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By Dr. Hulda Clark
Reviewed by "nowars"
When I first heard about Clark's theories,
I immediately discounted them as loony-tunes.
Three days ago, a good friend, who is
very sensible, cautious, and skeptical,
lent me "The Cure For All Diseases."
(1995, About 600 pages, full of data.)
To be honest, I had no intention of reading
the book because I had already discounted her
theories out of hand prior.
However, as I scanned the materials, I was
astounded at some of the very, very obscure
FACTS that she had uncovered. Some of them
mirrored our own "discoveries" either through
actual [amateur] experiments or by research
of scientific journals.
Here's my analysis of Clark's book:
- The title is rather bombastic, pompous, and is guaranteed to turn off 99.5% of "normal" readers.
- The book's theories should be taken up individually, and criticized {if criticism is indeed warranted} individually.
- I believe that her "pollution causes disease" information is largely correct because it is echoed by many environmental physicians also. This part of the book (which is about 40% of it, is probably beyond reproach, and in this layman's opinion, in sync with current knowledge.)
- Her "wildest" theory is that a $30 device built out of Radio Shack parts could zap disease causing viruses, bacterias, and parasites. But, heck, $30 is a nominal amount to prove or disprove her claim. We're going to build a machine to find out. (The ZAPPER might just be the "cold-fusion" of medicine, if it is proven to work.
However, I must say that IF Clark's ZAPPER is a "fraud", it would be inconsistent with
the rest of the book, which seems full of
verifiable facts. There is a possibility
that it might just WORK --- and it it does,
conventional medicine might just as well
fold 75% of its' practice. There is no
doubt that a massive "turf-war" would ensue
and that vested interests would try to
destroy Clark and her theories before
they become widespread.
The book's "prove it yourself" approach
is wonderful. She gives you the parts list
to allow you to build your own "zappers"
and "synchrometers".
Seems to me that the "hobby" Syncrometer
could be a very primitive type of "VEGA machine"
used by some environmental doctors.
- Clark's Syncrometer plans lacks a diagram
for the "plate" portion. The picture in another
chapter doesn't help. Does anyone there have a
simple drawing of how this looks like?
I'd like to get a Syncrometer built, if the zapper
works.
- Overall? I don't think we should look at the
book in an "overall" way. However, there is
no question in this layman's mind that the book
is worth $25 just for the environmental-heath
portion alone. The detailed information Clark
provides is worth 100 years of Consumer Reports
magazines, in my mind.
However, if Clark's ZAPPER works, she should be give
10 Nobel prizes and be nominated to run the
government's public-health program.
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