McCullough is still somewhat stuck in a box developed by his prior experience and expertise - although it is expanding. He like others, are reluctant to move in other directions. I worked the racket for several decades - research and clinical practice. I am still glad to see them offer some kind of hope to people. And for that I am grateful. So there is good here.
But most of these guys are very ignorant about nutraceuticals and are using them in place of the drugs they prescribed for years. That is not exactly the right approach. More natural substances are not a substitution for drugs - but something different. They should be stand alone as part of an overall program for health. Honestly, as most people on this forum already know, medicine needs an overhaul. However, I do give people like McCullough credit for trying to do something. But they are only tackling a limited part of the picture as far as what is poisoning people and how to deal with it. They are still viewing their approach through a pharmaceutical lens and there is a lot of ground they need to cover to catch up with where some of us have been for years.
Fighting against the systematic poisoning of the population through drugs, food, vaxxines, fluoride, and other poisons has not even been on these guys' radar. I was in those trenches fighting for decades and have the battle scars to prove it. Nutrition and natural substances are not taught - in fact, they are poo pooed and in some cases demonized. If a clinician wants better understanding, they have to do it on their own and educate themselves.
Some of these docs are being forced into starting other business ventures because they have had their medical licenses stripped for speaking out - or they still retain their licenses but have been stripped of their privileges and positions. Those with no license can no longer write prescriptions. In order to make money, because they have been shut out of the establishment they worked in for years, they are looking for new avenues of earning an income. This is another thing a give McCullough credit for. He started the Wellness Company that has given these docs someplace to go. They are trying some new things and that is good. Regardless, it is forcing them to look into areas that for far too long they pretty much blew off. Maybe this push out of mainstream medical system will be the catalyst to try new approaches to patient care that are long overdue.
McCullough and many of the rest won't touch the transcription issue or the nanotech with a ten foot pole. In a way, it seems like they are still self censoring to retain some credibility within the medical establishment. I understand it. They want to keep their foot in the traditional system using peer reviewed studies to build a case and be taken seriously. To do that, they can't stray off the reservation too far. Whether or not McCullough knows more, but is not willing to say, who knows for sure. But so far, there are not many coming from more traditional medical structures that are going to stick their necks out for fear of being completely demolished. I understand the why. But the public is still not getting the full picture of what has been done to them.
"I do like McCullough. He especially, I believe has honorable and good intentions - but he still has a lot to learn."
What is it that you think you know that McCullough presumably doesn't?
McCullough is still somewhat stuck in a box developed by his prior experience and expertise - although it is expanding. He like others, are reluctant to move in other directions. I worked the racket for several decades - research and clinical practice. I am still glad to see them offer some kind of hope to people. And for that I am grateful. So there is good here.
But most of these guys are very ignorant about nutraceuticals and are using them in place of the drugs they prescribed for years. That is not exactly the right approach. More natural substances are not a substitution for drugs - but something different. They should be stand alone as part of an overall program for health. Honestly, as most people on this forum already know, medicine needs an overhaul. However, I do give people like McCullough credit for trying to do something. But they are only tackling a limited part of the picture as far as what is poisoning people and how to deal with it. They are still viewing their approach through a pharmaceutical lens and there is a lot of ground they need to cover to catch up with where some of us have been for years.
Fighting against the systematic poisoning of the population through drugs, food, vaxxines, fluoride, and other poisons has not even been on these guys' radar. I was in those trenches fighting for decades and have the battle scars to prove it. Nutrition and natural substances are not taught - in fact, they are poo pooed and in some cases demonized. If a clinician wants better understanding, they have to do it on their own and educate themselves.
Some of these docs are being forced into starting other business ventures because they have had their medical licenses stripped for speaking out - or they still retain their licenses but have been stripped of their privileges and positions. Those with no license can no longer write prescriptions. In order to make money, because they have been shut out of the establishment they worked in for years, they are looking for new avenues of earning an income. This is another thing a give McCullough credit for. He started the Wellness Company that has given these docs someplace to go. They are trying some new things and that is good. Regardless, it is forcing them to look into areas that for far too long they pretty much blew off. Maybe this push out of mainstream medical system will be the catalyst to try new approaches to patient care that are long overdue.
McCullough and many of the rest won't touch the transcription issue or the nanotech with a ten foot pole. In a way, it seems like they are still self censoring to retain some credibility within the medical establishment. I understand it. They want to keep their foot in the traditional system using peer reviewed studies to build a case and be taken seriously. To do that, they can't stray off the reservation too far. Whether or not McCullough knows more, but is not willing to say, who knows for sure. But so far, there are not many coming from more traditional medical structures that are going to stick their necks out for fear of being completely demolished. I understand the why. But the public is still not getting the full picture of what has been done to them.