Quote Originally Posted by birdgirl73
Listen to or read Trudeau and you'll see how he claims to be an expert on healing, nutrition, drugs and health care. He does this in a sort of conspiritorial fashion that draws folks in and makes them believe he's letting them in on a big secret, which gets them emotionally invested in what he has to say. He does a great job of reeling people in, but when you examine what he actually says and recommends to these people, the info is full of holes, misinformation, half-truths and scare-tactics, and it often relates to other cons. (Your health will suffer if you don't take supplement A. Oh, and by the way, you can obtain supplement A from my Web site.)

If you don't want people who adivse you on matters of health, nutrition, and medicines to have any sort of schooling or education, go for it and believe what you want to believe. A great many thinking people who care about their bodies and health feel differently.

I'm not saying ordinary people can't learn about those subjects on their own and have a great deal of knowledge and expertise. They can. There are several on here who are self-taught and very well informed and who work hard at staying abreast of medical, nutritional and pharmaceutical information. But people need to be wary of a man who sells books touting products, vitamins and supplements--things that will allegedly transform your existence--that are sold by another arm of that same man's company. That's a big red flag/conflict of interest to me. And a big con job.

The laws Trudeau broke aren't "shyt," as you said. They are federal trade laws, extortion laws, credit card fraud laws. Laws that are on the books to protect people--particularly old, vulnerable, ill or uneducated people--from con men who prey on old, vulnerable, ill, and uneducated folks. Those are about as good as laws get, frankly.

I know people whose information and knowledge I value greatly who've spent time in jail. I know several of them right here. Breaking the law doesn't necessarily make people bad. But being a professional snake-oil salesman, always figuring out new ways to con vulnerable people out of money, does.


His basic message is:

Avoid processed foods.
Don't eat foods that come in a bag or box.
Avoid fast food.
Avoid corn fed beef.**

Then:

Relax through making your own food.
Eat more fruits
Eat more vegetables
East as much organic foods as you can


Corn fed beef is one of the silent killers out there. It's omega fat ratio is staggering 20:1. It should be closer to 3:1 or 4:1 like present in fish. Interestingly when cattle were fed grass like they are supposed to be anyway, that omega fat ratio in the red meat became identical to that of Fish. Everything he says in his book is true. It's all common sense.

The food industry is a business. Afterall any company that makes a product and packages it to be sold is doing it for money. It's not a hobby it basic money making. So since it's a business a business relies on making sales to stay afloat. To grow the business you have to increase your sales. One of the easy ways to increase sales aside from expanding your market is to have repeat customers. Well, how do you get repeat customers? Make your food taste better, richer more satysfying. Enter: Excitotoxins. This is what the industry uses. They're completly legal too. They're hidden chamicals added to processed foods that in laymen's terms will do things like make your taste buds hyper sensitive. So whatever you taste, tastes more intense, richer, creamier, sweeter, etc... Excitotoxins and/or High fructose corn syrup are in just about every non organic food you buy. It's a fact. It's all about sales.

Now, is it a conspiracy? I don't think so. It just sort of evolved that way, tis all. It comes down to personal responsibility to educate one's self on these and all issues.