263 points

I once knew a homeopath who tried to kill himself.

He took a massive underdose.

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59 points

I can’t tell if this is an actual story or a Mitch Hedberg style joke.

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36 points

It’s a joke. If it was serious, it would use other words while adding up to the same meaning.

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6 points

I miss Mitch, man

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5 points

I used to miss him. I still do, but I used to, too.

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38 points

Lol. I had a chemistry prof in university that every year, when teaching dilution, mixed up a solution of arsenic that was 2x the lethal dose and then diluted it over and over and over and then drank the water.

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48 points

He’s building up resistance so his wife can’t poison him.

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21 points
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or silly Sicilians

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21 points

Reminds me of James Randi eating handfuls of homeopathic sleeping pills.

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23 points

RIP Mr. Randi

Before Randi’s retirement, JREF sponsored the One Million Dollar Paranormal Challenge, which offered a prize of $1 million to applicants who could demonstrate evidence of any paranormal, supernatural, or occult power or event under test conditions agreed to by both parties.

You can imagine how many zeros of millions they paid out

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10 points

I’ve just now read through his extremely lengthy Wikipedia article and all I can say is: What an amazing man.

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1 point
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Really disappointing that so called people would rather believe in some random organisation for science instead of you know actual scientists and scientific groups like IONS for example investigating phenomenon scientifically

People are fools if they’d rather idolise figures instead of listening to actual qualified scientists and I’m tired of people listening to insufferable pop “scientists” who spout their own toxic opinions instead of listening to actual scientists

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0 points

So does that mean he actually payed out the largest fortune in human history?

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204 points

Not vaccinating your children is child abuse

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Facebook should be sued for this kid’s early death.

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17 points
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That’s probably why they say “v’s” instead of vaccines. An attempt to get around automated filters.

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9 points
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As if Facebook cares about misinformation

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34 points

Amen.

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5 points

Agreed. I’m willing to allow that adults should have the right to refuse vaccination, as stupid a decision as that may be, but very much in the same way that adults have the right to starve themselves. You do not have the right to starve your children, and vaccination should be seen in the same way (it should also never come at a direct personal cost; vaccines solve public health problems, they should be paid from the public purse).

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146 points

Do they not clue themselves in when they all suggest completely different solution?

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67 points

There are just so many solutions

Take your pick!

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24 points

Why the hell would they let facts get in the way of anything?

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44 points

Nope. If you watched the yelper episode of South Park, specifically the scenes where the yelpers are all gathered together talking over each other, it shows exactly how these people see the world.

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21 points

Never.

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13 points

The point of postmodernism is that there is no truth. And if everything is opinion then only strength matters.

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4 points

“There are no facts, only interpretations.”

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97 points

What is funny is their remedies would only have had an effect if it was done right away. Still wouldn’t have treated tetanus, but as far as wound management some of that does something.

Homeopaths are derrainged and do more harm than good with traditional medicine.

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47 points

Seems like it would be easier and probably even cheaper to take your kid to the doctor than to gather and store all those materials and learn how to use them, even assuming the efficacy of both options is the same, which it definitely isn’t.

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15 points

Luckily, you can find everything you need and all the research material you need in my Facebook store or my Etsy! Subscribe to my YouTube for more informational content and check my Twitter for my Livestream events with giveaways for subscribers!

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11 points

Most likely less expensive too. Essential oils are stupidly expensive.

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30 points

Because of what I have to admit is brilliant marketing. The ‘essential’ in essential oils just means ‘essence of,’ which is a perfectly valid, if dated, use of that word. However, because the modern connotation of ‘essential’ is ‘necessary,’ people convinced themselves that they need it. It’s obviously misleading, but not in a way that’s actually illegal. It’s both genius and fucking terrible.

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16 points

The dtap shot is even easier. Its either free with insurance or around $20 and you only need it once a decade.

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39 points
*

I bet a lot of people peddling homeopathy just think it’s herbs and water, and don’t know the initial theories behind it like “the law of similars” (thinking something can be treated by a substance that causes similar symptoms) and miasma (outdated idea on how diseases spread), or the fact that it’s often so diluted to the point where whatever was originally there is essentially gone.

At least some natural/traditional remedies are legit, but still see an actual fucking doctor over anything serious.

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31 points
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At least some natural/traditional remidies are legit

Yes. But that’s not Homeopathy. Holistic/Herbal medicine is valid (for the most part). Heck, most medicine started out as our ancestors realising that this or that plant eased pain, or lowered inflammation or a hundred other things.

Modern medicine is mostly just a distillation of those age old cures into more convenient pill form.

But let’s be really really clear here, Homeopathy is NOT “traditional medicine”. It’s a scam. This notion that because an infection makes your eye red, and an onion also makes your eye red, therefore a drop of diluted onion water will cure your eye infection is just a straight up insane at best, criminal at worst.

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11 points

“For the most part” is probably being generous. Yes, there are naturally occuring medicines which have paper observable physiological effects of the human body, but, the fundamental difference between modern medicine and “traditional” or “herbal” medicine is the truth-seeking framework in which it exists. Herbal medicine which stands up to scientific rigor is just medicine.

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3 points
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Reminds me of this: Storm by Tim Minchin

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31 points
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You know what they call alternative medicine that’s been proved to work?
Medicine
― Tim Minchin

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16 points

The people who believe homeopathy are either cons and grifters or gullible people who believe what they are told and wouldn’t dare look further than the testimonial and cherry-picked articles.

Understanding the history and theory are so much further than the Facebook post they read that convinced them.

I know universal healthcare wouldn’t get rid of them all, but man, would there be so much less.

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2 points

“Thank goodness water has memory.”

-Elsa

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12 points

Homeopaths are derrainged and do more harm than good with traditional medicine.

This is a true statement in that homeopaths do nothing good and do some harm. It’s a waste of money and time. Their system is based on a fundamental misunderstanding of reality in multiple ways (“like cures like”, water memory, etc.) and provides no benefit unless you count a little extra water intake as a point in their column.

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6 points

I’m convinced 90% of it is the people think homeopathic means “home remedy” because it has the word home then some kind of mediciney word.

Every person in my life that has mentioned homeopathy thinks it’s that and actively resists the explanation.

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6 points
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It’s a shame because it gets a bad rap but there’s a lot of things that can be healed using more natural methods.

I got rid of scabbies by taking cayenne pepper baths and an other product, I forget the name but it affects their reproduction cycle. I also put paste of the stuff on the “sore” every now an then and washed my sheets every day.

My friends on the others went through some intense cleaning of their houses and put plastic on everything that wasn’t washable. They also washed themselves with some seriously intense chemicals. They said it was almost unbearable and felt like skin wide burning while my baths only made my neither regions tingle a bit.

We all got the same results in the same amount of time in the end.

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8 points

We believe that man-made remedies are inherently better and have lost our connection to nature in another way.

It definitely is a lot more convenient to buy a pack of pills instead of having to go into your store of sheep sorrel that you gathered in-season for when you have a sore joint.

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2 points
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I don’t think any of those remedies are advisable to any wound. Even hydrogen peroxide have not been used in wounds in recent years.

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Hydrogen Peroxide has actually been proven in lab tests to delay healing. So it’s ok if that’s all you have to sanitize a wound, but it’s not a great choice otherwise.

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81 points

My mother got lockjaw, but she was also born in ‘45. It sure didn’t stop her from screaming at me though. I feel bad for the lunatic antivaxers’ kids. Destroying their kids’ lives because they’ve been tricked into distrusting facts.

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