You
are visiting
www.rawfoodinfo.com
Posted
Sunday, June 19, 2005
www.NewsTarget.com
Welcome
to the Town of Allopath
by Mike Adams
There once was a
town called Allopath. It had many people, streets and cars, but due to budget
limitations, there were no stop signs or traffic lights anywhere in Allopath.
Not surprisingly, traffic accidents were common. Cars would crash into each
other at nearly every intersection. But business was booming for the auto repair
shops and local hospitals, which dominated the economy of Allopath.
As the population of Allopath grew, traffic accidents increased to an alarming
level. Out of desperation, the city council hired Doctor West, a doctor of the
Motor Division (M.D.) to find a solution.
Dr. West spent days examining traffic accidents. He carried an assortment of
technical gear -- microscopes, chemical analysis equipment, lab gear -- and
put them all to work as part of his investigation. The townspeople of Allopath
watched on with great curiosity while Dr. West went about his work, meticulously
documenting and analyzing each traffic accident, and they awaited his final
report with great interest.
After weeks of investigation, Dr. West called the people of Allopath to a town
meeting for the release of his report. There, in front of the city council and
most of the residents of Allopath, he announced his findings: "Traffic
accidents are caused by skid marks." As Dr. West explained, he found and
documented a near-100% correlation between traffic accidents and skid marks.
"Wherever we find these cars colliding," he explained, "we also
find these skid marks."
The town had "Skid Marks Disease," the doctor explained, and the answer
to the town's epidemic of traffic accidents would, "...require nothing
more than treating Skid Marks Disease by making the streets skid-proof,"
Dr. West exclaimed, to great applause from the townspeople.
The city paid Dr. West his consulting fee, then asked the good doctor to propose
a method for treating this Skid Marks Disease. As chance would have it, Dr.
West had recently been on a trip to Hawaii paid for by a chemical company that
manufactured roadaceuticals: special chemicals used to treat roads for situations
just like this one. He recommended a particular chemical coating to the city
council: teflon.
"We can treat this Skid Marks Disease by coating the roads with teflon,"
Dr. West explained. "The streets will then be skid-proof, and all the traffic
accidents will cease!" He went on to describe the physical properties of
teflon and how its near-frictionless coating would deter nearly all vehicle
skids.
The city council heartily agreed with Dr. West, and they issued new public bonds
to raise the money required to buy enough teflon to coat all the city's streets.
Within weeks, the streets were completely coated, and the skid marks all but
disappeared.
-------------------------------------------------
Many automobile accidents may actually be caused by prescription drug side effects
The city council
paid Dr. West another consulting fee and thanked him for his expertise. The
problem of traffic accidents in Allopath was solved, they thought. Although
the cure was expensive, they were convinced it was worth it.
But things weren't well in Allopath. Traffic accidents quadrupled. Hospital
beds were overflowing with injured residents. Auto repair businesses were booming
so much that most of the city council members decided to either open their own
car repair shops or invest in existing ones.
Week after week, more and more residents of Allopath were injured, and their
cars were repeatedly damaged. Money piled into the pockets of the car repair
shops, hospitals, tow truck companies and car parts retailers.
The town economic advisor, observing this sharp increase in economic activity,
announced that Allopath was booming. Its economy was healthier than ever, and
Allopath could look forward to a great year of economic prosperity!
There were jobs to be had at the car repair shops. There were more nurses needed
at the hospital. "Help wanted" signs appeared all over town at the
paramedic station, the tow truck shops, and the auto glass businesses. Unemployment
dropped to near zero. But the traffic accidents continued to increase. And yet
there were no skid marks.
-------------------------------------------------
Driving with a cell phone is a lot less dangerous than driving on prescription
drugs
The city council was baffled. They thought they had solved this problem. Skid
Marks Disease had been eradicated by the teflon treatment. Why were traffic
accidents still happening?
They called a town meeting to discuss the problem, and following a short discussion
of the problem, an old hermit, who lived in the forest just outside of Allopath,
addressed the townspeople. "There is no such thing as Skid Marks Disease,"
he explained. "This disease was invented by the roadaceuticals company
to sell you teflon coatings."
The townspeople were horrified to hear such a statement. They knew Skid Marks
Disease existed. The doctor had told them so. How could this hermit, who had
no Motor Division (M.D.) degree, dare tell them otherwise? How could he question
their collective town wisdom in such a way?
"This is a simple problem," the hermit continued. "All we need
to do is build stop signs and traffic lights. Then the traffic accidents will
cease."
Without pause, one city council member remarked, "But how can we afford
stop signs? We've spent all our money on teflon treatments!"
The townspeople agreed. They had no money to buy stop signs.
Another council member added, "And how can we stop anyway? The streets
are all coated with teflon. If we build stop signs, we'll waste all the money
we've spent on teflon!"
-------------------------------------------------
Teflon linked to birth defects and illness; but is it safe to use in cooking?
The
townspeople agreed, again. What use were stop signs if they couldn't stop their
cars anyway?
The hermit replied, "But the stop signs will eliminate the need for teflon.
People will be able to stop their cars, and accidents will cease. The solution
is simple."
But what might happen if stop signs actually worked, the townspeople wondered.
How would it affect the booming economy of Allopath? Realizing the consequences,
a burly old man who owned a local repair shop jumped to his feet and said, "If
we build these stop signs, and traffic accidents go down, I'll have to fire
most of my workers!"
It was at that moment that most of the townspeople realized there own jobs were
at stake. If stop signs were built, nearly everyone would be unemployed. They
all had jobs in emergency response services, car repair shops, hospitals and
teflon coating maintenance. Some were now sales representatives of the roadaceuticals
company. Others were importers of glass, tires, steel and other parts for cars.
A few clever people were making a fortune selling wheelchairs and crutches to
accident victims.
One enterprising young gentleman started a scientific journal that published
research papers describing all the different kind of Skid Marks Diseases that
had been observed and documented. Another person, a fitness enthusiast, organized
an annual run to raise funds to find the cure for Skid Marks Disease. It was
a popular event, and all the townspeople participated as best they could: jogging,
walking, or just pushing themselves along in their wheelchairs.
-------------------------------------------------
EPA nails DuPont for violating federal Toxic Substances Control Act over Teflon
One way or another,
nearly everyone in Allopath was economically tied to Skid Marks Disease.
Out of fear of losing this economic prosperity, the townspeople voted to create
a new public safety agency: the Frequent Drivers Association (FDA). This FDA
would be responsible for approving or rejecting all signage, technology and
chemical coatings related to the town's roads.
The FDA's board members were chosen from among the business leaders of the community:
the owner of the car shop, the owner of the ambulance company, and of course,
Dr. West.
Soon after its inception, the FDA announced that Skid Marks Disease was, indeed,
very real, as it had been carefully documented by a doctor and recently published
in the town Skid Marks Disease journal. Since there were no studies whatsoever
showing stop signs to be effective for reducing traffic accidents, the FDA announced
that stop signs were to be outlawed, and that any person attempting to sell
stop signs would be charged with fraud and locked up in the town jail.
This pleased the townspeople of Allopath. With the FDA, they knew their jobs
were safe. They could go on living their lives of economic prosperity, with
secure jobs, knowing that the FDA would outlaw any attempt to take away their
livelihood. They still had a lot of traffic accidents, but at least their jobs
were secure.
-------------------------------------------------
The FDA Exposed: An Interview With Dr. David Graham, the Vioxx Whistleblower
And so life continued
in Allopath. For a short while, at least. As traffic accidents continued at
a devastating rate, more and more residents of Allopath were injured or killed.
Many were left bed-ridden, unable to work, due to their injuries.
In time, the population dwindled. The once-booming town of Allopath eventually
became little more than a ghost town. The hospital closed its doors, the FDA
was disbanded, and the Skid Marks Disease journal stopped printing.
The few residents remaining eventually realized nothing good had come of Skid
Marks Disease, the teflon coatings and the FDA. No one was any better off, as
all the town's money had been spent on the disease: the teflon coatings, car
parts and emergency services. No one was any healthier, or happier, or longer-lived.
Most, in fact, had lost their entire families to Skid Marks Disease.
And the hermit? He continued to live just outside of town, at the end of a winding
country road, where he lived a simple life with no cars, no roads, no teflon
coatings and no FDA.
He outlived every single resident of Allopath. He gardened, took long walks
through the forest, and gathered roots, leaves and berries to feed himself.
In his spare time, he constructed stop signs, waiting for the next population
to come along, and hoping they might listen to an old hermit with a crazy idea:
...that prevention is the answer, not the treatment of symptoms.
-------------------------------------------------
DuPont sued over Teflon cancer claims
-------------------------------------------------
This fable was authored by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger: www.healthranger.org
You may reprint or repost, as long as appropriate credit is given to Mike Adams at www.NewsTarget.com
Back
to Articles/Who's the Quack?
Home |
New to
Raw? |
Hotline |
Action Forum |
|
Multi/Media |
Events |
Press/Media
|