Difference between revisions of "Christopher Maloney"
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− | [[image:Maloney.jpg|Christopher Maloney|thumb]]'''Christopher Maloney''' is a US ''Naturopath'' in Augusta (Maine) who gained some notoriety on the internet. Several bloggers accused him of quackery, to which he and [[Andreas Moritz]] responded with legal threats. Maloney's website supports practices like Amalgam removal, [[ | + | [[image:Maloney.jpg|Christopher Maloney|thumb]]'''Christopher Maloney''' is a US ''Naturopath'' in Augusta (Maine) who gained some notoriety on the internet. Several bloggers accused him of quackery, to which he and [[Andreas Moritz]] responded with legal threats. Maloney's website supports practices like Amalgam removal, [[Homeopathy|homeopathy]] and [[TCM]]. Maloney is also critical of vaccines and spreads the myth that [[Andrew Wakefield|vaccination and autism]] were linked.<ref>http://www.maloneymedical.com/id40.html</ref> |
==citations== | ==citations== |
Latest revision as of 01:39, 3 November 2014
Christopher Maloney is a US Naturopath in Augusta (Maine) who gained some notoriety on the internet. Several bloggers accused him of quackery, to which he and Andreas Moritz responded with legal threats. Maloney's website supports practices like Amalgam removal, homeopathy and TCM. Maloney is also critical of vaccines and spreads the myth that vaccination and autism were linked.[1]
citations
- Parents waiting for vaccinations can provide their children with black elderberry, which blocks the H1N1 virus. A single garlic capsule daily cuts in half the incidence and the severity of a flu episode for children.