Saturday, February 11, 2012
"Media hoax exposed: Recent attack on vitamins a fabricated scare campaign"
I saw this story a while ago, and of course, the criticism of the media caught my eye.
These days, there are studies that purport to "prove" everything, until you find out who ran, authorized, and/or paid for said study.
Our media should be careful with how and what they publish.
That's wishful thinking, I guess...
These days, there are studies that purport to "prove" everything, until you find out who ran, authorized, and/or paid for said study.
Our media should be careful with how and what they publish.
That's wishful thinking, I guess...
At NaturalNews.com, Mike Adams took exception to this:
"Caught yet again, the mainstream media has been exposed pulling off a juvenile, simplistic hoax that attempts to scare people away from good nutrition. To accomplish this hoax, they took a poorly-constructed "scientific" study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine which was itself based on erroneous conclusions (see below) and then blatantly misreported what the study data actually showed.
This journal is owned, not surprisingly, by the American Medical Association, which has a long and sordid history of openly attacking vitamins and nutrition, even to the point of committing crimes that violate federal law. Remember, the AMA has been found guilty of conspiracy in federal courts: http://www.naturalnews.com/008845.html"