On Monday October 14 I attended what was advertised as a movie about homeopathy. It was listed in the email that goes out to all staff, faculty and students at NUNM, the National University of Natural Medicine. I was one of two staff present, the other one being there because she was required to for her job.
I attended this event because I am writing a book about homeopathy, or rather about the culture and psychology that surrounds it. I am not a believer. The people who at the event made the assumption that I was, and I made no effort to dissuade them. I presume that NUNM hosts these events because Boiron donates money, but I could be wrong.
The man who greeted me at the event was the same man I had called to RSVP. He was nice enough but he had terrible breath and I had to steel myself not to take several steps back whenever he spoke. He also had a huge pot belly. When I walked in the door he was telling his own conversion story, about how 30 years ago he'd been sick and had exhausted all the options given by conventional medicine. Then he'd tried homeopathy and gotten better, and he had never looked back. It is this kind of uncritical conversion story that gets repeated ad nauseum by homeopathy believers. I believe they need to repeat it, to hear themselves repeating it, to maintain their belief. His breath turned my stomach and his story gave me no reason to respect his critical thinking prowess, so I escaped as quickly as possible, but not before I learned that he is a rep for Boiron, one of apparently just two for the entire west coast. The other rep was also present and made no better representation of the health that can be attained by way of homeopathy. She engaged me in conversation for a little while, marketing her ND practice in PDX and eating M&M's one by one. If this is the best Boiron can do for reps they are definitely going down.
They were giving away free pizza and the host had asked me on the telephone what my favorite kind of pizza was. I answered jalapeno and anchovy, but when I got there my favorite was not. Apparently the restaurant did not have anchovies and only jar jalapenos though fresh are easily available. All but one of the huge stack of pizzas were gluten free, however. I suppose they think that all naturopaths avoid gluten.
The talk that came before the movie was supposed to be a summary of the regulatory status of homeopathy in the US, but really it was an advertisement for Boiron. The focus was on Boiron's efforts to influence the FDA's position, on a great personal connection that Boiron has in the FDA, and on how the FDA regs don't really stop the sale of homeopathy. I was somewhat irritable because being in the supplement business I know a little bit about how the FDA has impacted OUR sales of homeopathics, and the Boiron rep was clearly ignorant of that situation. We've discontinued all sales of LM's (compounded liquid homeopathics), remedies made from DEA-regulated drugs (opium, etc), and nosodes (remedies made from diseased material, like medorrhinum). These changes have been in response to shifts in the FDA's stance.
There was also angry mention of the Australian analysis of everything known about homeopathy which resulted in them dropping it from their publicly funded healthcare program. They decided it was not effective for treating any condition. France and other countries have dropped homeopathy from public funding due to lack of evidence, but the speaker at this event insisted that the Australian assessment was biased and wrong and would be reversed. Yeah, right.
I learned little from this presentation but I did eat some pizza. It was OK.
More interesting than the update about regulation was the bit that they said about the "grant" that Boiron had provided to the CEDH (Center for Education and Development of Clinical Homeopathy) to start a "Clinical Homeopathy" program, with the subtitle "Integrate Homeopathy Into Your Daily Practice". It isn't really a grant, it is an expenditure on a marketing effort intended to brainwash more people into believing. The CEDH exists to separate the name Boiron from the "educational" program.
In the first "module" of the 4-part educational program they have 22 students enrolled, most of whom are NUNM students. This makes sense as a lot of people enter naturopathic school already sure about homeopathy and intending to use it. It also makes sense because shifts in the ND curriculum have removed all five of the homeopathy classes that I was required to take, and instruction in homeopathy is supposed to be blended in with the subject matter in "blocks" that address organ systems one at a time. According to the students the majority of professors are not teaching much, if any homeopathy, and yet homeopathy is still on the ND clinical board exams. The students are panicked about the exams and seeking training in homeopathy outside of the NUNM ND curriculum. Boiron and the CEDH are taking advantage of this situation to secure their future market.
After the talking they finally started the movie, a good hour after the email had said it would begin. Entitled Magic Pills, the movie is another brainwashing effort along the lines of Just One Drop. This one attempts to directly address all the complaints that skeptics have about homeopathy, talking about confirmation bias as a reason that scientists won't even consider homeopathy, and repeating the usual homeopathy hypnotic anchor of "it works" (kind of like "build a wall" for Trump). They also expressed quite a bit of anger at moles such as myself who do not believe but show up to their events and practices wanting to gain information to undermine their efforts.
From my perspective Magic Pills was a weaker piece of brainwashing than Just One Drop but the believers in the scant audience were nodding along. The use of the title was an effort to take one of the phrases used by skeptics and turn it into a hypnotic anchor for the believers. I was keeping a tally of all the mentions of "it works", all the testimonials by lay people, medical professionals and PhD's, and all the conversion stories. These are the standard approaches of homeopaths in getting people to believe. In the future it might be worth tracking "magic pills" references. Skeptics should be aware that believers may have been brainwashed to specifically resist the terms that they are using. Repetition is one of the essential tools of hypnosis/brainwashing. I had to leave before the end which could be have been more powerful than the anti-skeptic lead-in, but I confess I did not regret leaving. I had to take a shower when I got home.
...Glib, facile solutions stand at the very heart of the populist appeal. Voters do not like to think that the world is complicared. They certainly do not like to be told that there is no immediate answer to their problems. Faced with politicians who seem to be less and less able to govern an increasingly complex world, many are increasingly willing to vote for anybody who promises a simple solution. This is why populists from India's Narendra Modi to Turkey's Recep Tayyip Erdogan, from Hungary's Viktor Orban to Poland"s Jaroslaw Kaczynski, and from France's Marine Le Pen to Italy's Beppe Grillo sound surprisingly similar to each other despite their considerable ideological differences. --Yasha Mounk, p38 of The People vs. Democracy
If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State.
To learn which questions are unanswerable, and not to answer them: This skill is most needful in times of stress and darkness. — Ursula K. Le Guin, “The Left Hand of Darkness.”
"A single dot on a canvas is not a painting and a single bet cannot resolve a complex theoretical dispute. This will take many questions and question clusters. Of course it's possible that if large numbers of questions are asked, each side may be right on some forecasts but wrong on others and the final outcome won't generate the banner headlines that celebrity bets sometimes do. But as software engineers say, that's a feature, not a bug. A major point of view rarely has zero merit, and if a forecasting contest produces a split decisions we will have learned that the reality is more mixed than either side thought. If learning, not gloating, is the goal, that is progress." --Tetlock, Philip and Gardner, Dan, in p269 in Superforecasting; The Art and Science of Prediction 2015.
Contemporary Western postural yoga projects an authenticity and unbroken ancient heritage onto the yogic tradition, while mourning the commodification, secularization and denuding of that tradition by the West. Such lamentation belies the fact that modern postural yoga is a creature of fabrication and reinvention. --Farah Godrej
Randy Blazak is a PhD from Emory University with a specialty in hate crimes.Specifically he studied racist skinheads (he doesn't say just "skin heads" because you can shave your head without being a racist).He's a professor of sociology at PSU where his intro class is opening people's minds, and a professor of criminology at OU.
His talk for the Freedom From Religion Foundation on 1/15/18 was entitled "With Odin on Our Side; The Role of Religion in Right Wing Extremism."I didn't understand why he said Odin in the title until the end of the talk, but it has to do with the fact that an ancient Viking religion is being propagated in our prisons as a cover for white supremacist gangs.I'm going to take the information from his talk and put it in chronological order, and flesh it out with links to articles around the web, trying to make sense of the times.
At the end of his talk Blazak summarized that there are two profiles for violent haters; sociopaths, and lower level thinkers.Sociopaths, or more specifically people with antisocial personality disorder, have no qualms about injuring or killing others because they have no conscience.These are the people we need to imprison long-term.Lower level thinkers are simply regular folks who joined the cause because they were alone and needed to belong.They weren’t philosophical about it, they were simply vulnerable.These are the people that we need to help.
Democracy is based on the belief that people are more good than bad, that we are more curious than controlling, more playful than violent, and more kind than selfish. I am not so sure anymore. If the ways of a democratic society are based on the common denominator, and humans at base are horny, greedy and cruel, then society will be the same.
I have come to suspect that we have not evolved to the point that our cognitive processes consistently overrule our animal instincts. The idea that we can base our choices on verifiable information appears damned. Civility is superficial and short-lived. Democracy fails in the face of the self-righteous greed of our kind. The solution of course would be a benevolent dictator, but the problem with those is that they are human too and the majority are not benevolent.
You are never dedicated to something you have complete confidence in. No one is fanatically shouting that the sun is going to rise tomorrow. They know it's going to rise tomorrow. When people are fanatically dedicated to political or religious faiths or any other kinds of dogmas or goals, it's always because these dogmas or goals are in doubt. ~ Robert M. Pirsig, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
About Pirsig and his book: I was made to read this book at approximately age 18, when I first started working at the Nantahala Outdoor Center in North Carolina. I was quite moldable, impressionable, unformed at that age. Payson Kennedy was in charge of training and orienting all new staff, and reading this book was his one requirement. What it taught me was a lesson that took many years to sink in, that small details deserve our full attention, that doing your best it the only way to do anything right. Thank you Payson for requiring us to read this book, for it has helped form my perspective for over 30 years since then. I think it may be time to reread it.
This of course was all brought up because Pirsig has died at the age of 88. It's encouraging to note that his book was rejected by 121 publishing houses before someone decided to print it.
For all of you who aren't sure, it is possible to be gay and Christian. It's also possible to believe in God and science. It is possible to be pro-choice and anti-abortion.
It is equally possible to be a feminist and love and respect men. It's possible to have privilege and be discriminated against, to be poor and have a rich life, to not have a job and still have money. It is possible to believe in sensible gun control legislation and still believe in one's right to defend one's self, family, and property, it's possible to be anti-war and pro-military.
It is possible to love thy neighbor and despise his actions. It is possible to advocate Black Lives Matter and still be pro police. It is possible to not have an education and be brilliant. It is possible to be Muslim and also suffer at the hands of terrorists. It is possible to be a non-American fighting for the American dream.
It is possible to be different and the same.
We are all walking contradictions of what "normal" looks like. Let humanity and love win.
I felt some loneliness the first week I was here. But now, no. I have enough acquaintances to not feel lonely. The landlady, Marie, speaks English and her bf is American. And her niece, Emma, also…
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