The body can heal most sicknesses itself. If need be, there are plenty of healing plants, of course there too, check that you are not taking a poisonous one, but lots of herbalists can help with that, and lot of info online and in books. There are also innocent remedies like Bach blossoms, Kneipp baths, homeopathic remedies, and if all that fails, I might go to the doctor. Luckily he has other patients, otherwise he'd starve.
well, there are a few times you need the doctor. I don't think any herb can heal appendicitis. Sometimes a broken bone needs a doctor. And in some cases, I make so high fever, that I don't want to see if my herbs will heal me ( 13 years ago I had tonsilitis and that needed antibiotics I probably would have died)
then I totally agree with you ! st johns wort is the best you can have. And if it is just a depressed feeling, I use boneset (only to be used 2 or 3 consecutive days but works great for me)
There are many natural antibiotics, and there is homeopathy, even though the FDA is trying to do away with all supplements and homeopathy. I also take no pharma products, by choice.
What an excellent interview! Thank you for giving platform to this powerful woman who has devoted her life to compassionate advocacy for people being misled by the psychopathic predators of the pharmaceutical industry.
A very enlightening conversation! An overarching theme for all the issues I worked on for decades as an environmental activist is "regulatory capture." So-called "regulatory" agencies that don't regulate at all, but in fact work to promote the industry they supposedly safeguard us against. What's even more shocking is how so many otherwise intelligent people - activists in particular - who fail to connect the dots about regulatory capture in one area, & its pervasiveness in others. For one small example, anti-nuclear activists who "get it" about regulatory capture in the nuclear arena, but utterly fail to recognize it in the pharmaceutical sphere. I was terribly slow myself to connect the dots. We get our heads so far down in the weeds inside one issue, we don't look up to see the big picture. Working away in our silos ... you know? Oy.
The body can heal most sicknesses itself. If need be, there are plenty of healing plants, of course there too, check that you are not taking a poisonous one, but lots of herbalists can help with that, and lot of info online and in books. There are also innocent remedies like Bach blossoms, Kneipp baths, homeopathic remedies, and if all that fails, I might go to the doctor. Luckily he has other patients, otherwise he'd starve.
well, there are a few times you need the doctor. I don't think any herb can heal appendicitis. Sometimes a broken bone needs a doctor. And in some cases, I make so high fever, that I don't want to see if my herbs will heal me ( 13 years ago I had tonsilitis and that needed antibiotics I probably would have died)
then I totally agree with you ! st johns wort is the best you can have. And if it is just a depressed feeling, I use boneset (only to be used 2 or 3 consecutive days but works great for me)
There are many natural antibiotics, and there is homeopathy, even though the FDA is trying to do away with all supplements and homeopathy. I also take no pharma products, by choice.
Horrifying! Many I know take antidepressants.🙏🏼🙏🏼
What an excellent interview! Thank you for giving platform to this powerful woman who has devoted her life to compassionate advocacy for people being misled by the psychopathic predators of the pharmaceutical industry.
Thank you, as always, for listening and commenting. Kim is a force of nature.
I deeply appreciate you not opting to blame Kim's husband and not shaming people who get injured by the Medical Mafia.
A very enlightening conversation! An overarching theme for all the issues I worked on for decades as an environmental activist is "regulatory capture." So-called "regulatory" agencies that don't regulate at all, but in fact work to promote the industry they supposedly safeguard us against. What's even more shocking is how so many otherwise intelligent people - activists in particular - who fail to connect the dots about regulatory capture in one area, & its pervasiveness in others. For one small example, anti-nuclear activists who "get it" about regulatory capture in the nuclear arena, but utterly fail to recognize it in the pharmaceutical sphere. I was terribly slow myself to connect the dots. We get our heads so far down in the weeds inside one issue, we don't look up to see the big picture. Working away in our silos ... you know? Oy.
Thank you, Janet...for taking the time to listen and comment, and for being active and aware! I'm so glad we crossed paths!
Me too, me too!!