the retraction and that Defendant Botnick was no
longer convinced that his criticisms of Chiropractic
Biophysics were valid. He asked Defendant Barrett to
retract the original article and post a copy of the
retraction on Chirobase/Quackwatch.
16.
Between August 28, 2005 and October 17, 2005, defendant
Barrett removed, or caused to be removed, the Botnick
article from the Chirobase web site, made minor changes to
the article, and posted, or caused to be posted, on the
Chirobase web site a slight variant on the article under the
name of Stephen Barrett, M.D., containing the defamatory
statements complained about by Plaintiff and previously
retracted by Defendant Botnick.
17.
At the time Defendant Barrett published the article under
his name, he had received and knew the contents of Defendant
Botnick’s retraction, which he did not post on his web
site. At the time Defendant Barrett published the article,
he knew the article contained false, misleading and
defamatory statements about Plaintiff and the branch of
chiropractic he founded.
18.
Sometime earlier than October 17, 2005, defendant Quackwatch
listed Chiropractic Biophysics on its web site as a
“Questionable Treatment.” At the time of this publication,
Defendant Quackwatch knew the article contained false,
misleading and defamatory statements about Plaintiff and the
branch of chiropractic he founded.
Interesting is that Barrett was already "served" at
his basement abode, but Botnick seems to have disappeared
from the face of the Earth.
Stay tuned...
Tim Bolen - Consumer Advocate
Copyright 2005 by Bolen Report

Quackbusters CRUSHED by California Supreme Court...
Opinion by
Tim Bolen "Consumer
Advocate"
(jurimed2@yahoo.com)
www.quackpotwatch.org
November 23, 2006
I don't know how the
"quackbusters"
can even come out in public any more. Their
constant humiliation in the US Court system has got to be
incredibly embarrassing. I don't know how they can
withstand the solid stream of laughter from the general
public.
It's not just the losses in Court (and they are legion),
it's how badly they lose, and the criticism they draw on
themselves by the participants in the Court system. They
just don't seem to learn.
Yesterday, November 20th, 2006, the California Supreme
Court voted unanimously (all seven Justices) to slap down
the latest
"quackbuster"
attempt to use, and abuse, the US Court system to
silence their critics. The case, originally known as
Barrett v. Clark, then for the appeals process renamed
Barrett v. Rosenthal, began over five years ago when three
individuals decided to sue "a room full of people."
In the end, the GOOD GUYS, that's us, had drawn the support
of some of the largest players on the internet, and more.
"Friend of the Court" Briefs, arguing in our favor,
were provided by Amazon, the Electronic Frontier Foundation,
EBay, the ACLU of Northern California, AOL, Microsoft,
Yahoo, Google, ABC, Ask Jeeves, the Cable News Network,
Compuserve, Earthlink, ESPN, Netscape, SBC Internet, Time
Warner, Washington Post, Association for Competitive
Technology, California Newspaper Publishers Association,
Information Technology of America Association, Internet
Commerce Coalition, National Cable and Telecommunications
Association, Netchoice, NetCoalition, Newspaper Association
of America, Online News Association, Online Publishers
Association, Technet, and the United State Internet Service
Providers Association.
The case became a rallying point for American free speech
and an opportunity to teach a lesson to those that would
try, through intimidation, to stop Americans from exercising
their free speech rights .
The original poorly written case (Barrett v. Clark), almost
forgotten, claimed that (get ready to laugh) world-renowned
scientist and author, Hulda Regehr Clark PhD hired Consumer
Advocate and Crisis Management Consultant Tim Bolen (that's
me!) to defame them. More, they claimed that several other
people allegedly "conspired" to defame them,
including Ilena Rosenthal, the head of the Humantics
Foundation.
Those three individuals were de-licensed MD Stephen Barrett
of "quackwatch.com" infamy, Oakland attorney
Christopher Grell (the guy who was just humiliated by the
California Supreme Court), and Terry Polevoy, Canada's
low-rent version of Stephen Barrett.
The original case was a hoot to start with. The threesome
filed the case in attorney Grell's home town, Oakland,
California, and before the Court Stamp ink was dry, the case
was on Stephen Barrett's sleazy website "quackwatch.com"
bolstered with Barrett's asinine commentary.. No efforts,
however, were made to "serve" anyone. The whole
thing was viewed as an obvious attempt to "shut people
up," an intimidation technique designed to stop Health
Freedom Activists from publicly criticizing the
"quackbuster"
operation.
My memory is a little foggy about the details, as it's been
over five years, but as I recall, the Judge in the case had
to order the threesome to finally "serve" me. After
eighteen months they had made no effort to properly deliver
the court paper to my legal address, and had gone to the
Judge requesting that they be allowed to "publish"
the lawsuit against me in my home town newspaper claiming
that that act was necessary because "Tim Bolen is
hiding."
However, my attorney, the famous Carlos F. Negrete, pointed
out the Judge that "if they know what his hometown
newspaper is, then they know where his legal address is."
The Judge ordered them to serve me at my legal address -
or else.
But Barrett, et al, didn't count on California's anti-SLAPP
law, legislation designed to protect Californians from just
this kind of "shut up or I'll sue you" kind of
lawsuits. "SLAPP" is short for Strategic Lawsuits
Against Public Participation. In layman's language that
means that, in California, if you sue someone for voicing
their thoughts about a public issue and get caught - you
lose - and pay the Defendants attorney fees.
And that's what happened to Barrett, Grell, and Polevoy in
this case - they got caught trying to "shut up" Ilena
Rosenthal, and now they owe her all of her attorney fees
from the case, the Appeal, and the California Supreme
Court. You can read the details of the Court's decision by
clicking
here.
And, I'd bet that right about now Ilena Rosenthal and her
attorney Mark Goldowitz, are preparing the paperwork to go
after those fees (I'm estimating at about $200,000 US) with
Gusto.
Stay tuned...
Tim Bolen - Consumer Advocate

"THE LAST DAYS OF THE QUACKBUSTERS"...
Opinion by
Tim Bolen "Consumer
Advocate"
(jurimed2@yahoo.com)
www.quackpotwatch.org
July 2006
I've been following
the activities of the
"Quackbusters" for about five years, ever
since the name
Stephen Barrett
(quackwatch.com)
came up, as a player, against a client of mine in
California. I asked the question "why
would this group be using a doctor from Pennsylvania, as
their witness, when there are 300,000 health professionals
in this State?"
Thus began my education. Now I'm going to educate YOU...
The
"quackbuster"
operation is a conspiracy. It is a propaganda enterprise,
one part crackpot, two parts evil. It's sole purpose is to
discredit, and suppress, in an "anything goes" attack
mode, what is wrongfully named "Alternative Medicine."
It has declared war on reality. The conspirators are
acting in the interests of, and are being paid, directly and
indirectly, by the "conventional" medical-industrial
complex.
Millions of health freedom fighters, and members of the
public, worldwide, know what I know. Public outrage and
reaction is growing. After 25 years of unopposed success,
the
"Quackbusters"
are now in real trouble... "The end" for them,
has begun. They, themselves are being hunted.
The "Quackbuster Conspiracy" is in a desperate place
now. They know they've lost the war, and are going to pay a
terrible price for their actions. The fear is in their
eyes...
CRACKPOTS?
Yes. When the self-named "Quackbusters" stumbled
around to find a derisive name to call their victims, they
picked the word "Quack," without ever bothering to discover
it's origins. Its original meaning, from Europe, comes from
the term "quacksalver" which was used to describe Dentists
who were dumb enough to use mercury (a poison) as fillings
for teeth. Look at propagandist, and "Quackbuster"
king-pin, Stephen Barrett's website (quackwatch.com), and
you'll find that HE IS IN FAVOR of mercury (amalgam) tooth
fillings.
Barrett, his cronies,
and minions, are not known to do intelligent research.
EVIL?
Yes. The "Quackbuster Conspiracy" was started shortly
after the American Medical Association (AMA) lost the court
battle to the Chiropractors in a case begun in Federal court
in 1976. The Federal judge ordered the AMA's covert operation
shut down - and leave the Chiropractors alone. The AMA files,
library, etc., ended up in Stephen Barrett's 1,800 square foot
basement in Allentown, PA. Barrett, and his minions, had the
common sense to stay away from criticizing Chiropractors for
quite some time. Barrett has since abandoned that common
sense.
Federal judges have a way of enforcing their decisions using
shackles, Federal Marshals, the federal prison facilities,
asset seizure, etc... Even Barrett, in all his incredible
arrogance, isn't dumb enough to match wills with a Federal
Judge. I think the Chiropractic Association should consider
re-opening the Wilks case in front of that same Federal Judge
- and point right at Barrett, and his cronies.
In that early, educational case for me in California,
Stephen Barrett
and two slime-ball investigators from the California Medical
Board, had convinced members of the Laguna Beach Police
Department that a nutritionist using ozone therapy was
"a sex criminal preying on women."
Flak-jacketed thugs
screwed a gun into Salvatore D'Onofrio's ear, forced him to
lie on the ground, and thus began a brutal, anything goes,
persecution.
D'Onofrio's attorney was a hiking partner of mine, and told me
the story on a ridgeline, seven miles up from a trailhead. I
laugh now when I remember my naive response
"This can't be happening in America."
Sal D'Onofrio, through his attorney, hired us, at day 43 in
solitary confinement in the Orange County Jail. He was in
"solitary" because that's what they do with sex criminals.
He was in jail because the judge had set bail at $500,000, an
amount his supporters couldn't raise. Barrett's minions were
ruining D'Onofrio's life in the press.
We organized a bail hearing for day 48 of incarceration, put
62 of D'Onofrio's supporters in the courtroom, LA network
television in the jury box, got the front page of the LA
Times, etc., etc., etc., - and the judge let D'Onofrio out on
his own recognizance. Seven weeks later the prosecutor
dropped the charges.
Who are these people that would, so casually, inflict that
kind of nightmare on an innocent man?
James Carter, MD's authoritative book "Racketeering In
Medicine," published by Hampton Roads, carefully explains
the "Quackbuster Conspiracy."
ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE?
"Alternative Medicine" is defined as any protocol,
action, or therapy that isn't "drugs, radiation, or surgery
oriented."
Wrongfully named? Yes. So-called "alternative medicine"
is actually the health choice of planet earth. It is a
combination of every good health idea invented by mankind, in
every country and culture on this planet. There is nothing
"alternative" about it. Labeling planet earth's health
choice as "alternative" is, and was, a propaganda
device.
North Americans have overwhelmingly (by their purchases) made
"Alternative Medicine" the "health choice of the
people" - for the best of reasons: it works better than
allopathic, it "removes the cause" rather than
"treating the symptoms," it is cost effective, it makes
people feel better and think clearer, and it doesn't have all
those horrible effects, and side effects, of invasive surgery
or prescription drugs.
More than half of the US health dollar in 1999 was spent on
"Alternative Medicine" and it was all out-of-pocket.
Conventional medicine is being paid for, and is surviving,
only because insurance and Medicare pay for it - the public
won't spend an out-of-pocket nickel on it.
Alternative Medicine philosophies fit the "American (I'll
make my own decisions)" way of thinking. Allopathic
Medicine philosophies fit the "Germanic (follow my orders)"
way. "Alternative Medicine" is for people who think
for themselves - Americans.
The door to real "alternatives" is barely open. The
future of medicine is right in front of us - it isn't in
pharmaceuticals - it is in nutrition, body cleansing,
prevention, oxygen therapies and energy medicine - all of
which are constantly targeted by the sleaziest of the "Quackbuster"
soldiers.
THE "QUACKBUSTER" STRONGHOLD...
The Federation of State Medical Boards (FSMB), is a vital
Medical Doctor (MD) control point. It is the trade
organization of all 50 State's Medical Boards. The FSMB is the
organization that writes the policy manuals, and provides
training for, Medical Board investigators and prosecutors all
over the United States. The FSMB is the "Quackbuster"
police agency.
The "Quackbusters" use the FSMB to persecute two groups
(1) "Alternative Practitioners" within the MD ranks
(they treat them like traitors), and (2) non-licensed
alternative health professionals (they charge them with
"practicing medicine without a license").
The "Quackbusters" through the FSMB, have been able to
change the focus of prosecutions against "bad doctors."
They define "bad doctors" as those that use alternative
modalities - and maximum penalties are exacted. We have seen
in California, that real "bad doctors," those that kill their
patients, actually get off with a slap-on-the-hand by using
the defense "but I prescribed a lot of drugs." State medical
Boards are not serving the needs of "we the people," they are
serving the needs of the "Quackbusters," and their paymasters.
Medical Board prosecutions are funded by the States - Barrett,
and his slime artists, don't have to spend a dime... I
couldn't even count the number of "alternative medicine"
practitioners currently under persecution from mis-informed
Medical Board investigators and prosecutors. The damage done
to Americans from this attack is incalculable...
BARRETT'S DUBIOUS CLAIMS ABOUT WHAT "HEALTH FRAUD" REALLY
IS...
The US government has indicated that "Health Fraud" is
a major problem in the United States Health Care system.
Statistics show that "conventional medicine" rips off
the American public significantly each year in bogus billings,
false claims, unnecessary procedures and tests, etc...
Attorney General Janet Reno has a special nationwide "Health
Fraud Prosecution Unit" to deal with this massive problem.
The prosecutions are against mega-greedy hospitals, HMOs,
ambulance companies, nursing facilities, etc. - all
"Conventional" medical units - not "Alternative."
But, if you peruse Stephen Barrett's (don't call him doctor,
he's not licensed) website, you get the impression that "allopaths"
are to be classified somewhere next to archangels - and
"alternatives" are snake-oil salesmen, akin to the devil's
minions. Barrett clearly defines, in smirky arrogance, health
fraud as "alternative medicine."
Huh?
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