Minor Crimes Against Science Education, Part 273

A reader pointed out yet another "water powered clock" to me, and asked:

What do you think? Scam, right? To me it sounds like it's got a battery in it, and water is just a conductor for it. "2 year lifespan" makes me even more certain...

Yes, that's kind of the deal.

Herein, I shall shamelessly reprint and slightly expand something I previously wrote as a comment on Book Of Joe:

Man, I'm tired of things like this. "Fruit Powered Clock", "Water Powered Radio", "Potato Powered Web Server" (that one required rather a lot of potatoes, as I recall). Some of them are complete hoaxes, but the commercial ones all do actually work. Every single one of them is misnamed, though.

In all of these cases, the object or liquid in between the electrodes is not "powering" anything. It is acting as the electrolyte, like the goo inside a flashlight battery or the acid inside your car battery. The actual power comes from an electrochemical reaction between the electrodes. For little gadgets like this one, the electrodes are generally paddles of copper and zinc.

All the electrolyte does is transport ions from one electrode to the other (and collect contamination along the way, which is why you mustn't eat the orange that's been "powering" that clock for the last couple of days). The actual power comes from the electrochemical difference between the material from which the electrodes are made. One electrode will be slowly eaten away, and the other will slowly crust up with crud.

To say otherwise - as the packaging for these devices invariably does - is like saying that your television is "powered by wire".

Science toys are fantastic.

Science toys that're dumbed down until they're lying to us are an own goal.

The Preliminary Proving of Pat Putt, Psychic

Apropos, given recent discussions:

"Professional medium Patricia Putt was last week subjected to a rigorous scientific test of her powers as the first stage of her bid to claim a $1m prize from the James Randi Educational Foundation."

And was Mrs Putt, who is apparently a dab hand at removing evil spirits from houses, the very first person in the history of the One Million Dollar Paranormal Challenge to pass the preliminary test?

Nope.

Mrs Putt claims to have the ability to psychically read people just by "being near them and hearing their voices". So ten volunteers were disguised, and faced away from her while reading from a set text, and Mrs Putt produced personalised psychic readings for each of them. The volunteers then perused all of the readings and picked the one which they thought best described them.

If five or more subjects picked the right reading, Mrs Putt would have passed the preliminary test and been able to take the final, more rigorous, million-dollar test.

(Which isn't to say this preliminary test was sloppy. As with every other preliminary test, the protocol was well-thought-out, with thorough precautions to avoid even quite subtle cheating.)

Precisely none of the subjects picked the reading that was allegedly about them.

To Mrs Putt's credit, she didn't then do what so many failed contestants have done - say the testers must have been cheating, the challenge is rigged, Randi is a child molester, blah blah blah.

Some failed challengers are all smiles when they leave and then immediately start pumping out press releases about how the scientific method is a Satanic plot, but Mrs Putt's Web site has no such updates (there seem to have been no updates at all for a few years, actually). Randi has also had to endure loud complaints from various people who never even made it to the preliminary test, because they refused to say exactly what it was they proposed to do, or proposed a test that could reasonably be expected to result in serious injury or death, or wouldn't say what would constitute failure. Or, most commonly, because they just broke off correspondence with Randi, since they had no time to talk to him between all their blog and Usenet posts about how Randi is too cowardly to face them.

But Mrs Putt took her defeat with dignity. For a few days. Then she gave in to temptation, as is explained in a stop-press at the end of the Guardian article. She announced that because the subjects were "bound from head to foot like black mummies, they themselves felt tied so were not really free to link with Spirit making my work a great deal more difficult".

(The subjects were actually wearing a ski mask and wraparound shades, and draped with a graduation gown. None reported feeling "tied".)

The fact that not a single one of the subjects picked the right reading opens a well-known psychic escape hatch, which goes something like: "In the pressure of the test, my powers must have fouled up and started working in reverse! Surely if I failed every single round of the test, when you would have expected me to get some right by random chance, that still indicates that something spooky is going on!"

Mrs Putt hasn't tried that one (yet), but I think it's instructive to run the numbers to see just how unlikely this event was, assuming everything was just random chance.

In the Putt test, each subject got their own set of all ten of the readings to choose from. This is good, for two reasons.

One, if they were all choosing from one pile of ten readings, then Subject 3 (say) could take Subject 7's reading, making it impossible for Subject 7 to pick the right one.

And two, it meant I didn't have to tie myself up in conditional-probability knots to figure out how likely it actually was that no subjects would choose the right reading by random chance.

As I've discussed before, this is also the way to go about calculating how likely it is that one or more subjects would choose the right reading randomly, because that probability is the inverse, or "complement", of the probability that none would.

If you've got ten subjects each randomly choosing from ten readings, one of which is "theirs", the probability that each individual subject will choose the wrong reading is 9 out of 10, or 0.9. Since there are ten subjects, the probability that no subject will get the right reading by random chance is 0.9 to the power of 10, or 0.349. Which means the probability that at least one subject will get the right reading is 0.651.

So it's only slightly odd that nobody picked the right reading by accident. The possibility still remains that Mrs Putt actually did do some "reverse psychic-ology" and produce readings that were completely unlike the person she was attempting to describe, and that the zero result thereby does indicate something odd going on. But given that the same test done entirely at random will give you this same zero-hits result seven times out of every twenty, the result doesn't look peculiar at all.

(The chance that all of the subjects would randomly choose the right reading is 0.1 to the power of 10, or one in 10,000,000,000. Mrs Putt would only have needed five or more of the subjects to randomly choose the right reading in order to pass the test, though. I leave calculating the probability of that as an exercise for the reader.)

Reprint #96 of that bit of Ben's book

While I'm posting vast chunks of text written by someone else, I thought this might be a good moment for me to do my part to fill up the Google results with the truth about one of the world's most horrifyingly successful quacks.

Herewith, Ben Goldacre's suddenly-famous book chapter about Matthias Rath, which was missing from the first edition of his book because of ongoing legal action by Rath against Ben and The Guardian.

Rath dropped the case, is paying his opponents' costs, and has displayed his usual firm grasp on reality by deciding that this means he has won a famous victory.


This is an extract from
BAD SCIENCE by Ben Goldacre
Published by Harper Perennial 2009.

You are free to copy it, paste it, bake it, reprint it, read it aloud, as long as you don't change it – including this bit – so that people know that they can find more ideas for free at www.badscience.net

.

The Doctor Will Sue You Now

This chapter did not appear in the original edition of this book, because for fifteen months leading up to September 2008 the vitamin-pill entrepreneur Matthias Rath was suing me personally, and the Guardian, for libel. This strategy brought only mixed success. For all that nutritionists may fantasise in public that any critic is somehow a pawn of big pharma, in private they would do well to remember that, like many my age who work in the public sector, I don't own a flat. The Guardian generously paid for the lawyers, and in September 2008 Rath dropped his case, which had cost in excess of £500,000 to defend. Rath has paid £220,000 already, and the rest will hopefully follow. Nobody will ever repay me for the endless meetings, the time off work, or the days spent poring over tables filled with endlessly cross-referenced court documents.

On this last point there is, however, one small consolation, and I will spell it out as a cautionary tale: I now know more about Matthias Rath than almost any other person alive. My notes, references and witness statements, boxed up in the room where I am sitting right now, make a pile as tall as the man himself, and what I will write here is only a tiny fraction of the fuller story that is waiting to be told about him. This chapter, I should also mention, is available free online for anyone who wishes to see it.

Matthias Rath takes us rudely outside the contained, almost academic distance of this book. For the most part we've been interested in the intellectual and cultural consequences of bad science, the made-up facts in national newspapers, dubious academic practices in universities, some foolish pill-peddling, and so on. But what happens if we take these sleights of hand, these pill-marketing techniques, and transplant them out of our decadent Western context into a situation where things really matter?

In an ideal world this would be only a thought experiment. AIDS is the opposite of anecdote. Twenty-five million people have died from it already, three million in the last year alone, and 500,000 of those deaths were children. In South Africa it kills 300,000 people every year: that's eight hundred people every day, or one every two minutes. This one country has 6.3 million people who are HIV positive, including 30 per cent of all pregnant women. There are 1.2 million AIDS orphans under the age of seventeen. Most chillingly of all, this disaster has appeared suddenly, and while we were watching: in 1990, just 1 per cent of adults in South Africa were HIV positive. Ten years
later, the figure had risen to 25 per cent.

It's hard to mount an emotional response to raw numbers, but on one thing I think we would agree. If you were to walk into a situation with that much death, misery and disease, you would be very careful to make sure that you knew what you were talking about. For the reasons you are about to read, I suspect that Matthias Rath missed the mark.

This man, we should be clear, is our responsibility. Born and raised in Germany, Rath was the head of Cardiovascular Research at the Linus Pauling Institute in Palo Alto in California, and even then he had a tendency towards grand gestures, publishing a paper in the Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine in 1992 titled "A Unified Theory of Human Cardiovascular Disease Leading the Way to the Abolition of this Disease as a Cause for Human Mortality". The unified theory was high-dose vitamins.

He first developed a power base from sales in Europe, selling his pills with tactics that will be very familiar to you from the rest of this book, albeit slightly more aggressive. In the UK, his adverts claimed that "90 per cent of patients receiving chemotherapy for cancer die within months of starting treatment", and suggested that three million lives could be saved if cancer patients stopped being treated by conventional medicine. The pharmaceutical industry was deliberately letting people die for financial gain, he explained. Cancer treatments were "poisonous compounds" with "not even one effective treatment".

The decision to embark on treatment for cancer can be the most difficult that an individual or a family will ever take, representing a close balance between well-documented benefits and equally well-documented side-effects. Adverts like these might play especially strongly on your conscience if your mother has just lost all her hair to chemotherapy, for example, in the hope of staying alive just long enough to see your son speak.

There was some limited regulatory response in Europe, but it was generally as weak as that faced by the other characters in this book. The Advertising Standards Authority criticised one of his adverts in the UK, but that is essentially all they are able to do. Rath was ordered by a Berlin court to stop claiming that his vitamins could cure cancer, or face a €250,000 fine.

But sales were strong, and Matthias Rath still has many supporters in Europe, as you will shortly see. He walked into South Africa with all the acclaim, self-confidence and wealth he had amassed as a successful vitamin-pill entrepreneur in Europe and America, and began to take out full-page adverts in newspapers.

˜The answer to the AIDS epidemic is here," he proclaimed. Anti-retroviral drugs were poisonous, and a conspiracy to kill patients and make money. "Stop AIDS Genocide by the Drugs Cartel said one headline. "Why should South Africans continue to be poisoned with AZT? There is a natural answer to AIDS." The answer came in the form of vitamin pills. "Multivitamin treatment is more effective than any toxic AIDS drug. Multivitamins cut the risk of developing AIDS in half."

Rath's company ran clinics reflecting these ideas, and in 2005 he decided to run a trial of his vitamins in a township near Cape Town called Khayelitsha, giving his own formulation, VitaCell, to people with advanced AIDS. In 2008 this trial was declared illegal by the Cape High Court of South Africa. Although Rath says that none of his participants had been on anti-retroviral drugs, some relatives have given statements saying that they were, and were actively told to stop using them.

Tragically,Matthias Rath had taken these ideas to exactly the right place. Thabo Mbeki, the President of South Africa at the time, was well known as an "AIDS dissident", and to international horror, while people died at the rate of one every two minutes in his country, he gave credence and support to the claims of a small band of campaigners who variously claim that AIDS does not exist, that it is not caused by HIV, that anti-retroviral medication does more harm than good, and so on.

At various times during the peak of the AIDS epidemic in South Africa their government argued that HIV is not the cause of AIDS, and that anti-retroviral drugs are not useful for patients. They refused to roll out proper treatment programmes, they refused to accept free donations of drugs, and they refused to accept grant money from the Global Fund to buy drugs. One study estimates that if the South African national government had used anti-retroviral drugs for prevention and treatment at the same rate as the Western Cape province (which defied national policy on the issue), around 171,000 new HIV infections and 343,000 deaths could have been prevented between 1999 and 2007. Another study estimates that between 2000 and 2005 there were 330,000 unnecessary deaths, 2.2 million person years lost, and 35,000 babies unnecessarily born with HIV because of the failure to implement a cheap and simple mother-to-child-transmission prevention program. Between one and three doses of an ARV drug can reduce transmission dramatically. The cost is negligible. It was not available.

Interestingly, Matthias Rath's colleague and employee, a South African barrister named Anthony Brink, takes the credit for introducing Thabo Mbeki to many of these ideas. Brink stumbled on the "AIDS dissident" material in the mid-1990s, and after much surfing and reading, became convinced that it must be right. In 1999 he wrote an article about AZT in a Johannesburg newspaper titled "a medicine from hell". This led to a public exchange with a leading virologist. Brink contacted Mbeki, sending him copies of the debate, and was welcomed as an expert.

This is a chilling testament to the danger of elevating cranks by engaging with them. In his initial letter of motivation for employment to Matthias Rath, Brink described himself as "South Africa's leading AIDS dissident, best known for my whistle-blowing exposé of the toxicity and inefficacy of AIDS drugs, and for my political activism in this regard, which caused President Mbeki and Health Minister Dr Tshabalala-Msimang to repudiate the drugs in 1999?.

In 2000, the now infamous International AIDS Conference took place in Durban. Mbeki's presidential advisory panel beforehand was packed with "AIDS dissidents", including Peter Duesberg and David Rasnick. On the first day, Rasnick suggested that all HIV testing should be banned on principle, and that South Africa should stop screening supplies of blood for HIV. "If I had the power to outlaw the HIV antibody test," he said, "I would do it across the board." When African physicians gave testimony about the drastic change AIDS had caused in their clinics and hospitals, Rasnick said he had not seen "any evidence" of an AIDS catastrophe. The media were not allowed in, but one reporter from the Village Voice was present. Peter Duesberg, he said, "gave a presentation so removed from African medical reality that it left several local doctors shaking their heads". It wasn't AIDS that was killing babies and children, said the dissidents: it was the anti-retroviral medication.

President Mbeki sent a letter to world leaders comparing the struggle of the "AIDS dissidents" to the struggle against apartheid. The Washington Post described the reaction at the White House: "So stunned were some officials by the letter's tone and timing during final preparations for July's conference in Durban that at least two of them, according to diplomatic sources, felt obliged to check whether it was genuine. Hundreds of delegates walked out of Mbeki's address to the conference in disgust, but many more described themselves as dazed and confused. Over 5,000 researchers and activists around the world signed up to the Durban Declaration, a document that specifically addressed and repudiated the claims and concerns–at least the more moderate ones–of the "AIDS dissidents". Specifically, it addressed the charge that people were simply dying of poverty:

The evidence that AIDS is caused by HIV-1 or HIV-2 is clearcut, exhaustive and unambiguous… As with any other chronic infection, various co-factors play a role in determining the risk of disease. Persons who are malnourished, who already suffer other infections or who are older, tend to be more susceptible to the rapid development of AIDS following HIV infection. However, none of these factors weaken the scientific evidence that HIV is the sole cause of AIDS… Mother-to-child transmission can be reduced by half or more by short courses of antiviral drugs … What works best in one country may not be appropriate in another. But to tackle the disease, everyone must first understand that HIV is the enemy. Research, not myths, will lead to the development of more effective and cheaper treatments.

It did them no good. Until 2003 the South African government refused, as a matter of principle, to roll out proper antiretroviral medication programmes, and even then the process was half-hearted. This madness was only overturned after a massive campaign by grassroots organisations such as the Treatment Action Campaign, but even after the ANC cabinet voted to allow medication to be given, there was still resistance. In mid-2005, at least 85 per cent of HIV-positive people who needed anti-retroviral drugs were still refused them. That's around a million people.

This resistance, of course, went deeper than just one man; much of it came from Mbeki's Health Minister, Manto Tshabalala-Msimang. An ardent critic of medical drugs for HIV, she would cheerfully go on television to talk up their dangers, talk down their benefits, and became irritable and evasive when asked how many patients were receiving effective treatment. She declared in 2005 that she would not be "pressured" into meeting the target of three million patients on anti-retroviral medication, that people had ignored the importance of nutrition, and that she would continue to warn patients of the sideeffects of anti-retrovirals, saying: "We have been vindicated in
this regard. We are what we eat."

It's an eerily familiar catchphrase. Tshabalala-Msimang has also gone on record to praise the work of Matthias Rath, and refused to investigate his activities. Most joyfully of all, she is a staunch advocate of the kind of weekend glossy-magazine-style nutritionism that will by now be very familiar to you. The remedies she advocates for AIDS are beetroot, garlic, lemons and African potatoes. A fairly typical quote, from the Health Minister in a country where eight hundred people die every day from AIDS, is this: "Raw garlic and a skin of the lemon–not only do they give you a beautiful face and skin but they also protect you from disease." South Africa's stand at the 2006 World AIDS Conference in Toronto was described by delegates as the "salad stall". It consisted of some garlic, some beetroot, the African potato, and assorted other vegetables. Some boxes of anti-retroviral drugs were added later, but they were reportedly borrowed at the last minute from other conference delegates.

Alternative therapists like to suggest that their treatments and ideas have not been sufficiently researched. As you now know, this is often untrue, and in the case of the Health Minister's favoured vegetables, research had indeed been done, with results that were far from promising. Interviewed on SABC about this, Tshabalala-Msimang gave the kind of responses you'd expect to hear at any North London dinner-party discussion of alternative therapies.

First she was asked about work from the University of Stellenbosch which suggested that her chosen plant, the African potato, might be actively dangerous for people on AIDS drugs. One study on African potato in HIV had to be terminated prematurely, because the patients who received the plant extract developed severe bone-marrow suppression and a drop in their CD4 cell count–which is a bad thing–after eight weeks. On top of this, when extract from the same vegetable was given to cats with Feline Immunodeficiency Virus, they succumbed to full-blown Feline AIDS faster than their non-treated controls. African potato does not look like a good bet.

Tshabalala-Msimang disagreed: the researchers should go back to the drawing board, and "investigate properly". Why? Because HIV-positive people who used African potato had shown improvement, and they had said so themselves. If a person says he or she is feeling better, should this be disputed, she demanded to know, merely because it had not been proved scientifically? "When a person says she or he is feeling better, I must say ‘No, I don't think you are feeling better'? I must rather go and do science on you'?" Asked whether there should be a scientific basis to her views, she replied: "Whose science?"

And there, perhaps, is a clue, if not exoneration. This is a continent that has been brutally exploited by the developed world, first by empire, and then by globalised capital. Conspiracy theories about AIDS and Western medicine are not entirely absurd in this context. The pharmaceutical industry has indeed been caught performing drug trials in Africa which would be impossible anywhere in the developed world. Many find it suspicious that black Africans seem to be the biggest victims of AIDS, and point to the biological warfare programmes set up by the apartheid governments; there have also been suspicions that the scientific discourse of HIV/AIDS might be a device, a Trojan horse for spreading even more exploitative Western political and economic agendas around a problem that is simply one of poverty.

And these are new countries, for which independence and self-rule are recent developments, which are struggling to find their commercial feet and true cultural identity after centuries of colonisation. Traditional medicine represents an important link with an autonomous past; besides which, anti-retroviral medications have been unnecessarily – offensively, absurdly – expensive, and until moves to challenge this became partially successful, many Africans were effectively denied access to medical treatment as a result.

It's very easy for us to feel smug, and to forget that we all have our own strange cultural idiosyncrasies which prevent us from taking up sensible public-health programmes. For examples, we don't even have to look as far as MMR. There is a good evidence base, for example, to show that needle-exchange programmes reduce the spread of HIV, but this strategy has been rejected time and again in favour of "Just say no." Development charities funded by US Christian groups refuse to engage with birth control, and any suggestion of abortion, even in countries where being in control of your own fertility could mean the difference between success and failure in life, is met with a cold, pious stare. These impractical moral principles are so deeply entrenched that Pepfar, the US Presidential Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, has insisted that every recipient of international aid money must sign a declaration expressly promising not to have any involvement with sex workers.

We mustn't appear insensitive to the Christian value system, but it seems to me that engaging sex workers is almost the cornerstone of any effective AIDS policy: commercial sex is frequently the "vector of transmission", and sex workers a very high-risk population; but there are also more subtle issues at stake. If you secure the legal rights of prostitutes to be free from violence and discrimination, you empower them to demand universal condom use, and that way you can prevent HIV from being spread into the whole community. This is where science meets culture. But perhaps even to your own friends and neighbours, in whatever suburban idyll has become your home, the moral principle of abstinence from sex and drugs is more important than people dying of AIDS; and perhaps, then, they are no less irrational than Thabo Mbeki.

So this was the situation into which the vitamin-pill entrepreneur Matthias Rath inserted himself, prominently and expensively, with the wealth he had amassed from Europe and America, exploiting anti-colonial anxieties with no sense of irony, although he was a white man offering pills made in a factory abroad. His adverts and clinics were a tremendous success. He began to tout individual patients as evidence of the benefits that could come from vitamin pills – although in reality some of his most famous success stories have died of AIDS. When asked about the deaths of Rath's star patients, Health Minister Tshabalala-Msimang replied: "It doesn't necessarily mean that if I am taking antibiotics and I die, that I died of antibiotics."

She is not alone: South Africa's politicians have consistently refused to step in, Rath claims the support of the government, and its most senior figures have refused to distance themselves from his operations or to criticise his activities. Tshabalala-Msimang has gone on the record to state that the Rath Foundation "are not undermining the government's position. If anything, they are supporting it."

In 2005, exasperated by government inaction, a group of 199 leading medical practitioners in South Africa signed an open letter to the health authorities of the Western Cape, pleading for action on the Rath Foundation. "Our patients are being inundated with propaganda encouraging them to stop life-saving medicine," it said. "Many of us have had experiences with HIV infected patients who have had their health compromised by stopping their anti-retrovirals due to the activities of this Foundation." Rath's adverts continue unabated. He even claimed that his activities were endorsed by huge lists of sponsors and affiliates including the World Health Organization, UNICEF and UNAIDS. All have issued statements flatly denouncing his claims and activities. The man certainly has chutzpah.

His adverts are also rich with detailed scientific claims. It would be wrong of us to neglect the science in this story, so we should follow some through, specifically those which focused on a Harvard study in Tanzania. He described this research in full-page advertisements, some of which have appeared in the New York Times and the Herald Tribune. He refers to these paid adverts, I should mention, as if he had received flattering news coverage in the same papers. Anyway, this research showed that multivitamin supplements can be beneficial in a developing world population with AIDS: there's no problem with that result, and there are plenty of reasons to think that vitamins might have some benefit for a sick and frequently malnourished population.

The researchers enrolled 1,078 HIV-positive pregnant women and randomly assigned them to have either a vitamin supplement or placebo. Notice once again, if you will, that this is another large, well-conducted, publicly funded trial of vitamins, conducted by mainstream scientists, contrary to the claims of nutritionists that such studies do not exist. The women were followed up for several years, and at the end of the study, 25 per cent of those on vitamins were severely ill or dead, compared with 31 per cent of those on placebo. There was also a statistically significant benefit in CD4 cell count (a measure of HIV activity) and viral loads. These results were in no sense dramatic – and they cannot be compared to the demonstrable life-saving benefits of anti-retrovirals – but they did show that improved diet, or cheap generic vitamin pills, could represent a simple and relatively inexpensive way to marginally delay the need to start HIV medication in some patients.

In the hands of Rath, this study became evidence that vitamin pills are superior to medication in the treatment of HIV/AIDS, that anti-retroviral therapies "severely damage all cells in the body–including white blood cells", and worse, that they were "thereby not improving but rather worsening immune deficiencies and expanding the AIDS epidemic". The researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health were so horrified that they put together a press release setting out their support for medication, and stating starkly, with unambiguous clarity, that Matthias Rath had misrepresented their findings.

To outsiders the story is baffling and terrifying. The United Nations has condemned Rath's adverts as "wrong and misleading". "This guy is killing people by luring them with unrecognised treatment without any scientific evidence," said Eric Goemaere, head of Médecins sans Frontières SA, a man who pioneered anti-retroviral therapy in South Africa. Rath sued him.

It's not just MSF who Rath has gone after: he has also brought time-consuming, expensive, stalled or failed cases against a professor of AIDS research, critics in the media and others.

But his most heinous campaign has been against the Treatment Action Campaign. For many years this has been the key organisation campaigning for access to anti-retroviral medication in South Africa, and it has been fighting a war on four fronts. Firstly, TAC campaigns against its own government, trying to compel it to roll out treatment programmes for the population. Secondly, it fights against the pharmaceutical industry, which claims that it needs to charge full price for its products in developing countries in order to pay for research and development of new drugs – although, as we shall see, out of its $550 billion global annual revenue, the pharmaceutical industry spends twice as much on promotion and admin as it does on research and development. Thirdly, it is a grassroots organisation, made up largely of black women from townships who do important prevention and treatment-literacy work on the ground, ensuring that people know what is available, and how to protect themselves. Lastly, it fights against people who promote the type of information peddled by Matthias Rath and his ilk.

Rath has taken it upon himself to launch a massive campaign against this group. He distributes advertising material against them, saying "Treatment Action Campaign medicines are killing you" and "Stop AIDS genocide by the drug cartel", claiming–as you will guess by now–that there is an international conspiracy by pharmaceutical companies intent on prolonging the AIDS crisis in the interests of their own profits by giving medication that makes people worse. TAC must be a part of this, goes the reasoning, because it criticises Matthias Rath. Just like me writing on Patrick Holford or Gillian McKeith, TAC is perfectly in favour of good diet and nutrition. But in Rath's promotional literature it is a front for the pharmaceutical industry, a "Trojan horse" and a "running dog". TAC has made a full disclosure of its funding and activities, showing no such connection: Rath presented no evidence to the contrary, and has even lost a court case over the issue, but will not let it lie. In fact he presents the loss of this court case as if it was a victory.

The founder of TAC is a man called Zackie Achmat, and he is the closest thing I have to a hero. He is South African, and coloured, by the nomenclature of the apartheid system in which he grew up. At the age of fourteen he tried to burn down his school, and you might have done the same in similar circumstances. He has been arrested and imprisoned under South Africas violent, brutal white regime, with all that entailed. He is also gay, and HIV-positive, and he refused to take anti-retroviral medication until it was widely available to all on the public health system, even when he was dying of AIDS, even when he was personally implored to save himself by Nelson Mandela, a public supporter of anti-retroviral medication and Achmat's work.

And now, at last, we come to the lowest point of this whole story, not merely for Matthias Rath's movement, but for the alternative therapy movement around the world as a whole. In 2007, with a huge public flourish, to great media coverage, Rath's former employee Anthony Brink filed a formal complaint against Zackie Achmat, the head of the TAC. Bizarrely, he filed this complaint with the International Criminal Court at The Hague, accusing Achmat of genocide for successfully campaigning to get access to HIV drugs for the people of South Africa.

It's hard to explain just how influential the "AIDS dissidents" are in South Africa. Brink is a barrister, a man with important friends, and his accusations were reported in the national news media –and in some corners of the Western gay press–as a serious news story. I do not believe that any one of those journalists who reported on it can possibly have read Brink's indictment to the end.

I have.

The first fifty-seven pages present familiar anti-medication and "AIDS-dissident" material. But then, on page fifty-eight, this "indictment" document suddenly deteriorates into something altogether more vicious and unhinged, as Brink sets out what he believes would be an appropriate punishment for Zackie. Because I do not wish to be accused of selective editing, I will now reproduce for you that entire section, unedited, so you can see and feel it for yourself.

APPROPRIATE CRIMINAL SANCTION

In view of the scale and gravity of Achmat's crime and his direct personal criminal culpability for ‘the deaths of thousands of people', to quote his own words, it is respectfully submitted that the International Criminal Court ought to impose on him the highest sentence provided by Article 77.1(b) of the Rome Statute, namely to permanent confinement in a small white steel and concrete cage, bright fluorescent light on all the time to keep an eye on him, his warders putting him out only to work every day in the prison garden to cultivate nutrient-rich vegetables, including when it's raining. In order for him to repay his debt to society, with the ARVs he claims to take administered daily under close medical watch at the full prescribed dose, morning noon and night, without interruption, to prevent him faking that he's being treatment compliant, pushed if necessary down his forced-open gullet with a finger, or, if he bites, kicks and screams too much, dripped into his arm after he's been restrained on a gurney with cable ties around his ankles, wrists and neck, until he gives up the ghost on them, so as to eradicate this foulest, most loathsome, unscrupulous and malevolent blight on the human race, who has plagued and poisoned the people of South Africa, mostly black, mostly poor, for nearly a decade now, since the day he and his TAC first hit the scene.

Signed at Cape Town, South Africa, on 1 January 2007

Anthony Brink

Appropriate Criminal Sanction A

Appropriate Criminal Sanction B

The document was described by the Rath Foundation as "entirely valid and long overdue".

This story isn't about Matthias Rath, or Anthony Brink, or Zackie Achmat, or even South Africa. It is about the culture of how ideas work, and how that can break down. Doctors criticise other doctors, academics criticise academics, politicians criticise politicians: that's normal and healthy, it's how ideas improve. Matthias Rath is an alternative therapist, made in Europe. He is every bit the same as the British operators that we have seen in this book. He is from their world.

Despite the extremes of this case, not one single alternative therapist or nutritionist, anywhere in the world, has stood up to criticise any single aspect of the activities of Matthias Rath and his colleagues. In fact, far from it: he continues to be fêted to this day. I have sat in true astonishment and watched leading figures of the UK's alternative therapy movement applaud Matthias Rath at a public lecture (I have it on video, just in case there's any doubt). Natural health organisations continue to defend Rath. Homeopaths' mailouts continue to promote his work. The British Association of Nutritional Therapists has been invited to comment by bloggers, but declined. Most, when challenged, will dissemble."Oh," they say, "I don't really know much about it." Not one person will step forward and dissent.

The alternative therapy movement as a whole has demonstrated itself to be so dangerously, systemically incapable of critical self-appraisal that it cannot step up even in a case like that of Rath: in that count I include tens of thousands of practitioners, writers, administrators and more. This is how ideas go badly wrong. In the conclusion to this book, written before I was able to include this chapter, I will argue that the biggest dangers posed by the material we have covered are cultural and intellectual.

I may be mistaken.

/.

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10,537 bytes with which I do not agree

Never let it be said that I don't give people who disagree with me a fair suck of the saveloy.

(Amazingly enough, that's actual genuine Australian slang, though a bit old-fashioned these days.)

My post the other day about anti-vaccinationist Jock Doubleday attracted some feedback from him, culminating in a comment of epic dimensions. Since I've an innate sympathy for anybody who, like me, appears to buy ink by the barrel, and because this is such a brilliant example of the breed, I hereby award said comment a post of its own, just as I did with the last one.

(My own comments on this comment, of course, follow.)

I understand if you believe it's a waste of your time to argue with someone who has stepped out of the vaccines-as-salvation paradigm.

Your belief in vaccines as the greatest good stems from decades of institutional indoctrination -- indoctrination which I also had but which I was allowed to break free from by a chance encounter with someone who had also broken free.

You can continue on with your beliefs -- and with your endless making-it-about-me -- but the truth about vaccines is waiting for you in over a century of scientific research.

Commenter #8 mentioned smallpox. Regarding this disease, please take time to read Dr. Tim O'Shea's article:

http://www.thedoctorwithin.com/smallpox/Smallpox-Bringing-a-Dead-Disease-Back-to-Life.php

Below are the sources I used for my article "Into the Labyrinth: Discovering the Truth about Vaccination" . . . for your consideration.

If you or anyone commenting here would prefer to have a discussion about vaccine efficacy somewhere other than this blog, I can post all discussions on my site. I have had the following URL up for several years with no takers:

"The Great Vaccination Debate"
http://spontaneouscreation.org/SC/OpenLetterToBelieversInVaccination.htm

Or we could carry on a conversation on another site of your or one of your commenters' choosing.

If anyone wants to discuss vaccines, you may first want to read these MDs and medical historians:

http://www.whale.to/m/critics.html

If you would prefer to hear nothing more from me here on vaccination, I will be happy to refrain from posting here again. Just let me know.

You are always welcome to write to me at:
director@spontaneouscreation.org

Vaccine info sources below.

In health,
Jock Doubleday

VACCINE EFFICACY?

http://www.vaclib.org/sites/debate/index.html

http://www.thinktwice.com/

http://www.whale.to/vaccines.html

http://www.909shot.com/

http://vaccineinfo.net/

http://www.foundationforhealthchoice.com/

http://www.avn.org.au/

http://www.vaclib.org/

http://www.thedoctorwithin.com/

http://www.vaccinepolicy.org/

http://www.whale.to/v/obomsawin.html

http://www.know-vaccines.org/

http://www.vaccine-info.com/

http://www.vaccines.bizland.com/

http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/8148/vac.html

http://www.informedparent.co.uk/

http://www.vaccinationnews.com/

VACCINE INGREDIENTS

http://www.vaclib.org/basic/vacingredient.htm

http://chemfinder.camsoft.com/

AIDS LINKED TO MASS POLIO VACCINATION

http://www.uow.edu.au/arts/sts/bmartin/dissent/documents/AIDS/

http://www.uow.edu.au/arts/sts/bmartin/dissent/documents/AIDS/River/Hooper_00/

ANIMAL VACCINES

http://www.healthy.net/library/articles/ivn/animals.htm

http://www.ahvma.org/

http://cyberpet.com/cyberdog/articles/health/vaccin.htm

http://www.canine-health-concern.org.uk/

http://www.shirleys-wellness-cafe.com/petvacc.htm

http://www.animalhomeopathy.net/

ANTHRAX VACCINE

www.gulfwarvets.com/anthrax.htm

ANTIBODIES AND VACCINES

http://www.whale.to/vaccines/antibody.html

http://vaclib.org/intro/qanda3.htm

ARMY VACCINES

http://www.gulfwarvets.com/winds.htm

http://www.all-natural.com/gwi-1.html

ASTHMA AND VACCINES

http://www.whale.to/vaccines/asthma.html

http://www.whale.to/v/asthma3.html

AUTISM AND VACCINES

http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2008/01/02/vaccine-induced-autism.aspx

http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2000/10/01/autism-mercury-part-one.aspx

http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2001/02/24/autism-mercury-part-two.aspx

http://www.wellbeingjournal.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=491&Itemid=77

http://www.unlockingautism.org

http://www.taap.info/articles.asp

http://www.autismuk.com/

http://www.mercola.com/2001/mar/7/autism_vaccines.htm

http://www.garynull.com/Documents/autism99b.htm

CHILD ABUSE (shaken baby syndrome) AND VACCINES

http://www.falseallegation.org

http://www.freeyurko.bizland.com/contents.html

CHURCH OF VACCINATION

http://www.healthy.net/asp/templates/article.asp?PageType=Article&ID=1121

CONFLICT OF INTEREST AND VACCINES

http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2000/05/21/research-for-sale.aspx

http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2000/09/24/vaccine-approvals.aspx

http://www.wellbeingjournal.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=52&Itemid=65

http://www.mercola.com/2000/oct/15/congress_conflicts.htm

http://www.mercola.com/2001/sep/15/vaccines.htm

http://consumerlawpage.com/article/vaccine.shtml

http://www.cspinet.org/new/200303101.html

DIABETES AND VACCINES

http://www.nvic.org/vaccines-and-diseases/Diabetes/congressionalhearing.aspx

http://www.nvic.org/vaccines-and-diseases/Diabetes/juvenilediabetes.aspx

DIPHTHERIA (DPT) VACCINE

http://www.whale.to/v/asthma3.html

DPT VACCINE LINKED TO PARALYTIC POLIO

http://www.pnc.com.au/~cafmr/online/vaccine/polio.html

DISEASE THEORY AND VACCINES

http://www.pnc.com.au/~cafmr/reviews2.html#pasteur

http://www.pnc.com.au/%7Ecafmr/reviews2.html

EXEMPTIONS / WAIVERS FOR VACCINES

http://www.geocities.com/titus2birthing/VacRefuse.html

http://www.nccn.net/~wwithin/exemptions.htm

http://www.geocities.com/titus2birthing/WhyChoose.html

http://www.know-vaccines.org/exemption.html

http://www.gval.com/exempt.htm

FLU VACCINE

http://www.healthy.net/library/articles/ivn/flu.htm

FORCED VACCINATION

http://www.naturalnews.com/022384.html

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r6Vj0EX_STU

http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=54095

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=1117

http://www.disinfo.com/content/story.php?title=Help-Stop-Forced-Vaccination-Children

http://www.naturalnews.com/022384.html

GARDASIL (HPV) VACCINE

http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=54095

HEPATITIS B (HEP B) VACCINE

http://www.vaccinationnews.com/DailyNews/June2001/HepBVaxReactOutnumbCases.htm

http://www.vaccinationnews.com/DailyNews/July2001/HepBDis&VaxFacts.htm

http://www.vaccinationnews.com/DailyNews/August2001/HepBVaxForNewborns.htm

HOMEOPATHY AND VACCINES

http://www.healthy.net/library/articles/moskowitz/vaccination.htm

http://www.healthy.net/library/articles/moskowitz/unvaccinated.htm

http://www.tinussmits.com/english/

http://www.animalhomeopathy.net/

IMMUNE SYSTEM AND VACCINES (autoimmune disorders)

http://www.healthy.net/library/articles/neustaedter/immune.htm

MMR VACCINE (Measles Mumps Rubella)

http://www.nvic.org/vaccines-and-diseases/MMR.aspx

http://cryshame.net/index.php?option=com_search&searchword=pport

MMR AND AUTISM

http://www.autismuk.com/

POLIO VACCINE

http://www.vaccines.plus.com/

http://thinktwice.com/s_polio.htm

http://www.uow.edu.au/arts/sts/bmartin/dissent/documents/AIDS/

RUBELLA VACCINE

http://thinktwice.com/s_rubell.htm

http://www.garynull.com/Documents/autism99b.htm

SIDS (sudden infant death syndrome) AND VACCINES

http://www.pnc.com.au/~cafmr/coulter/sids.html

http://www.pnc.com.au/~cafmr/coulter/vacc-deb.html

http://www.pnc.com.au/~cafmr/newsl/kalo.html

TETANUS VACCINE

http://www.whale.to/a/tetanus.html

http://www.whale.to/vaccines/tetanus.html

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=PubMed&cmd=Retrieve&list_uids=1565228&dopt=Abstract

TUBERCULOSIS AND VACCINES

http://www.whale.to/m/point1.html

UNVACCINATED CHILDREN

http://www.healthy.net/library/articles/moskowitz/unvaccinated.htm

VACCINE ADVERSE REACTIONS

http://www.gn.apc.org/inquirer/vaccio.html

VACCINE ARTICLES

http://www.ivanfraser.com/articles/health/vaccination.html

http://www.curezone.com/art/1.asp?C0=735

http://www.icpa4kids.com/pediatric_chiropractic_articles_immunizations.htm

http://www.healingwell.com/library/health/thompson2.asp

http://www.wellbeingjournal.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=52&Itemid=65

http://www.mercola.com/2003/jul/12/vaccine_procedure.htm

http://www.healthy.net/clinic/familyhealthcenter/children/vaccination/articles.asp

http://www.korenpublications.com/

http://www.wellbeingjournal.com/index.php?searchword=vaccines&option=com_search&Itemid=

VACCINE CHALLENGE (Jock Doubleday's)
http://www.spontaneouscreation.org/SC/$75,000VaccineOffer.htm

VACCINE CHALLENGE (Viera Scheibner's)

http://vaccinationnews.com/DailyNews/October2001/VaccinationChallenge.htm

VACCINE CRITICS

http://www.whale.to/m/critics.html

VACCINE HOAX

http://www.whale.to/a/hoax.html

VACCINE LINKS

http://www.vaclib.org/links/vaxlinks.htm

http://wolfcreekranch1.tripod.com/human_vaccines.html

http://www.industryinet.com/~ruby/vaccinations.html

VACCINE PACKAGE INSERTS (pdf files)

http://www.vaclib.org/chapter/inserts.htm

VACCINE SITES (GOVERNMENT) Vaccine Adverse Event Report System (VAERS)

http://www.fda.gov/cber/vaers/vaers.htm

VACCINE QUOTES

http://www.whale.to/a/hoax.html

VACCINE BOOKS

Jamie Murphy, What Every Parent Should Know about Childhood Immunization

Tim O'Shea, The Sanctity of Human Blood: Vaccination Is Not Immunization

Neil Z. Miller, Vaccines: Are They Really Safe and Effective?

Robert Mendelsohn, How to Raise A Healthy Child in Spite of Your Doctor

Walene James, Immunization: The Reality Behind the Myth

Tedd Koren, Childhood Vaccination: Questions All Parents Should Ask

Randall Neustaedter, The Vaccine Guide: Risks and Benefits for Children and Adults

Raymond Obomsawin, Universal Immunization: Medical Miracle or Masterful Mirage?

Ethel Douglas Hume, Pasteur Exposed: The False Foundations of Modern Medicine

Harris L. Coulter and Barbara Loe Fisher, A Shot in the Dark: Why the P in DPT Vaccination May Be Hazardous to Your Child's Health

Leon Chaitow, Vaccination and Immunization: Dangers, Delusions and Alternatives

Harris L. Coulter, Vaccination, Social Violence and Criminality: The Medical Assault on the American Brain

Viera Scheibner, Vaccination: 100 Years of Orthodox Research Shows that Vaccines Represent a Medical Assault on the Immune System

Neil Z. Miller, Vaccines, Autism, and Childhood Disorders

Neil Z. Miller, Immunizations: The People Speak!

Catherine J.M. Diodati, Immunization: History, Ethics, Law and Health

Epidemics: Opposing Viewpoints (Opposing Viewpoints Series, Unnumbered) by William Dudley, Ed., Mary E. Williams, Ed., Greenhaven Press (January 1999)

VACCINE BOOK SITES

http://www.know-vaccines.org/reading.html

http://thinktwice.com/vaccine.htm

http://www.korenpublications.com

http://www.cure-guide.com/Vaccine_Guide/vaccine_guide.html

http://www.noamalgam.com/vaccinations.html

http://www.vaclib.org/sites/debate/about.html

AUTISM BOOKS AND ARTICLES

http://www.autismwebsite.com/ari/index.htm

http://www.impossiblecure.com

http://www.baps-online.co.uk/28.html

VACCINE BOOK REVIEWS

http://www.pnc.com.au/%7Ecafmr/reviews2.html

VACCINE VIDEOTAPES

http://www.vaclib.org/basic/products.htm

Comment by jockdoubleday — May 11, 2009 @ 5:20 am

Phew.

To other readers of this site, not to Jock:

The above comment is a fine example, if you haven't encountered one before, of the "quantity of evidence" or "filibuster" approach, in which a person attempts to justify their beliefs by presenting an enormous number of references which are claimed to - and sometimes actually all do - agree with their point of view. It's a great technique for people who're opposed to the scientific consensus, because it gives people who disagree a huge task - "Don't comment before you've read them all!" - while relieving the claimant of the task of actually forming an argument, or even of saying with which of the numerous sources he or she agrees.

Given the large number of human beings in the world and the very long time that some people have spent believing just about any odd thing you care to name, though, it is unsurprising that you can come up with a long list of books and papers and pamphlets and speeches and Web pages from people who believe just about anything you like. Einstein was wrong, the speed of light is infinite, the colour of human of your choice is superior to the other colour of human of your choice (with the "superiority" arrow pointing in all possible directions between "black", "brown", "white", "yellow", "very importantly different kind of yellow" and "red"), the MMR vaccination causes autism, abstinence-based sex education works, et cetera.

I have a suggestion for any readers who're enthusiastic about giving Jock a fair hearing, but who also have, you know, stuff to do other than spend months digging for a nugget of truth in the above large pile of... data. I suggest you randomly pick one or more of the above, and see what they have to say.

I stuck a metaphorical pin into the above list, avoiding the ones whose names I already recognised (like the ones who say that "shaken baby syndrome" can be caused by vaccines; how delightful!), and settled on "Pasteur Exposed: The False Foundations of Modern Medicine", by one Ethel Douglas Hume.

Thanks to this helpful review from a believer, I know that this work was originally published in 1923, and advanced the views of one Professor Antoine Béchamp over those of Pasteur.

Ethel took a while to finish her book about Béchamp, seeing as he died in 1908, at the end of a long and productive life in which I feel safe in saying his dispute with Pasteur was not the high point. Béchamp believed in pleomorphism, the view that in certain conditions, animal cells can turn into different animal cells. This much is not incorrect; certain cells, like stem cells, certainly can "differentiate" into other kinds of cells.

But Béchamp took this further. He believed that when you get a particular illness, and a particular kind of bacteria are then found in your body, those bacteria were actually created by tiny "microzymas" in your body which have been caused, by the disease you have, to turn themselves into bacteria rather than into the normal cells of your body.

Here's a believer's page about Béchamp's theory, which says it's "never been refuted". I take exception to that, because we have now studied human cells and bacteria at all scales down to individual molecules, and have abundant evidence that bacterial infection causes bacterial diseases, and that bacteria arise solely from other bacteria, and that there does not seem to exist anything that looks even slightly like a "microzyma".

It has, for some decades now, been quite easy and inexpensive for ordinary people to do biology experiments at home. If you happen to have a placenta handy, you can isolate amniotic stem cells from it; you can even sequence your own DNA at home.

So even if you, like Jock, believe science to be a form of evil religion, you can fiddle about with bacteria in the privacy of your own home in ways that Béchamp and Pasteur could only dream of, and establish for yourself which one of them had the right end of the stick.

(We're also, unfortunately, getting some more plain-as-day hard evidence of the importance of vaccinations, courtesy of people who believe the anti-vax arguments and don't vaccinate their children. As herd immunity falls, more kids get sick, and people are reminded why it was that we started vaccinating against diseases like measles, mumps and rubella, which can be deadly. I'm sure the antivaxers have a very good explanation for this.)

The publishers' blurb on this Amazon page for the 1988 reprint of "Pasteur Exposed" says:

"This extraordinary history of the germ theory, among other things, shows that vaccination far from saving millions of lives has cost millions. In destroying Pasteur's ideas, the author has introduced us to Bechamp, whose experiments produced the first scientific evidence of how homoeopathy, acupuncture and all holistic therapies can cure disease while conventional medicine can only treat it. The implications of Bechamp's discoveries are far reaching and have yet to be realized, and it is hoped that this book will be an inspiration to scientists, therapists and the general public who are beginning to sense the futility of the conventional approach."

Humankind's ever-increasing life expectancies would seem to me to militate against this view that "the conventional approach" is "futile"; I actually suspect that most people who held this opinion in 1924 would, if they saw today's world, admit that they'd got it wrong. I mean, never mind all the people whose cancer has been cured before it became more than a little lump, let alone what used to happen; we've got a smallpox-free world, which notably also does not contain thousands of children doomed to spend the rest of their lives in an iron lung, I'm sorry but the allegation that the polio vaccine had nothing to do with this always makes me just a little bit fucking angry.

The anti-vaccinationists a hundred years ago were all saying that vaccination would never achieve a damn thing and we should all use their homeopathy or other "holistic therapies". Well, we haven't used those therapies, we have used vaccination, and the evidence is there to see for anybody who doesn't still insist on waving books from 1923 in the air as if their projections of what might happen in their future are more valuable than our direct knowledge of what happened in our past.

There's a wonderful pull-quote above the publishers' blurb, too:

"This plagiarist (Pasteur) was the most monumental charlatan whose existence is disclosed to us in the entire recorded history of medicine." - M.R. Leverson

Oh, my! And who is M.R. Leverson when he's at home, I wondered?

Well, here Montague R. Leverson is in a New York Times story from 1901, refusing to report smallpox cases to the NY Board of Health, on the grounds that the government would only lessen their chances of recovery. Here he is again, opposing public-school vaccinations in 1895, and complaining about them in the Journal of the American Medical Association in 1897. Leverson was a doctor... of homeopathy. (And is alleged to have been a bit of a charlatan himself, but this is neither here nor there.)

Homeopathy, I remind you, is the idea that water can remember substances it used to be in contact with, when it is shaken by a person who intends it to remember those substances, and will after this become more and more powerful the more strongly it is diluted, and cure whatever diseases are caused by the substance which the water was once in contact with would cause, in large doses. (Got that?)

Homeopathic doctrine, unlike scientific medicine, has stayed pleasingly static ever since Samuel Hahnemann first discovered that giving people water described as medicine worked better than the orthodox medical treatment of his time, which was the year 1796.

Grab a sawbones from 1796 and put him in a modern hospital and he'd be completely mystified, but a homeopath from the turn of the 19th century would be right at home in a modern homeopath's office, after a brief refresher course on the strange ways in which homeopathic remedies can today be "proven".

It's still easy to find homeopaths who claim to treat cancer, autism, diabetes, you name it; but strangely enough, the world-shaking news that serious ailments with clearly-defined endpoints can be cured by something that orthodox science says is just water, or a sugar pill, has not been forthcoming. Once again, these practitioners don't follow up on their patients, and there's no evidence beyond the say-so of the practitioners that their patients are any better off, for diseases that aren't amenable to treatment by placebo.

Homeopathy today has lots of remedies that are "proved" in strange, metaphorical, poetic ways. As with other areas of human endeavour that're essentially just sympathetic magic, this means that any homeopath can claim anything about anything, if they're clever enough. It's like postmodern literary criticism.

Homeopathic "preparations" of straightforward poisons like arsenic can, by this mechanism, end up with a hilarious laundry list of conditions for which they're meant to be effective.

"Arsenicum Album" is, to be fair, not usually quoted as a homeopathic cure for cancer - but it is normally quoted as being effective against the paralysing fear of death suffered by terminal disease patients!

The reason for this is that, wait for it: If a homeopathic remedy doesn't treat the actual illness (in this case, death) that the homeopathically-diluted-out-of-existence substance it's based on (in this case, arsenic) causes when administered in macroscopic doses, it must treat that which is psychologically associated with that illness!

Poetry, right there!

(Some "homeopathic" remedies, of course, simply and rather boringly contain pharmaceutically effective concentrations of real drugs. Nobody can figure out how this happens.)

Amazon has a listing for another book by Ethel Hume, "Béchamp or Pasteur? A Lost Chapter in the History of Biology", with some "Look Inside" pages to give you a peek at its content. (These people are selling a modern impression of that book, and offer some downloadable sample chapters, but the server's currently down.)

And all this fun came from only one of Jock's references! Just imagine how much entertainment can be had from the rest!

(Do feel free to add your comments about any of the other sources in Jock's huge list.)

I'm still waiting for mail from Jenny McCarthy

I was pleased to see the anti-vaccinationist Jock Doubleday's comment on a post here.

(I was less pleased to see that he'd added the same comment to a post that has nothing to do with his thesis. I've deleted that one.)

Comments on past posts aren't very frequently read, so I've taken the liberty of reproducing Jock's comment here:

Hi Dan,

If you want to link to my actual vaccine challenge, as opposed to a psychopath's lies and speculations about it, you can link to this URL:

http://www.spontaneouscreation.org/SC/$75,000VaccineOffer.htm

Have a vaccine-free day!

In health,

Jock Doubleday
Director
Natural Woman, Natural Man, Inc.
A California 501(c)3 Nonprofit Corporation
http://www.SpontaneousCreation.org
director@spontaneouscreation.org

Jock Doubleday is the author of
"Spontaneous Creation:
101 Reasons Not to Have Your Baby in a Hospital, Vol 1:
A Book about Natural Childbirth and the Birth of Wisdom and Power in Childbearing Women"

Comment by jockdoubleday — May 9, 2009 @ 5:01 am

Do feel free to explore Jock's bold hypotheses about human health, and his above-linked "Vaccine Offer".

Jock unaccountably failed, however, to link to the entirely reasonable terms to which prospective challengers have to agree. Strangely, he doesn't even link to the terms from the Vaccine Offer page itself. Perhaps he was too busy crowing over how he's had no takers for the Offer, which is odd, because as I said, the terms are entirely reasonable and completely not the sort of thing that no human could ever possibly pass.

Summarised, the terms are:

Prospective challengers must be doctors who administer vaccines, or the CEO of a pharmaceutical company. They must be evaluated by three consecutive psychiatrists, named by Jock but paid for by the challenger, who will report their findings in secret to Jock. Then the challenger must provide records of their entire mental-health history to Jock. Then they must pass an e-mail exam about vaccinations, getting all answers right, with the rightness of the answers being determined by Jock, whose strange opinions about vaccines are the source of this whole thing in the first place. Then the challenger must purchase five anti-vaccination books. Then the challenger must take a written exam, once again marked by Jock. Then the challenger must be physically examined by a "medical professional" named by Jock. Then the challenger must not gain more than five pounds of weight between the examination and the actual challenge. Then the challenger has to find three more "medical professionals", who'll get together with another three "medical professionals" provided by Jock, to put the vaccine-challenge dose together. Then the challenger has to provide Jock with risk/benefit documentation they provide to patients they vaccinate. Then the challenger has to appear on television at least five times with Jock, on stations and at places named by Jock, with all of the challenger's travel, food and accommodation costs paid for by the challenger.

That's all just too easy, I'm sure you all agree, so you'll be pleased to learn that all of the above comprises only "Part A" of the contract!

Part A is to be followed by an "Agreement-in-Full". If the challenger finds the terms of the Agreement-in-Full to be unacceptable, whatever they turn out to be, all they have to do is, per Part A, donate $US5000 to Jock's anti-vaccination organisation.

It really couldn't be simpler, could it? I can't understand for a moment why so very many people think Jock's just another crank.

(Jock would also like you to know that the state of the world today is the result of an Illuminati conspiracy. Which, I suppose, may include your family doctor and the World Health Organization.)

[Jock got back to me again after this post, leading to this further post.]

18: Holding reminder notes on the plate in your skull

No fewer than seventeen cool magnet tricks, from the irritatingly productive Evil Mad Scientists (I note that they favourited this...).

I've done only a few of these "tricks" - many of them are actually more in the "handy hints" department - myself. I've made homopolar motors, and done a bit of sculpting, and the big scary truncated-pyramid magnet from this old piece is our fridge-pen holder; if a pen has nothing ferromagnetic in it, we just tape a paper clip onto it. I've also got a length of aluminium tubing and a slab of copper for eddy-current braking demos.

The EMSL piece ends with a warning to keep magnets away from your laptop's hard drive, if you're seeing if you can put the computer to sleep with the lid open by putting a magnet on the embedded switch. This is a fair warning; a decent-sized modern rare-earth magnet might indeed be able to damage data on a laptop drive.

But the emphasis is still on the "might", because even the scant centimetre of aluminium and plastic between a laptop drive platter and the outside world is likely to keep magnets far enough away that any not-dangerous-to-humans NIB (neodymium-iron-boron) magnet won't be able to hurt it. The magstripe on a modern credit card has a coercivity similar to that of a hard-drive platter, and you definitely can wreck a card magstripe with a small rare-earth magnet - but the magnet can touch the magstripe, while a drive platter is inside a casing, and the casing is usually inside a computer. And, roughly speaking, the intensity of a magnetic field decreases with the cube of the distance from the centre of the magnet.

(New-fangled perpendicular-recording hard drives apparently have higher-coercivity magnetic coatings than older drives; if so, this ought to make them even more resistant to accidental erasure.)

Generally speaking, you don't have to be too worried about playing with magnets near your PC. Especially now that you probably have an LCD monitor, not a magnet-sensitive CRT that'll need degaussing if you bring a magnet too close.

Oh, look! Another chance for me to deploy my cool picture of a monitor being degaussed!

Degaussing a CRT

And now, here's somebody messing up his own monitor, so you don't have to:

Here's someone doing the same thing with a rare-earth magnet, which is so strong that I think it's pulling the shadow mask right into contact with the inside of the screen:

If a shadow mask or aperture grille gets distorted that badly (usually by physical mistreatment of the monitor, not by magnets), it's unlikely to be fixable. The monitor will still work, but it'll now have permanent weird coloured blotches.

(Black-and-white TVs, and monochrome monitors, have no shadow mask and so can't be permanently damaged by a magnet. The field will just pull the image into a funny shape, which will bounce back to normal when you take the magnet away. Only if you somehow manage to magnetise some ferromagnetic component near the tube will any of the distortion stay after the magnet has gone. Fun could be had by putting the big ring magnet off the back of a loudspeaker under someone's Apple II green-screen.)

1: Invent antigravity. 2: Get comfortable.

To continue my occasional series on Designers who Really Just Want to Draw Cool Pictures, Not Make Anything That Can Actually Work, behold the Koo Touch "Cloud" sofa!

Dumb-ass floating sofa

They appear to be going for the same sort of thing that makes those levitating globes work, with active electromagnets (in this case hiding in the thing that looks like a giant face-down iPhone on the floor) using sensor feedback to keep the unpowered floaty bit that looks like Pigsy's cloud in place.

(Find more info about levitating globes and other such toys in the Cool Magnet Man electromagnetic-toy roundup; see also the same guy's magnet experiments and executive-toy collection!)

There are two problems with the Cloud sofa.

One: It is not easy to make a stable system that can hold an object up over an electromagnet, as opposed to holding it down under one.

It certainly is possible, though; look at the Levitron Anti-Gravity Globe, for instance. As Amazon reviewers point out, though, it's a bit tricky to get the globe into the sweet spot for floating, and then any small knock or touch, or stiff breeze for that matter, will push it out of balance, with catastrophic results.

So even if the makers of the cloud-sofa went to the trouble of putting multiple coils in the base unit and huge scary rare-earth magnets in the floaty bit, the moment someone sat on the darn thing it'd crash to the ground and mash one side of itself into the base.

Two: Assuming you managed to solve the instability problem, the field strength needed to get this thing off the ground at all with a human being in it would mean the electromagnets would have to be very, very powerful. You might not quite have to cool the magnets with liquid helium, but they definitely would need some kind of bad-ass cooling, and would probably also draw a lot more power than electricity authorities are willing to deliver to a residence.

(Note that if the person you want to levitate does not weigh more than an ant, pyrolytic graphite will get the job done.)

And, if you got your humungous floater magnets and 50-kilowatt lifter magnets and feedback system all in place, you'd have to make the whole room look like Magneto's plastic prison, to prevent people being nailed to the sofa-base by their belt buckle, sets of keys streaking across the room and taking someone's hand off, et cetera.

Look, I get that design students are given assignments that aren't marked by plausibility of product. But in that case, why not just make your product a teleporter, or a full-fledged antigravity flying belt, or an umbrella that turns rain into turkey sandwiches, if you don't care about making anything that can actually exist?

The hell of this is that it actually is possible to make a mag-lev lounge. And that lounge actually does look like something right out of Magneto's special jail; check it out!

Hoverit floating couch

The reason why this thing doesn't look very impressive compared with the Cloud is that it uses permanent magnets for levitation. There's only one way to do "proper" levitation using permanent magnets; you have to spin the levitator for stability. This is how the most famous Levitron product, the hovering top, works.

Anybody who's ever tried to get a Levitron top working will know that they're touchy little buggers - even worse than the Levitron globe - and obviously not a generally useful solution to the problem. Even if you managed to hide magnetic gyros inside a floating sofa-cloud, it'd be pretty much impossible to get the cloud to stay in place if a person tried to sit on it.

The more practical way to make a permanent-magnet levitator is to mechanically restrict the movement of the magnets in one way or another. The way of doing this that looks most like "real" levitation is to arrange your magnets so that the levitator wants to fall off in one particular direction, then put a support with some sort of low-friction bearing in the way. There are executive toys that work this way, and it can even be extended into a motor design - the solar "Mendocino Motor", for instance:

The Hoverit couch uses a much simpler arrangement, usually seen as a piston and cylinder. One magnet goes at the bottom of the cylinder, and the other one, turned to repel the cylinder magnet, is on a piston that you push down into the cylinder. This basically turns the magnets into a very-high-isolation spring, which has been used in some hilariously expensive audiophile turntables, and in add-on isolation feet for other audio components.

The Hoverit makes this look better by aligning the magnets only with the arm-rest pillars; the rest of the magnets are firmly held in the acrylic base and lounge parts, but unable to "fall off" each other because of the pillar assembly.

The result, of course, is just a bouncily-suspended hard plastic lounge chair, which I think has to be far less comfortable than a $10 banana lounge from a garage sale.

But at least it's physically possible.

The Anti-Randi Marching Band

This stuff keeps coming back.

Someone cheerfully declares something to the effect that "Telepathy and other 'Psi' phenomena have been demonstrated conclusively so many times that if they were a dieting pill it would have been on the market fifty years ago". So it's a bit odd that even in our kee-razy capitalist world, the only 'psi'-based commercial products continue to be frank scams, isn't it, but never mind.

The usual next move in this common opening to the chess-game of reason versus woo is someone mentioning the fact that any psychic (or aura-seer, or astral traveller, or dowser, or therapeutic toucher) could make a million dollars by simply demonstrating the ability to do even some small subset of what they claim they do with little effort every day.

Next, without fail, someone else says there's "fine print" in the Randi challenge, and Randi's a big cheat, and so on and so forth.

(There sure is fine print in the Challenge! Well, more of a FAQ, really, which explains the 1500-word Challenge itself in plain terms, so that busy communicators with the dead can get the gist in a hurry. But that print is still fine if you set your browser text size small. And it says things like, you have to agree on what you promise to do at the beginning, and since you get to set your own terms in cooperation with the James Randi Educational Foundation before taking even the not-passed-by-anyone-yet preliminary test, it's fine for Randi to be a thousand miles away during the testing if you think he's a big cheat. So you can see how people might object to it. It's obviously a total screw-job.)

More than nine years ago now, I observed an expanded version of this time-honoured square-dance in progress on Usenet, and wrote the following:

At 23:50 4/12/99 -0500, [someone else on the Skeptic list] wrote:

Garrison Hilliard [whose Web page has a picture of a naked woman on it, if you scroll down. So don't go there, or scroll down, if that sort of thing bothers you] started a few threads on the alt.out-of-body newsgroup. It's been pretty interesting, and especially some of the apparent anger at the questions.

Please feel free to visit the place, or at least review it through dejanews. [I told you this was old!]

For those who haven't had time to review the discussion (there are a few hundred relevant messages), allow me to condense it:

Garrison: Please provide evidence that Out-of-body Experiences are anything other than delusions, hallucinations, or outright lies.

Someone Else: Hey, man, try it for yourself, you'll see!

Garrison: I have. I didn't see anything.

Someone Else: Well, we don't need to either, then!

Garrison: Huh?

Someone Else: You can't prove you like having orgasms, so we don't have to prove nothin'!

Garrison: <scratches head> Uh, well, gee...

Someone Else: ACUPUNCTURE IS REAL! VISIT MY SITE!

John Stone: Naff off.

Someone Else: OOBEs are a parallel reality, different from ours.

Garrison: How's that different from a hallucination?

Someone Else: Kirlian photography shows they're real!

Garrison: Oh, give me a break.

Someone Else: Get fucked!

Garrison: Eh?

Someone Else: You're doing the work of Satan, you know!

Garrison: Pardon?

Someone Else: <WEBTVHTMLBLAHBLAHBLAHBLAH><font color=mediumslategreen>Let's</font> <font color=puce>ignore</font> <I><U><B><STRONG><BIG><BIG><BIG><BIG>Garrison.</BIG></BIG></BIG></BIG></STRONG></B></U></I><BLINK>He's</BLINK><FONT SIZE=18237>rude.</FONT><EMBED sig_with_a_midi_file_in_it></WEBTVHTMLBLAHBLAHBLAHBLAH>

Someone Else: I agree.

Someone Else: Me too.

Someone Else: How profound.

Someone Else: Yes, I have killfiled that rude asshole.

Someone Else: I always killfile anyone who flames me by asking me why I believe what I believe.

Garrison: I'm still heeeee-re!

Someone Else: That's because, in your heart, you know the world is flat. Uh, no, I mean...

Someone Else: Photocopiers can't see colour, which explains perfectly why OOBEs don't let you read things you couldn't ordinarily see.

Someone Else: That's it in a nutshell.

Someone Else: Yup, you got it.

Someone Else: That oughta shut him up, huh!

Someone Else: Anyway, if we read some piece of paper in another room, that might just prove we're telepathic or remote viewers. It wouldn't necessarily be an OOBE at all. So it'd be no good for anything!

Garrison: <cough, splutter>

Barry Williams (not that one): All of this is amusing me enormously.

Someone Vaguely Sensible: Uh, doesn't Garrison kinda have a point?

Someone Else: Does not!

Someone Vaguely Sensible: Does too!

Garrison: This isn't an argument.

John Cleese: Yes it is.

Someone Else: Go away! Leave us alone! What do you care, anyway!

Garrison: I'm researching OOBEs. You could [the fateful moment!] make a million dollars, you know.

Someone Else: I'm not in this for the money.

Garrison: What, you couldn't think of ANYONE to give it to?

The Anti-Randi Marching Band: There is no money/there is too little money/there is too much money/I want to see the money in a pile/proximity to cash compromises my spiritual enlightenment/Randi is a powerful anti-psi ray emitter/Randi is a cannibal and I am afraid of him/Randi would just say we were never in our bodies to start with/the FBI will forcibly change my gender if I win/I want it in Tongan Pa'anga, not US dollars/money is an illusion/property is theft/I'm a teapot! I'm a teapot!

James Randi: Bring it on, girlymen.

Someone Else: You're not James Randi.

Someone Vaguely Sensible: Yes he is.

Someone Else: No he isn't. See, I'll e-mail him, and... oh. Sorry.

Someone Else: ISN'T ISN'T ISN'T ISN'T ISN'T!

Someone Vaguely Sensible: OK, so minds go flying around without bodies, but James Randi can't possibly post to a newsgroup?

Someone Else: Ah, but there's lots of evidence that minds fly around without bodies.

Garrison: <vein stands out on forehead> Well, if you'd care to PRESENT it...

Someone Else: Child molester!! Look! Look! A nudie pic on Garrison's Web site! [Which, as mentioned above, is still there!] My pubic-hairometer clearly identifies her as underage!

Various Appreciators Of The Female Form: Phwoar.

Gary Glitter: Run for your life, man. [This was topical humour at the time.]

Someone Else: I badly misunderstand the laws of thermodynamics.

Someone Else: T HATS NOTHING!!!!!!!! ICANT'' EVEn typE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Various people: Standard spelling and punctuation thread #1.

Someone Else: What's Garrison doing here, anyway?

Someone Vaguely Sensible: Discussing OOBEs, just like the rest of us.

Someone Else: He is restricting our freedom of speech! Let's complain to his ISP and get him gagged!

Someone Else: I so totally would rather have the blue pill than the red one.

Postscript:

People who dismiss the Randi Challenge out of hand usually aren't just nuts. They're actually using deductive reasoning, from a less-than-solid premise:

A: Everybody knows that paranormal phenomena are real.

B: Nobody has ever passed even a preliminary test for the Randi Challenge.

Therefore, the Randi Challenge must be rigged.

This reasoning works perfectly for the few challenges out there that really are rigged, and impossible for anybody to win, even if they could pass with flying colours a fair version of the test. Kent Hovind's evolution challenge, for instance, and Jock Doubleday's vaccine challenge.

[This attracted Jock Doubleday's attention and led to another couple of posts about his challenge, which are here and here.]

I also like the example that's currently in the Wikipedia article about deduction:

All fire-breathing rabbits live on Earth.
All humans are fire-breathing rabbits.
(Therefore,) all humans live on Earth.

You do, to be fair, now have to have a "media presence" of some sort in order to apply for the Randi Challenge - there have to be newspaper or other media stories about your amazing abilities. You also now need to come up with "at least one signed document from an academic who has witnessed the powers or abilities", but this shouldn't be very difficult to achieve, if you're doing whatever paranormal thing you do all the time. (These rules are relatively new, I think; they're there to discourage all the people with delusional disorders who can't even convince their local newspaper that they have paranormal abilities, yet invariably figure that the Randi Challenge will be a piece of cake.)