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Big Tobacco and
Big Pharma: same tactics, different chemicals
Have you ever thought about the similarities between pharmaceutical
and tobacco companies? They're striking. Both sell products that
kill people when used as directed. The statistics are readily available
for pharmaceuticals, which kill around 100,000 Americans each year
according to the Journal of the American Medical Association, and
Big Tobacco, which makes tobacco products that are partly responsible
for hundreds of thousands of cases of cancer in the United States
each year. These are the facts from industry. Industry critics (such
as myself) would argue that those numbers are actually much higher.
But let's look at other similarities. Aside from marketing products
that actually kill people when used as directed, both industries
are engaged in the blatant distortion of scientific evidence in order
to mislead regulators and the public.
With Big Tobacco we saw the suppression of studies that said nicotine
was addictive, or of studies linking the inhalation of tobacco smoke
to lung cancer. In the pharmaceutical industry, we see even worse
distortions of clinical studies. We see studies that are designed
to minimize the appearance of negative risks associated with these
drugs, such as heart attacks, stroke, mental disorders, suicide attempts,
and violent behavior. Even after studies are completed, the results
are highly distorted as well. Drug companies pick and choose which
studies they want to publish. They may do twelve different studies
on a particular drug, and if six of them say the drug is safe and
effective, while the other six studies say the drug is dangerous
and useless from a medicinal point of view, they pick the six they
want and bury the others. They forward the six they want to the FDA.
The FDA looks at those six and says, "This sure is scientific!",
and they approve that drug application. I'm not making this up.
In the late 1990's, drug advertising appeared on television. That
is, of course, another similarity between Big Tobacco and Big Pharma:
they both use direct-to-consumer advertising to create demand for
their products. For many years, tobacco companies sponsored sporting
events; in fact, they still attempt to sponsor many sporting events.
In the pharmaceutical industry, we see heavy magazine and television
advertising, and hundreds of millions of dollars spent lobbying doctors,
buying them gifts, trips (to Hawaii, believe it or not), air tickets,
and stays in luxurious resorts. All doctors have to do is show up,
sign in, and act like they're attending a continuing medical education
course. They then can leave for the entire day, and go on the beach,
go fishing, go surfing, and do whatever they want. It's an all-expenses-paid
vacation.
Some people say, "No, that's ridiculous. That doesn't happen." I've
actually been in Hawaii, talking to doctors who were attending such
an event. I saw the entire room of about four hundred MD’s,
and these people just signed in, then they left to go surfing with
me! So I know how the system works, I've seen it firsthand. All the
doctors out there who might be listening to this, you know how it
works too. A lot of these continuing medical education courses are
really just a joke.
Doctors pushed cigarettes for decades
Another interesting similarity between cigarettes and prescription
drugs is that doctors have a history of supporting them both very
strongly. You might say, "Wait a minute, doctors don't support
smoking and cigarettes." Sure they do, if you just go back
far enough. In the seventies and eighties, they began to figure
out that smoking is bad for you. Before that, however, doctors
could actually be found as spokespersons for cigarettes. They said
that cigarettes made you healthy.
You can find, in archives of old magazines like Time, that some
doctors are even in advertisements stating, "Smoking, it's good
for your smile". They also said smoking helps you concentrate,
and that it's good for your nervous system. They made many ridiculous
claims about cigarettes. We tend to forget about that today, but
doctors were paid to be spokespersons for tobacco companies, and
this went on for decades.
Today, of course, old school doctors are strongly in support of
prescription drugs. But new doctors, the smart doctors, whom I hope
you're visiting, are questioning the safety of prescription drugs.
They are looking outside of conventional medicine for solutions,
in terms of disease prevention and even the simple treatment of symptoms.
These new doctors are noticing that people get healthier when they
get off of prescription drugs. Alternatively, they use prescription
drugs only as a temporary measure in order to give the patient enough
time and education so that they can put into effect long term lifestyle
changes that, in turn, eliminate the need for the drugs.
Of course, this frustrates the drug companies, since they want people
to take these drugs for a lifetime. They claim that it's good for
you, but actually, it's only good for their bottom line when you
become a daily user of their overpriced product. Good doctors are
recognizing that. They recognize statin drugs do have a temporary
role in dealing with an acute symptom, which might be extremely elevated
cholesterol that represents an immediate risk to the person's health
or even life. So they may use a statin drug on a temporary basis,
only for a few weeks or a couple of months at most. They meanwhile
help patients undergo major, fundamental reforms in their lifestyle
consisting of food choice, dietary habits, and physical exercise,
avoidance of environmental toxins, lower levels of chronic stress,
better sleep, better hormonal balance, and so on.
Marketing to children
Here's another similarity between Big Tobacco and Big Pharma: They
both love to market to children. For years, tobacco companies have
been trying to edge and wiggle their way into the adolescent market,
targeting teenagers and children. They used Joe Camel, a cartoon
character, to sell cigarettes, because they knew that if they could
get adolescents hooked on nicotine, they had a customer for life.
It's not rocket science to figure out the marketing tactic there
for Big Tobacco.
Pharmaceutical companies don't have the same addictive quality for
their drugs. You’re not necessarily psychologically or physiologically
addicted to drugs in the same way as nicotine. However, by starting
a kid early on drugs, they can create a paradigm where that kid grows
up thinking that he is a diseased person, and that he is that label.
So if they get a kid diagnosed as ADD or ADHD, then that child will
associate that label with himself or herself, and will continue on
in life with the belief that they have some sort of disease or brain
chemical imbalance. And they'll even tell other people, "I'm
ADD" or "I'm bipolar," as if that's who they are.
That, of course, is not who they are. That's a completely fictitious
label; it's been made up, and it's been placed upon them. But the
trick is that by placing these labels upon these children, the drug
companies know that when those children grow up, they identify themselves
with those diseases, and they readily accept the idea of taking more
prescription drugs as long as the doctors put more labels on them.
So as they grow up, they'll find more labels, being told, "You
have a syndrome X, you need this drug" or "You have high
blood pressure and that's a disease, so you need this drug to lower
your blood pressure." If you take a child and you get them used
to the idea of associating their identity with labels of diseases,
then you create a lifelong customer for the pharmaceutical industry.
Big Pharma knows this, and their marketing people understand this.
Some people will do anything for a paycheck
Another interesting similarity between Big Tobacco and Big Pharma
is that both are staffed by people you might consider to be ordinary,
everyday people. They might be your neighbors, people that you
wouldn't think would be harmful, and who aren't necessarily evil.
They're just regular, everyday people trying to succeed in their
jobs. Yet, they are part of a machine that is creating tremendous
pain and suffering, along with destruction, disease, and distortion
in our society.
It makes you wonder, what kind of people would go work for tobacco
companies? Who would do that? What kind of person would go work for
a pharmaceutical company? Who are these drug reps? I've met a lot
of these drug reps. They're everyday, nice people; people you might
have as friends. Maybe you are a drug rep because you just needed
a job. But I think it's important to note that there's a great tendency
for human beings, when they need jobs, to set aside their ethics.
They tend to dissociate themselves from the long term effects of
what they are doing.
Historically, we saw this of course in Nazi Germany, where people
were members of the Nazi party. They were part of a machine that
was creating tremendous evil, pain and suffering, and destruction
in many different ways. (I'm not talking just about the Holocaust
here.)
They were part of this machine, yet they felt the need to succeed
in their particular role in that machine. They dissociated themselves
from the pain and suffering the machine was ultimately causing. Perhaps
they saw themselves as just a cog in a big wheel. Maybe they felt
like they just had no other options. I suspect that some of the same
psychology is at work today in people who work for pharmaceutical
companies, or people who work for tobacco companies.
But this psychological deception is harder to do today, at least
when working for tobacco companies. It's hard to lie to yourself
and say, "This is a healthy product." You'd have to be
living in some alternate universe, where you've seen none of the
science about how dangerous cigarette smoke is to human health. In
the pharmaceutical industry, however, there are a lot of people who
are lying to themselves, and it's easier to lie to yourself saying, "We
are searching for the cure for cancer!" or "We're going
to solve osteoporosis and we're going to end suffering!" They
think they're part of a machine that's going to end suffering. Thus,
they think if they succeed in marketing and creating more money and
more profits for their company, then fund more research, they can
find all these solutions to disease.
Thus, they fall for something I call "The Big Lie," which
is the idea that we can solve health problems by creating ever more
technologically advanced or complex synthetic chemicals and compounds
that, if introduced into the human body, can suddenly reverse all
of these diseases which have been created by years and years of abuse
through lifestyle, lack of nutrition, exposure to environmental toxins,
and so on.
The Big Lie of the pharmaceutical industry
It's a big lie that you can cure cancer or diabetes by coming up
with the right chemical, or that you can even cure depression by
altering brain chemistry with the right chemical. This is a big
lie. It's as if medical science has gone down the wrong pathway
for so long that they can't even see the fact that they're lost.
They're lost in the forest, and they can't even see the trees.
All they can do is continue to try to come up with more and more
chemicals they think are treating these diseases.
They think the only reason they haven't cured cancer yet is because
they don't have enough money, that it's just a money problem. "Give
us more money and in a couple more years, and we'll have cancer cured." That's
been the promise they've held out for decades. The reason they think
they can cure these diseases if they just have enough money and enough
time is because conventional medicine remains stuck in the paradigm
of germ theory. And the germ theory says that every disease is based
on an organism or an invading element, whether it is a virus or bacteria,
and if you just have the right chemical compound, then you can cure
that infectious disease.
Of course, this was quite valid in the day of penicillin, and it's
still valid today for basic, simple infections. But the germ theory
does not apply to chronic, degenerative diseases such as cancer,
osteoporosis, Alzheimer's disease, arthritis, diabetes, cardiovascular
heart disease, Crohn's disease, clinical depression, inflammatory
diseases, and so on.
Chemical-based medicine is a Newtonian view of health
That model of germ theory simply does not apply today. It doesn't
mean that germ theory is false, but these chronic degenerative
diseases exist in a different realm. For example, regarding physics
and the laws of motion, Newtonian physics operate on a large scale;
it talks about the interaction between the motion of objects and
gravity and momentum. That is a very valid realm of physics and
science. And it creates predictable observations and outcomes that
match the mathematics. But when you go into quantum mechanics,
or when you get to the subatomic level, the rules begin to change.
You're now dealing with quantum physics. Quantum physics disagrees
with Newtonian physics. But it doesn't mean that quantum physics
is wrong, or that Newtonian physics is wrong, it's only that it's
applied in a different context. The same is true with medicine.
We still have the old germ theory, which I equate to Newtonian physics,
trying to be applied to today's epidemic diseases, which shouldn't
even be called diseases, because invading microorganisms do not cause
them. They are created as a result of many different inputs, or causes
that the patient undergoes, or those which the patient chooses to
engage in. To call them diseases is really not accurate. Therefore,
the idea that you can cure or reverse these fictitious diseases is
invalid at its very premise.
Cancer is no infectious disease
The idea that you can reverse cancer by taking a synthetic chemical
compound or prescription drug is, at its very core, nonsense. Because
there is no such infectious disease as "cancer," there
is no microbial invader. In fact, there isn't even a tissue or
a physical element that you can point to and look at under a microscope
and say, "That is cancer."
Some people mistakenly say, "Well, sure you can. You can take
a tumor out of the body, and you can put that under a microscope
and call it cancer. However, that’s not cancer. That's the
side effect of cancer, because cancer is a systemic failure of the
immune system. It's a systemic disease. It is actually a condition.
It is a lack of the body's ability to self-regulate its own cell
growth, to clean up its own blood, tissues, bones, bone marrow, and
so on.
This is the nature of cancer; you can't put that under a microscope
and look at it. In the germ theory of disease, however, scientists
are always trying to look at cancer under a microscope, where they
can put it down and say, "This is the microbe, see? There's
the virus" or "There's the bacteria" or "There's
the parasite." They still try to do that today by saying, "Alzheimer's
is based on the nervous system. Put it under a microscope and there
you can see plaque. Plaque on the nervous system." They think
that's the cause of the disease. It's not, it's just a side effect.
Big Pharma = big-time poverty
Getting back to the main point of this, which is Big Tobacco and
Big Pharma, we were talking about why people work for these organizations
when these organizations are actually doing such evil, or engaging
in the creation of such pain and suffering, and even death. Here
in the United States, we're also talking about economic poverty
created by both of these companies.
Tobacco companies make people poor, because they hook them on a
product that's expensive to buy; and they have to keep buying it,
because they're addicted to it. You'll notice that people who smoke
tend to be on a lower economic scale. Part of that is the vicious
feedback cycle; if you start smoking, you will get poorer. As you
get poorer, you will continue to smoke more because life is terrible
and you need your nicotine high just to feel okay. Thus, it's a downward
spiral into oblivion.
Much the same is true with prescription drugs in terms of the economic
scale and the loss of good, clear decision making abilities. One
thing I've noticed is that when people begin taking prescription
drugs, not only do they immediately suffer a big economic hit (remember
that 50 percent of all bankruptcies in the United States today are
due to medical bills, including prescription drugs), they also tend
to lose the ability to make good decisions.
Many of these drugs, especially statin or antidepressant drugs,
for example, affect people's mental acuity. They result in a loss
of lucidity, which results in people no longer comprehending the
big picture, and no longer making good decisions. When people can't
make good decisions, they ultimately decide to allow the doctor to
keep prescribing them more prescription drugs. They don't have the
mental awareness to say no to the drugs. They keep taking more drugs,
and they lose even more awareness. They get even less responsive,
and retain less decision-making ability, and this just becomes another
downward spiral.
As this is happening; they are being drained of their finances.
So day after day dollars are leaving their pockets and being stuffed
into the pockets of the corporate CEOs and the shareholders of the
pharmaceutical companies. There's this huge transfer. Imagine dollar
bills with little wings flying out of the pockets of people all around
the country and flying into the corporate CEOs' pockets in the big
buildings of the giant pharmaceutical companies of this country.
That is happening every single day. I believe it's an exploitation
of people for economic gain, for greed, by the pharmaceutical companies.
Profits first, people second
This, of course, is classic behavior that we saw from Big Tobacco.
It was all about greed, it was all about marketing products. They
didn't care about the resulting effect they were creating in their
customers. In fact, the tobacco companies really only wanted to
make sure their product didn't kill customers so fast that they
lost a paying customer. They most likely didn't mind that it was
giving them disease; they just wanted the customer to stay alive
long enough to keep buying more product.
To some degree, this mindset is still present in the pharmaceutical
industry. You see this incredible insensitivity to the human condition
in Big Pharma. You see press releases and memos from inside the pharmaceutical
companies saying , "We can't wait for the Alzheimer's wave to
come. We can sell a lot of drugs! Look at all those Alzheimer's patients
out there!" Obviously I'm paraphrasing, but this is the kind
of attitude we see. They look at diseases as opportunities, and that's
sick! To look at a disease and how it's sweeping across the nation
and affecting millions of people, and have dollar signs ringing up
in your eyes and thinking, "Wow! This is great! We can make
so much money selling drugs to all these people who are going to
have Alzheimer's, or dementia, or osteoporosis.” That's what
goes on every single day in the back alleys of Big Pharma; or rather,
I should say, in the executive office suites of Big Pharma. There
are no back alleys; they're doing quite well financially.
Exploiting the public for financial gain
Whether it's Big Tobacco or Big Pharma, the similarities are very
obvious at this point. It's all about making money, and selling
a product to people. It's about exploiting the public for financial
gain, while disregarding the true effects of your company's products
on the public health. That, to me, is a crime. It's not just a
crime in the legal sense, but in the spiritual sense, a crime against
a fellow human being. To exploit their pain and suffering for your
financial gain is unethical and immoral. It's bad karma and it
should be against the law.
Instead, many of these companies are actually propped up today.
Business magazines talk about them as great successes, and their
CEOs are named as some of the most successful business people in
the country. They sit on various boards, and they're influential
people. I ask myself, "What great good have these people accomplished?" Nothing!
Where are the cures for any of these diseases?
Where are all the cures?
I haven't seen a single cure for any disease come out of the pharmaceutical
industry since insulin came out. And that doesn't even cure diabetes,
although it does regulate blood sugar. So where are the cures?
Where is this big turnaround in health if everybody's taking so
many drugs? If drugs are so good for everybody, shouldn't we be
the healthiest population in the world? Where are those statistics?
Well, they don't exist!
We're the most diseased population in the world, the most diseased
in the history of the world. We have never seen a population this
diseased, and we're taking more drugs than anybody. We're spending
the most money on healthcare. We're supposed to have the greatest
healthcare system in the world, yet we're the sickest!
We're the craziest in this country, too. We have more mental disorders,
behavioral disorders, school violence -- we have people shooting
their friends and classmates -- we have more people with dementia
and Alzheimer's than we've ever seen before. So where are all these
medicinal miracles? They're nowhere. The whole thing is a giant distortion
and an illusion. Pharmaceuticals offer us nothing. It's just like
nicotine and cigarettes. They offer us nothing other than a quick
fix; nothing other than something to try to make us feel comfortable
in the short term. Meanwhile, they are destroying our health from
the inside out. In both cases, they're also destroying us economically.
Class action lawsuits: the downfall of Big Pharma?
The last similarity between these two companies is the class action
lawsuits. Of course, Big Tobacco has fended off a lot of lawsuits.
There was a Big Tobacco settlement a few years ago where the states
got involved, and I think there is just such a lawsuit coming against
the pharmaceutical companies.
I think the pharmaceutical companies have dug their own grave. They
have over-hyped, over-promoted, over-prescribed, over-pushed, and
over-advertised all these prescription drugs. As a result, they now
have over 40 percent of the population taking drugs. This means that
as the facts start to come out about how these drugs are killing
people and causing disease, and sometimes causing the very disorders
they claim to treat, there's going to be a huge backlash -- a major
class action lawsuit.
Most of the adults in this country will probably be involved. We've
got drugs out there that are extremely dangerous, even over-the-counter
drugs like non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, which, by the last
study I saw, are killing 16,500 Americans per year just from gastro-intestinal
bleeding alone. These are the numbers from one of the drug safety
researchers at the FDA. That's just one drug, one over-the-counter
drug, killing 16,500 a year. I think there's a big backlash coming,
just like there was against Big Tobacco.
Times are changing; people are realizing that pharmaceuticals are
not safe, that they need to look beyond drugs. They need to look
beyond these magic pill solutions and start taking responsibility
for their own health. People are figuring out that if they go to
the doctor and believe everything their doctor tells them, they'll
most likely end up on one or more prescription drugs that will turn
out to be unsafe years down the road, after the damage has been done.
Most of these drugs are just giant experiments. And people are just
guinea pigs to the drug companies. These drugs are not well tested.
They're not in widespread use. All these trials have been carefully
selected and constructed, but afterward they are distorted anyway.
These are not safe drugs, but the drug companies know they can make
enough money to fend off the lawsuits and even settle with patients,
so they still come out ahead, even when their drugs literally kill
people by the thousands.
But that's the big trend coming -- massive nationwide lawsuits against
the pharmaceutical companies with the states and the Attorney General
getting involved. People like Eliot Spitzer, a fantastic champion
of protecting the public and going after corrupt corporations will
play a part. We’ve got states right now suing drug companies
for all kinds of billing fraud. We're talking about hundreds of millions
of dollars in fraud, in which these pharmaceutical companies would
just over-bill states.
I saw statistics in which some drug companies were billing states,
I believe, $900 for a bottle of electrolyte solution for IVs. This
should be about $20, and it's being billed at $900. It was a long
list of items being overcharged. The states were shelling out this
money to the pharmaceutical companies, being scammed one day after
another, just like the American people are being scammed.
I say the pharmaceutical industry is the greatest con ever perpetrated
on the American people. It's a huge con, and they've got everybody
behind it. They've got the FDA backing it up, they've got the doctors
and the medical profession, and even the medical schools and the
medical journals behind it. A lot of the mainstream media as well,
because the drug companies spend so much money in advertising that
they can pick up the phone and talk to the editors of these big magazines
and news networks. They have influence because they spend the bucks.
It's a huge con and it has far-reaching implications, and its roots
are deep and widespread throughout society. It's going to be difficult
to get rid of this, but times are changing.
History will not judge Big Pharma kindly
Some day, Big Pharma will be looked at in much the same way that
Big Tobacco is looked at today. Today, Big Tobacco is not doing
so well here in the United States. What has Big Tobacco done? They
have turned to the international market. The American people finally
figured out that cigarettes are a dangerous product and started
passing laws about not selling cigarettes to minors, restricting
the advertising of tobacco companies, and so on. But the tobacco
companies figured out that they can exploit other countries. "Let's
go sell cigarettes in China."
Guess what, the smoking rate in China is skyrocketing. They're selling
a whole lot of cigarettes over there, and killing a lot of Chinese
people in the meantime. We're talking about Hong Kong, China, Taiwan,
Japan, Thailand, North and South Korea, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia,
and all throughout Southeast Asia. We have a huge smoking problem
and it's the American cigarette companies that are over there exploiting
those populations and literally poisoning and killing those people
just to make a buck, because they figured out they couldn't make
their money over here in the US anymore. The game was up. They got
caught red handed here in the US.
Eventually some of those other countries will figure it out too.
Hopefully, we eventually won't have a tobacco industry in this country
or anywhere in the world. That would be ideal. Hopefully, people
don't need to inhale these deadly products.
When the backlash happens against Big Pharma, we're going to see
the same thing. Big Pharma here will finally have to get creative
and try to sell their products overseas. They will very likely start
exploiting Asia again. There's a whole lot of people over there,
they need drugs too. They'll go over there and try to discredit traditional
Chinese medicine, and they will try to discredit herbs and acupuncture,
just like they've done here in the US. They will create a market
where they force people to have only one option for treating diseases
or symptoms: prescription drugs.
The same scam worked here in the US. They convinced most people
that drugs are the answer, even doctors, who are smart people. Why
not try it in Asia as well? I'm sure they will. They're doing it
already. They will just accelerate it as they become exposed here
in the US, as people learn the truth about the dangers of prescription
drugs.
A few legitimate uses of drugs
With all this talk about the pharmaceutical industry, you might say, "Mike,
don't you have anything good to say about the pharmaceutical industry?" Yes,
sure. It's great to have antibiotics if they're used properly, which
they aren't. They're overused today. It's great to have anesthetics.
If you need a surgical procedure because you've been in a car crash
or you've experienced some kind of physical trauma or injury, you
need anesthetics. You need antibiotics during that surgery. You need
this technology to help put you back together physically.
Traditional, organized Western medicine has a place. I don't deny
that. Even prescription drugs can have a place if used temporarily,
only for short term treatment of acute symptoms and acute conditions,
and only when paired with education and lifestyle changes that can
help that patient eliminate the very causes of the conditions that
created that disease in the first place. The pharmaceutical industry
does have a place; but frankly, it's only justified role in society
is maybe something like one-twentieth of its current size. We don't
need 40 percent of the population taking pharmaceuticals at any one
time, we only need about 2 percent. The other 38 percent should be
on nutritional healing programs. They should be on lifestyle changes,
strength training, physical exercise, exposure to natural sunlight,
and consumption of fresh water on a more regular basis. They also
need healing foods and healing therapies. They don't need drugs.
Where is the shame of doctors?
Doctors will some day look back on this and they will be embarrassed
that they supported prescription drugs for so long. They will be
embarrassed in the same way as they are today about the truth that
they promoted cigarettes. No doctor is proud of being associated
with a profession and with an American Medical Association that
has actually promoted these things in the past. The American Medical
Association has even been convicted twice in the federal courts
of conspiracy, for conspiracy to discredit chiropractic medicine.
This is a history that doctors shouldn't be proud of. Perhaps a
lot of them don't even know this history, but this is the real history
of medical doctors in this country. In the future they will look
back to today and say, "We are ashamed that we promoted all
of these drugs, that we prescribed them without teaching patients
how to be healthy. We are ashamed of our profession, and it's time
to make some changes." They indeed should be ashamed, because
right now old school medical doctors are doing tremendous harm.
The first rule of medicine: Do no harm. That has been forgotten,
because every time a doctor sees a patient, spends three minutes
with that patient, writes a prescription, and sends them out the
door to go to the pharmacy, that's doing harm. That is irresponsible
medicine. In fact, it is not even healing at all. It's not even being
a doctor.
The word "doctor" means "teacher", according
to the Latin root. Where is the teaching in our doctors today? It's
not present, except in the really great doctors. But by and large,
the run-of-the-mill general practitioners are not teaching anybody
anything. They're writing prescriptions and getting them out of the
office.
Some say, "We don't have time to teach people." Then,
what are you doing? What are you doing as a doctor? What are you
doing in this profession if you don't have time to help people? Didn't
you get into medicine because you wanted to help people? Stop wasting
your time being a slave of the drug companies. You will be embarrassed
about that some day, believe me; instead, go study naturopathy. Go
learn nutrition. Go help people in meaningful ways. Don't be part
of the machine that is causing pain, suffering, destruction, and
death in our society and around the world right now. That machine
is set up for one purpose, which is financial profit. Refuse to be
part of that machine.
Just say no to prescription drugs
For the rest of us, we can cause the vanishing of both Big Tobacco
and Big Pharma by simply not purchasing their products. We can
go somewhere else, we can do something different. We can use homeopathic
remedies or acupuncture to treat our acute systems. We can use
nutritional healing and lifestyle changes to prevent chronic disease
so that we don't become a patient in the first place. We won't
suffer from Alzheimer's and dementia and these so called "aging
diseases," which really have almost nothing to do with aging;
but modern medicine loves to describe it that way to try to make
you think it's inevitable.
We can make these changes. We don't have to be a customer of organized
medicine. We can say "No" to cigarettes; we can say "No" to
prescription drugs. We can find alternatives. I encourage you to
take responsibility for your own health, to seek out those alternatives
and use them. Don't be a victim. Don't be exploited by tobacco companies
or pharmaceutical companies just so that you can make their CEOs
rich at your expense. |