ListenDownload Hour 1 - Richard
Ostrow - What to do when your Carnivora is out of date. Buy a new bottle you dumbass.
ListenDownload Hour 2 - Peter
Davenport - I see UFO's everywhere but don't think it's Tesla technology. Fuckin greys are after me: " Oh fuck! Now I'm being probed." ListenDownload Hour 3 - Michael
Collins - It's the end of the world - From Hong Kong - Yoichi Shimatsu - It's the end of the world too.
Ok, so they both claim that carnivora is not supposed to help any known medical condition. OK.
Then why the hell would anyone want to spend so much hard-earned money for it? Well, according to Jeff, it "boosts your immune system..." - what?
Boosts my immune system? Well, lets examine that. First, you need to MEASURE my immune system in terms of something that can be expressed in some kind of NUMBER(s). Then you need to have two groups, one that you give known quantities of carnivora to, and the other you give a neutral placebo to that appears just like carnivora, and then, after the period of time you think is sufficient for the "boost" to occur, you measure that number (or numbers) to see what kind of "boost" your immune system underwent for the carnivora group as opposed to the placebo group. That makes sense, and, after that, you can honestly and correctly claim that your tonic carnivora "boosts your immune system", because you have hard data to prove it.
But, well, lets see - has the folks selling carnivora done this? Hmmm, no, I don't think so. Have the folks selling carnivora, or Jeff, even set forth the immune system parameters to measure and the method of taking those measurements? No, they just make the general claim that "it boosts your immune system", and then they get clients (or "actors") to come on the air and report how much better their condition got after they took carnivora.
Surely the folks reading this blog can tell a charlatan when they hear one? But, I'm betting that a lot of listeners fall for it - like sheep they are hoping for a miracle cure for whatever they think ails them.
1 comment:
Ok, so they both claim that carnivora is not supposed to help any known medical condition. OK.
Then why the hell would anyone want to spend so much hard-earned money for it? Well, according to Jeff, it "boosts your immune system..." - what?
Boosts my immune system? Well, lets examine that. First, you need to MEASURE my immune system in terms of something that can be expressed in some kind of NUMBER(s). Then you need to have two groups, one that you give known quantities of carnivora to, and the other you give a neutral placebo to that appears just like carnivora, and then, after the period of time you think is sufficient for the "boost" to occur, you measure that number (or numbers) to see what kind of "boost" your immune system underwent for the carnivora group as opposed to the placebo group. That makes sense, and, after that, you can honestly and correctly claim that your tonic carnivora "boosts your immune system", because you have hard data to prove it.
But, well, lets see - has the folks selling carnivora done this? Hmmm, no, I don't think so. Have the folks selling carnivora, or Jeff, even set forth the immune system parameters to measure and the method of taking those measurements? No, they just make the general claim that "it boosts your immune system", and then they get clients (or "actors") to come on the air and report how much better their condition got after they took carnivora.
Surely the folks reading this blog can tell a charlatan when they hear one? But, I'm betting that a lot of listeners fall for it - like sheep they are hoping for a miracle cure for whatever they think ails them.
Idiots.
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