Won't be long before a child dies, surprising it hasn't happened already.

Then the authorities might act.


@imastawka wrote:

From the above link -

 

The product is alleged to have been created by Jim Humble according to Metro.co.uk

The site says Humble was previously a member of the Church of Scientology who later started up ‘Genesis II Church of Healing & Health’.

 

The solution’s promoters say it can cure HIV, malaria, hepatitis, autism, acne, and cancer, Raw Story reports.

 

 

There's not a hole big enough to put these people in


The only cure left out here - is the cure for overwhelming stupidity.

Criminal stupidity.
bleach scars and destroys tissue and will leave these children damaged for life.

Bleach will burn tissues.  What sort of inadequate education the parents received that they do not understand that?  it will also kill any bacteria in the digestive system.  The health implications for these children are just horrendous.

000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000

Voltaire: “Those Who Can Make You Believe Absurdities, Can Make You Commit Atrocities” .

A friend's niece drank bleach to try and take her own life.  Didn't kill her but done terrible damage to her throat and innards.  She had severe burns and damage to her lungs.

 photo 214a93fa3a9e326200857a2dbc30e730_zps379416e4.jpg

i think the purveyors of this product should be made to demonstrate it's safety by taking a nice big dose themselves.

http://scienceblogs.com/insolence/2012/05/25/selling-bleach-as-a-cure-for-autism/

 

Unbelievable.  I'm not watching it anymore but, if as he says, it's worms causing autism why not give the children anti worm medication?

 

In the second video the woman demonstrates mixing the bleach solution and adding it to the baby bottle.

Anonymous
Not applicable

MMS was a cure touted by an Australian couple targeting the Seattle area. They ran websites using fake testimonials, photographs, and Seattle addresses, to promote downloadable books touted as containing secret cures as well as selling bottles labeled "water purification drops" with a brand name of "MMS Professional".[32] The Washington State Attorney General's Office filed suit, and in conjunction with the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC), secured a settlement of more than US$40,000, roughly $25,000 for state legal fees and $14,000 to be divided among 200 consumers.[33][34] In the ACCC legal action, the presiding judge described the cures as quack medicine and found the claims on the websites "false, misleading or deceptive".[32][35]

 

A woman from the city of Mackay in Australia, without qualifications to practice, charged up to A$2,000 to inject patients with MMS in her garage which lacked proper facilities for sterilization, and went as far as advising a person to avoid chemotherapy while "dishonestly promoting its benefits with no scientific basis for her claims". The Queensland Office of Fair Trading handed down a court order prohibiting her from "making any claims she is able to treat, cure, or benefit any person suffering from cancer" and she was charged court costs of A$12,000.[36][37]

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miracle_Mineral_Supplement


@*julia*2010 wrote:

MMS was a cure touted by an Australian couple targeting the Seattle area. They ran websites using fake testimonials, photographs, and Seattle addresses, to promote downloadable books touted as containing secret cures as well as selling bottles labeled "water purification drops" with a brand name of "MMS Professional".[32] The Washington State Attorney General's Office filed suit, and in conjunction with the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC), secured a settlement of more than US$40,000, roughly $25,000 for state legal fees and $14,000 to be divided among 200 consumers.[33][34] In the ACCC legal action, the presiding judge described the cures as quack medicine and found the claims on the websites "false, misleading or deceptive".[32][35]

 

A woman from the city of Mackay in Australia, without qualifications to practice, charged up to A$2,000 to inject patients with MMS in her garage which lacked proper facilities for sterilization, and went as far as advising a person to avoid chemotherapy while "dishonestly promoting its benefits with no scientific basis for her claims". The Queensland Office of Fair Trading handed down a court order prohibiting her from "making any claims she is able to treat, cure, or benefit any person suffering from cancer" and she was charged court costs of A$12,000.[36][37]

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miracle_Mineral_Supplement


The really sad part, is that there are others stupid and gullible enough to fall for these cons!

 

Just how lacking in intelligence do you have to be to fall for tripe such as this? Honestly - the mind boggles at the sheer magnitude of human stupidity!

 

But then, I reflect that most of us are brought up in some form of religion - where it is paramount to believe a lie without question - and so, once conditioned in childhood to believe one lie, it's not that hard to carry that mentality to other lies, as well.

Breatharians,  vaccinations, creation science...the list just goes on and on!

 

In today's educated and enlightened society, ignorance should be considered a crime - or a human failing at the very least!

 

But unfortunately, whilst there's money to be made, and gullible people to fleece, the charlatans will continue, and people's lives ruined.

thats a new one on me, worse than washing out your child's mouth with soap to stop them from cussing. This is right up there with police and jail guard cruelity.

.

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