Gary Null - described on quackwatch.org as "one of the nation's leading promoters of dubious treatment for serious disease"
I like Gary even better now. Now, if only the FDA would condemn him too that would pretty much cinch his status as a health guru.
After I began doing a bit of research into colloidal silver I began to be more and more impressed with it. I was much more impressed after I began using it and seeing what it did for me, and further impressed when I began to see and hear firsthand many testimonials from others. But when the mainstream machine and all of their alphabet agencies and their operatives and psycophants (including the lovely Quackwatch) began to totally crucify colloidal silver, that cinched it - there was no doubt remaining that it had to be something really good.
PS - Actually, I DO monitor your inner thoughts. But don't worry, I won't tell for the most part.
Is it worth mentioning that bacteriality.com is one of the sites whose purpose is to promote the Marshall Protocol? Or that Amy Proal is a still-wet-behind-the-ears Georgetown grad with a BA in biology who is also a hired shill for Marshall? Almost all of her articles either promote his protocol or else point to it and that has been the case since her senior thesis "Chronic Fatigue and the Marshall Protocol". As such, I have to view anything she writes as self serving and worthy of questioning.
It is good to hear that you don't advocate Marshall's protocol. His background is not impressive at all when it comes to medical science and his past includes some very questionable episodes. Trevor Marshall is often mis-identified as a biochemist, while in reality he is an electrical engineer with a somewhat shady background. See:
http://sci.tech-archive.net/Archive/sci.med.diseases.lyme/2005-08/msg01695.html
As one article skeptical of Marshall noted, his views that people should avoid vitamin D and avoid sunlight run counter to the overwhelming bulk of qualified opinion. None of his theories about vitamin D have been proven in vitro, and especially not in vivo. Sometimes a lone wolf who turns out to be against the overwhelming tide of opinions and evidence to the contrary is correct, but I don't think Marshall is such a wolf.
Wolves don't quack.
So, what you are saying is that an electrical engineer with shady medical science credentials (including publishing articles in his own journals) and a shadier ethical background who has a hired shill and a patented protocol he is promoting and gives advice to avoid sunshine and keep Vitamin D3 levels low is right when virtually the entire universe of scientific opinion and the opinion of those who favor alternative health is wrong? Again, he not only warns about Vitamin D supplementation, he warns about exposure to sunshine - the giver of life on our planet and something that mankind has develped to utilize and depend on to thrive since we first put down our first footsteps in the sands of time. I think it is clear to see where the scam is - and it is not getting adequate sunshine nor is it supplementing with a reasonable amount of Vitamin D3.