Warnings against dangerous Miracle Mineral Solution (bleach, chlorine dioxide)

Andy

Retired committee member
The Guardian: 'Church' to offer 'miracle cure' despite FDA warnings against drinking bleach

A group calling itself Genesis II Church of Health and Healing plans to convene at a hotel resort in Washington state on Saturday to promote a “miracle cure” that claims to cure 95% of all diseases in the world by making adults and children, including infants, drink industrial bleach.

The group is inviting members of the public through Facebook to attend what they call their “effective alternative healing” at the Icicle Village Resort in Leavenworth on Saturday morning. The organizer of the event, Tom Merry, has publicized the event on his personal Facebook page by telling people that learning how to consume the bleach “could save your life, or the life of a loved one sent home to die”.

The “church” is asking attendants of the meeting to “donate” $450 each, or $800 per couple, in exchange for receiving membership to the organization as well as packages of the bleach, which they call “sacraments”. The chemical is referred to as MMS, or “miracle mineral solution or supplement”, and participants are promised they will acquire “the knowledge to help heal many people of this world’s terrible diseases”.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news...ent-despite-fda-warnings-against-miracle-cure
 
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Didn't this debate go on either here, or at the other place, for some considerable time. It must have or I wouldn't know anything about it.

So I'm surprised that everybody doesn't know about it, and at least part of why my first post in this thread was so flippant is I thought everybody was aware of MMS
 
These type of things seem to combine the same features every time.

People,"desperate, affluent, and suggestible" in search of help, combined with control via means such as establishing a brand new type of religion, or setting oneself up as an ultimate authority (that is without any credentials).


A 2010 article from The Guardian about this:

https://www.theguardian.com/science/2010/sep/15/miracle-mineral-solutions-mms-bleach
 
Didn't this debate go on either here, or at the other place, for some considerable time. It must have or I wouldn't know anything about it.

So I'm surprised that everybody doesn't know about it, and at least part of why my first post in this thread was so flippant is I thought everybody was aware of MMS

Yes someone who was pushing it at the other site. I remember that thread and debating whether to get involved. It seemed like a whack head against wall type of exercise, the individual promoting it as a remedy for autism insisted that it was not bleach. At that point I figured it was useless engaging with them.
 
They should be in jail for false advertising and endangering the public.

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Wow, that is an amazing miracle. :rolleyes: But seriously, isn't that illegal?
all the best miracles are illegal;

Water into wine, wine is alcoholic, various taxes and duties are payable, not to mention lots of certification before it can legally be distributed.

loaves and fishes, unauthorised gathering, food preparation and distribution to the public, in a public place, without correct permits, non payment of relevant duties and taxes.

etc. (I don't currently remember a lot of miracles)

ETA - curing at least one leper - isn't practicing medicine without a license illegal? Was there informed consent?
 
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Merged thread

FDA warns consumers about the dangerous and potentially life threating side effects of Miracle Mineral Solution


The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is warning consumers not to purchase or drink a product sold online as a medical treatment due to a recent rise in reported health issues. Since 2010, the FDA has warned consumers about the dangers of Miracle or Master Mineral Solution, Miracle Mineral Supplement, MMS, Chlorine Dioxide (CD) Protocol, Water Purification Solution (WPS) and other similar products. Miracle Mineral Solution has not been approved by the FDA for any use, but these products continue to be promoted on social media as a remedy for treating autism, cancer, HIV/AIDS, hepatitis and flu, among other conditions. However, the solution, when mixed, develops into a dangerous bleach which has caused serious and potentially life-threatening side effects...

The FDA recently received new reports of people experiencing severe vomiting, severe diarrhea, life-threatening low blood pressure caused by dehydration and acute liver failure after drinking these products. The FDA is not aware of any scientific evidence supporting the safety or effectiveness of MMS products, despite claims that the solution is an antimicrobial, antiviral and antibacterial. The FDA encourages consumers to talk to a health care professional about treating medical conditions or diseases.

https://www.fda.gov/news-events/pre...y-life-threating-side-effects-miracle-mineral
 
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Yet what is in effect Miracle Mineral Solution is also sold as an injectable pharmaceutical drug which is licensed for use in the treatment of radiation cystitis, diabetic foot ulcers, and wound healing (due to its immunomodulatory macrophage activating effects).
 
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Yet what is in effect Miracle Mineral Solution is also sold as an injectable pharmaceutical drug which is licensed for used for the treatment of radiation cystitis, diabetic foot ulcers, and wound healing (due to its immunomodulatory macrophage activating effects).

Do you have the drug name, is it the same chemicals in comparable quantities ?
 
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