Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Death By Medicine, Choosing To Live Healthier Ways

[This discussion is about how human health can be so much better for everyone. And how people find the inconvenience of useful change, which they are certainly capable of, a bother with their current 'lifestyle' so much so that they actually choose to harm themselves and others, often without consciously thinking about the consequences of their daily choices, as if this was a normal thing to do.

It is not 'normal' to hurt oneself or others.

This discussion could just as well be about the environment and the systematic, over hundreds of years, destruction of nature place by place. Or about creating dysfunctional cities and towns that can do much more to nurture each and everyone, to encourage beauty and and happiness as a normal way of living well with nature etc.

This discussion also shows that better more viable positive choices can be made by each and everyone, each and everyday. People can chose better life ways. People have or can find the information and tools, that are often right before them to empower and nurture themselves and everyone they are around for a better world for everyone - people and nature.]
===


“Death by Medicine” came about because we had been misled.


1
04,000 people dying from infections that they contracted in hospital.
50,000
people one year dying from malnutrition they contracted while being hospitalized.
over 100,000 people
died from properly given medications.

the most conservative number ... the least amount of deaths was 740,000 per year.
More realistic figures put it over 1 million.

not been refuted by anyone, and for a simple reason: because they’re absolute,

out-and-out facts.

that’s as many people as are dying from heart disease, stroke
and cancer combined.

American medicine is the number one cause of death and injury in the United States,
“iatrogenic” -- or doctor-induced or medical-induced injury and death

most medical procedures, ... in use are unproven or disproven and/or are very deadly with no real benefit.

a medical establishment that makes $2 trillion per year.
12% of the GNP will be spent on disease maintenance.

there’s nothing healthy in our healthcare system.

There’s no
prevention in our healthcare system.


Is there a chance that people are going to realize what’s wrong?
No, we never learn from our mistakes.

They would walk away from her at a social event rather than hear that maybe they weren’t living in some pristine environment.

So, everywhere you go people don’t want to know.
you have more Americans engaging in unhealthy habits than anything else that they’re going to do concerning their health.

They don’t do healthy
things, they do unhealthy things, and somehow they’re surprised and disappointed when they get sick.


what motivates you if you think the population won’t learn from its mistakes?



The population has a choice.
My responsibility is to honor my spiritual self, which is to
stay present in the moment,
detached from the outcome, and to
keep focus on detaching from my own
conscious mind.

When you are in the moment and you’re honoring your self, then the world has a chance

to benefit from it, but it’s their choice



Well,
reasonable people in some areas of life make very unreasonable choices.

my job is to try to present
people with information, resources and inspiration and motivation. But I can’t do more than that.

I cannot take responsibility for whether people choose to use my information.
I must
honor their freedom of choice, even if the choice they make in the end is the wrong choice, and even if their choice kills them, you can’t jump between a person and the gun they’re putting at their head and start this game of Russian roulette every day, because then you’ll just burn out.

They’re not going to do a damn thing you said.

instead of getting angry about it, or getting depressed about it, which adversely affects your

chi, your life energy, just
simply say, “That’s okay.”

The information’s there, they have it, and hopefully they
will decide to use it in part or whole.
But I can’t force them to do that.

you’re fit, you follow your own advice, and yet
why do people go off
and believe the information from so many conventional doctors who are obviously diseased?
 

we need a new approach.
talk
about exercise, meditation and spiritual journaling and eating organic

being an example of health.

“Does anybody not see that he is a bald-headed, 500-pound, arthritic-suffering person? And yet he’s claiming he can cure this stuff? My goodness, why doesn’t he cure himself?”

people didn’t want to look at the messenger.
They wanted to believe in the illusion of the message.


Now if you said in order to overcome
this disease you’ve got to make all the changes that caused them, that’s the message they don’t want.

just take this pill - that’s the message they want.

Atkins was enormously successful, because he said,
“You don’t have to exercise or give up your bad, unhealthy habits. You know, eat pork
rinds, eat mystery meat ... go eat a living dog”... Atkins was, you know, he was a person who believed in a lot of fat and a lot of meat.

Well people did it because it was easy.


drug companies now use this same message for everything.

It’s seductive to say
I don’t have to change anything in my life, let me try this pill first and see if that works.


Happy pills! Making up conditions that don’t exist

There’s nothing left in life that they haven’t figured out is a disease. If you speak up for
yourself, that’s being overly affirmative disease. If you don’t speak up for yourself, that’s a shy disease. If
you’re too quiet, it’s a quiet disease.

They’ve pathologized childhood, they’ve pathologized pregnancy, they’ve pathologized menopause, they’ve pathologized being a senior citizen, and they’ve pathologized women.

understanding of what it takes by going into the lives
working with them one on one and watching their transformation.
 


a vehicle for people who want to make change

create vehicles and tools for self-empowerment and change
people find a need for them and use them.
+++



Live with Gary Null

BY MIKE ADAMS
The Health Ranger
http://sciaticacenter.com/recommends/LivewithGaryNull.pdf


Gary Null is the author of national best seller “Get Healthy

Now” and for over 30 years, he has committed his life to
making a difference in the world of health and beyond.
 

MIKE: One of the first topics I want to talk to you about is the document that I’ve been sending lots of
readers to, and that’s “Death by Medicine.” That’s a real shocker for a lot of people, and I’m wondering if
you have any plans to update or that, or are looking at wider distribution for it?

GARY NULL: “Death by Medicine” came about because we had been misled. Over the years we have
heard statistics like 104,000 people dying from infections that they contracted in hospital. Over 50,000
people one year dying from malnutrition they contracted while being hospitalized. That over 100,000 people
died from properly given medications. We started adding up how many people died from the overuse of
improperly given medications or side effects from other medications, multiple drugs, and the fact that very
few physicians even asked patients if they were on other medications before putting them on medication.
I thought to myself, “What is the actual number?” It’s amazing that no one has actually added up all the
numbers. To do so, I brought together a group of MDs and PhDs, all with backgrounds in research and
research methodology, all Board certified, and we put the test out there. The test was, how many people are
injured, and how many people are killed each year by American medicine. It took us over a year and a half
of doing diligent daily research, because there were thousands of studies that we had to review. At the end
of this we were really surprised -- the most conservative number that we could establish, the least amount
of deaths was 740,000 per year. That’s the least. More realistic figures put it over 1 million. But we decided
to take the most conservative [number] and then show the statistics, show the journal articles we derived
these from. They have not been refuted by anyone, and for a simple reason: because they’re absolute,
out-and-out facts. Now, put it in perspective: that’s as many people as are dying from heart disease, stroke
and cancer combined.

Yet, when you say that American medicine is the number one cause of death and injury in the United States,
that’s a scary thing to say because then people say, “Well, what parts of medicine?” Then we did a separate
report called “iatrogenic” -- or doctor-induced or medical-induced injury and death -- and it showed that
most medical procedures, from radical mastectomies and hysterectomies and antibiotic use are unproven
or disproven and/or are very deadly with no real benefit. You start to realize that, gee whiz, we were led to
believe that medicine is scientific, and scientific medicine is both safe and effective -- and it’s not true. So
that’s what that report was about. It’s interesting, because we sent that out to all the major media, and not
a single member of the major media has published or reported on it.

MIKE: Isn’t that fascinating?

GARY NULL: They covered it up.

MIKE: People love to ignore some of the things that you’re trying to tell them, some of the warnings you’re
trying to put out, it seems. I mean, this should be front page news.

GARY NULL: Should be, but then again you have a medical establishment that makes $2 trillion per year.
This year it’ll be $2.1 trillion, or approximately 12% of the GNP will be spent on disease maintenance. Now
we say we have a healthcare system, but there’s nothing healthy in our healthcare system. There’s no
prevention in our healthcare system. Their idea of prevention is don’t smoke and wear a condom. Well, if
you made a body condom and just lived in a condom and didn’t smoke, it’s not going to increase your life
expectancy.


MIKE: Do you think the tide, or at least awareness, is starting to shift with fiascos like the Vioxx problem
and the antidepressants? Is there a chance that people are going to realize what’s wrong?

GARY NULL: No, we never learn from our mistakes. Look, we have 104 nuclear facilities in the United
States, like Indian Point, which is 22 miles north of New York City. If there was a major nuclear accident
or terrorist attack on that facility, you would have no evacuation plans for 20-22 million people, and if the
leak was sustained you could permanently destroy New York City. It would not be habitable for millions
of years, because you couldn’t clean it up and it would permanently influence people’s health. The older
people would die, the younger people would die, the sick people would die, and everybody else would
end up with substantial radiation poisoning, and ultimately they would die in time from different illnesses.

Well, you would think that we would learn something from the River Keeper’s Foundation, that’s Robert

Kennedy’s group, about the dangers from the documentary I did called “Fatal Fallout” about our deadly
nuclear legacy. But we haven’t.

When I had a showing of this last night here in New York City at the Lowes

Theater, we had the usual suspects -- we had mainly counter-culturalists there. I didn’t see anybody from
the suburbs. I didn’t see anybody living near it. [Indian Point is] where the very rich live, I’m talking about
very expensive homes -- and they have a very high cancer rate there, especially women, where there’s no
risk for breast cancer. They’re not smoking, they’re not drinking. They’re not doing the things that would
cause breast cancer, yet they have a very high risk of cancer, and they have cancer because of the leakage
from the nuclear facility. This is true in all 104 nuclear facilities around the United States. You could take
an American cancer hotspot, draw a circle, and you’re always going to have in the middle of that circle a
nuclear facility.

And yet, would they do anything about it? We managed finally to get through to Ms. Merrill of Merrill-Lynch,
who ended up with breast cancer, and whose mother had cancer. Neither of them had an unhealthy lifestyle,
and there, when you’re Merrill-Lynch, you’ve got title and name and access to people. She said none of her
friends want to know about this, none of the society people want to know about it. They would walk away
from her at a social event rather than hear that maybe they weren’t living in some pristine environment.

So, everywhere you go people don’t want to know. We have 131 million overweight Americans. We have
an obesity epidemic in our children. We have, if you take the five leading industries - they’re gambling,
drugs, smoking, alcohol and pornography - put them together and you have more Americans engaging in
unhealthy habits than anything else that they’re going to do concerning their health. They don’t do healthy
things, they do unhealthy things, and somehow they’re surprised and disappointed when they get sick.


MIKE: Well obviously it must be the genes, right?


GARY NULL: Of course, everything in life is the genes, they tell us. The trouble is, it’s not the genes.


MIKE: What keeps you going, though? You’re incredibly productive; you do radio shows, you’ve done them

for 20–plus years.

GARY NULL: I’ve been on non-commercial radio every day for 26 1/2 years, five days a week

MIKE: Dozens of books you’ve published…

GARY NULL: Eighty-one books, 650 articles, 20 award-winning documentaries, and about 100 self-
empowerment documentaries.

MIKE: Well, what is it then, what motivates you if you think the population won’t learn from its mistakes?

GARY NULL: The population has a choice. My responsibility is to honor my spiritual self, which is to

stay present in the moment, detached from the outcome, and to keep focus on detaching from my own
conscious mind.

When you are in the moment and you’re honoring your self, then the world has a chance

to benefit from it, but it’s their choice, and if…

my own brother smoked three packs of cigarettes a day, and

drank coffee and ate baloney sandwiches and French fries and pizzas and hot dogs ... he was a very nice
guy, but he got lung cancer. At first he got throat cancer -- and of course he denied that it had anything
to do with his smoking. Okay. And then when I went to the hospital, there he is smoking through the hole
in his throat one day after the operation. And so you think that doesn’t make a whole lot of sense.

Well,

reasonable people in some areas of life make very unreasonable choices.

So my job is to try to present

people with information, resources and inspiration and motivation. But I can’t do more than that. I can’t push
rope up the hill, and I cannot take responsibility for whether people choose to use my information. I must
honor their freedom of choice, even if the choice they make in the end is the wrong choice, and even if their
choice kills them, you can’t jump between a person and the gun they’re putting at their head and start this
game of Russian roulette every day, because then you’ll just burn out.

The first time someone takes two or three hours of your time counseling them, and they’re dying and they
desperately need your help, you give them the best that you can. Then you find out that they go right across
the street and go to a hotdog joint and start eating mystery meat hot dogs off the street. [They’re] smoking
cigarettes right outside the window of your office -- and this after they’ve been told they’ve got six months
to live and they came to see you so that you could extend their life.  They’re not going to do a damn thing
you said.

Well instead of getting angry about it, or getting depressed about it, which adversely affects your

chi, your life energy, just simply say, “That’s okay.” The information’s there, they have it, and hopefully they
will decide to use it in part or whole. But I can’t force them to do that.

MIKE: Can I ask you about credibility now, because you are one of the few outspoken, I would say, natural
health activists who is very healthy. And you’re fit, you follow your own advice, and yet why do people go off
and believe the information from so many conventional doctors who are obviously diseased?
 

GARY NULL: Well, I’m going to answer your question by telling you a little observation from my past.
When I had my first best-selling book I was very young. I was just a kid. And it was just one of those flukes
of life that I happened to have been in the right place at the right time. An older woman -- she was in her
70s -- heard me on a radio show and it was my only radio interview. She said, “Boy, I like what you were
saying and I just felt that there was some affinity with the way you think and the way I think. Would you be
interested in writing a book on health?”

I said, “Well, I’m not credentialed in that area.”

She said, “Well that doesn’t matter. There’s no one young in the field. Everyone like Carlton Frederickson
and Dale Davis and Gaylord Hauser, these are senior citizens. There’s not a single young person in the
entire field to take over when they step aside. And we need a new approach.  When I’m listening to you talk
about exercise, meditation and spiritual journaling and eating organic -- no one in this field is doing that.”
So I said, ”Okay,” and she gave me $250 to write a book. I took a year and a half, almost two years, to
research and write it -- I write very fast. And the book came out, and it became the biggest selling health
book in history.

MIKE: Which title was that?

GARY NULL: “The Complete Handbook of Nutrition.” They were selling 50,000 hardback copies a week,
that’s how well it was selling. America needed that message at that time -- 1972. Well, within six months, the
whole health field, which was made up of these old Mustache Petes. You know, the guys in the back rooms
that controlled the health movement, they needed some fresh blood. There was a convention and they had
a poor attendance. I went just to have a look-see who all these people were and their audience ... I didn’t
see a natural colored hair in the place. Everybody was over 60-70 years of age and their messages were,
“Eat high fiber bread,” or “Have organic meat,” and “Take a 5mg B complex.”  That was the message.

I mean it was no exercise, no spirituality, no meditation, no stress management. No being an example of
health. And then I was invited to a conference, down in Asbury Park, they only had about 50 people, and
I brought in another 1500. We spent three days in this rickety old building down there. I was watching the
people backstage and this guy says, “I’m going to do the instructions here, Gary”  I said, “Fine.” He goes out
on stage and he maybe weighs 500 lbs. He’s got arthritis because he’s got a cane, and he’s bald-headed.
He goes out there and he’s talking and talking and he says, “There’s a cure for arthritis! And it’s in my book.
There’s a cure for obesity! It’s in my book. There’s a cure for baldness! And it’s in my book!”
And then he walks out -- he doesn’t introduce me,  he’s promoting his own books -- walks out into the
hallway and everybody follows him. He sold hundreds and hundreds of books. In the meanwhile, I’m
standing backstage watching this guy do this and thinking, “Does anybody not see that he is a bald-headed,
500-pound, arthritic-suffering person? And yet he’s claiming he can cure this stuff? My goodness, why
doesn’t he cure himself?”

I got a lesson, and it was an important lesson. And the lesson was that people didn’t want to look at the
messenger. They wanted to believe in the illusion of the message.

Now if you said in order to overcome

this disease you’ve got to make all the changes that caused them, that’s the message they don’t want.

If

you said just take this pill - that’s the message they want. So from that time until now, that message has
not changed.

Robert Atkins was enormously successful, I knew him very, very well, and he was successful

because he said, “You don’t have to exercise or give up your bad, unhealthy habits. You know, eat pork
rinds, eat mystery meat ... go eat a living dog”... Atkins was, you know, he was a person who believed in a
lot of fat and a lot of meat. Well people did it because it was easy.

MIKE: And of course drug companies now use this same message for everything.

GARY NULL: Yeah, so you see when you ask, “Well, gee whiz? Aren’t people smart enough?” And the
answer is, it’s not your fault you’re stupid ... I take that back.

MIKE: Maybe they need some brain nutrition.

GARY NULL: I don’t think there’s enough nutrition in the world to help most brains.

MIKE: I call that, by the way, the seduction quality of pharmaceutical or prescription drugs. It’s seductive to
say I don’t have to change anything in my life, let me try this pill first and see if that works.

GARY NULL: Happy pills! Making up conditions that don’t exist like “Generalized Anxiety Disorder.”  And
then they show people who are fretting, “What should I wear tonight?” or someone else, “Mmm, I’m not sure
if I like this food..” or someone else gazing out the window, and someone else not paying attention - these
are common disorders affecting everyone and you may have it too, it’s a new psychiatric disorder, because
it’s in the DSM-4 (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders), and if it’s in the DSM-4 then it
must be real and we’ve got a drug to treat it. Now the drug has side effects, including suicide and anxiety
and emotional detachment and homicidal feelings, but don’t worry about the side effects. Just think, you
don’t want to suffer from this, so get on board.
 

GARY NULL: There’s nothing left in life that they haven’t figured out is a disease. If you speak up for
yourself, that’s being overly affirmative disease. If you don’t speak up for yourself, that’s a shy disease. If
you’re too quiet, it’s a quiet disease. If you sweat when you sleep, no matter what you do, if you have yellow
urine, it’s a yellow urine disease. They’ve pathologized childhood, they’ve pathologized pregnancy, they’ve
pathologized menopause, they’ve pathologized being a senior citizen, and they’ve pathologized women.


So they’re very successful and you haven’t heard a peep out of mainstream media, or legislators or the

White House, the Supreme Court. So everyone believes that pharmaceuticals are the answer.

MIKE: Isn’t part of the problem with the information on this the fact that the media is now so strongly
financially supported through direct-to-consumer advertising?

GARY NULL: Well, the media could not survive without that advertising. They would go broke.

MIKE: What’s next in your ongoing activism here. What can people look forward to?

GARY NULL: Well, I’ve got “Fatal Fallout” now, which you can go to my website and get, “The Drugging
of Our Children” -- I’ve just finished and wrapped on that after two and a half years of filming, about the 11
million children being drugged each day, and how ADD and ADHD don’t really exist, except in the minds of
people who need to make it exist for the drugs they’re trying to promote.
And also I’ve just finished, “Kiss your Fat Goodbye” -- an understanding of what it takes by going into the
lives of overweight people and working with them one on one and watching their transformation.
 

MIKE: And that’s a video?

GARY NULL: That’s a video, that’s finished. And my book “Power Aging,” is what I’m talking a lot about
now, because I find at least that’s a vehicle for people who want to make change to start.

So what I do is I

create vehicles and tools for self-empowerment and change, put them on a table and walk out of the room,
and hope that people find a need for them and use them.

MIKE: Amen to that. Well, thank you so much for your time Dr Null.

GARY NULL: Thank you.

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