Anyone mentions the word "cleanse" to me, they better be talking about soap.
I'd rather feed them with less-expensive, scientifically proven equally-healthy GMO foods.
That's a fair point - and as someone who doesn't give a crap about "buying organic" (I'm hoping the synthetics and GMOs will give me superpowers, franklyThat's not how that works. Not remotely.
For one, Round up is much LESS toxic than the preferred "organic" pesticides. It's LD50 level is like half that of ordinary table salt. Rotenone, one of the most common "organic" pesticides is 25x more toxic than Roundup. Also, organic pesticides break down faster, so it is actually they that need to be sprayed more often.
We (my cousins and I) used to make this stuff called "pipe cleaner" at my grandma's house - about an inch of lemon juice extract in the cup, five or six teaspoons of sugar, then fill with water, mix and drink. Before long, you'd be running for the bathroom to empty yourself. Not sure it "flushed out toxins", though.Anyone mentions the word "cleanse" to me, they better be talking about soap.
@Triskelion , I for one have never heard of massage being an alternative medical treatment. I get medical massage as part of my PT. And hypnosis is a great relaxation technique! The problem is when people believe they can retrieve suppressed memories or visit past lives or do other impossible things using it.
I actually agree with everything you said, except the bit about acupuncture. That's been proved not to work. It was definitely an interesting case, because unlike homeopathy or reiki, it was plausible that it could be doing something, and also because it was really difficult to test, because how do you do a properly blinded acupuncture study? How do you get an acupuncturist to not know whether or not they are actually performing acupuncture? I followed this one for a few years because I was really interested in it!
In a really well designed study they solved the blinding problem like this: They had one group receive sham acupuncture (real needles but put in random places that had nothing to do with acupuncture philosophy). They then had two groups receive blinded treatment from real acupuncturists. They rigged it so the acupuncture needles were encased in a little device and the acupuncturist would press a trigger that would either insert a needle or just poke the patient gently with a toothpick, thereby properly blinding the study. The control group received therapeutic massage. This study, as well as other well designed studies of acupuncture show no effect beyond placebo.
So does it have the real, medical, valuable benefit of calming you? Of course! The placebo effect is definitely a real thing. It really does calm you. It really can reduce pain. But that goes back to the ethical problem I brought up in my first post on the subject of using fake treatments for real conditions, back to the asthma study I brought up; no harm no foul if people are seeing their acupuncturists for stress relief or a back ache. But when both provider and patient believe acupuncture can treat more than that, diseases that it cannot treat, that's where you have a problem. Better to recognize it as the snake oil it is, and send the patients to get a medical massage. Same benefit, without the false hope that it will also help "strengthen their immune systems" and fight their cancer or whatever.
And don't think for a second I dismiss the importance of mental health...my academic background is in neuropsychology! However, particularly in the area of clinical psychology, the field is rife with terrible research (this is one of the reasons I actually shifted my focus in school from social psych to neurology, I couldn't stomach the terrible research standards). Don't get me wrong, there is also a lot of great research and excellent practices. Like you said, hypnosis is a great stress-reducer, it can be so effective that it is used to treat patients who are allergic to anesthesia and have to have surgery. Most psychotherapy techniques are bogus, but cognitive behavioral continually proves effective in studies with good methodology. Mindfulness is also looking positive as a therapy modality, but it's too early to tell.
This is a fantastic article (again, from one of my favorite go-to resources, Science-Based Medicine) about the problems in the field.
*For disclosure, I don't work in the field, rather in the related field of education, but have my MSci IPN and BSPsy and try to keep up with the research.
@USS Triumphant , Monsanto is shitty for pretty much every reason except their science. I agree with you regarding the fundamental issue of patenting living things. However, in their defense (though they don't deserve much defense, because, business practice and ethics-wise they are, indeed, craptastic), the stories about them suing farmers for seeds blowing onto their fields are completely bogus.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.