PDA

View Full Version : Anti vaccine religion by chiros


Eos of the Eons
31st January 2004, 09:39 AM
http://www.loper.org/~george/trends/2003/Jan/82.html
He founded the Congregation — which does pay taxes, he said — with three other chiropractors, who have since died. The most radical was Dr. Daniel J. Dalton, who preached that physicians were agents of Satan, pharmacy was witchcraft, and Western medicine evolved from worship of the Greek god Hermes and adopted his symbol, the caduceus, a snake-entwined winged wand.

"I wouldn't say he was a fanatic, but that would give you a sense of him," Dr. Schilling said. "What other people see as Western medicine, we see as a state-imposed pagan religion.

"We're constantly intimidated by the system. Now, when we're intimidated, we intimidate back."

Asked how he would feel if a child with an exemption from him contracted polio, he answered: "If they're clear spinally, if the communication between God and the body is clear and they're working at 100 percent efficiency, then their resistance will be higher.



Jeebus! "if they're clear spinally". The chirowhacks and their spinal path to health. More like path to death.


"Western medicine" is now an imposed 'pagan' religion.

These chiroquacks are a clear show of why chiropracy is based on an old scam that now has gone way out of control.

"Clear spinally"??? The base of chiroquackery is insane.

Soapy Sam
2nd February 2004, 06:48 AM
EOS- I misread your title as "Anti-religion vaccine".

Which would be an interesting invention.

Eos of the Eons
2nd February 2004, 07:25 PM
Originally posted by Soapy Sam
EOS- I misread your title as "Anti-religion vaccine".

Which would be an interesting invention. :D

lol,

Well, maybe I should change the title accordingly :D

Yahweh
2nd February 2004, 07:30 PM
And the Chiro-weirdos are serious about this, eh? :p

Eos of the Eons
2nd February 2004, 08:19 PM
Originally posted by Yahweh
And the Chiro-weirdos are serious about this, eh? :p

Of course they are. Now people can say they are part of this religion and say it is against their beliefs to get their kid a vaccine.

One of the only ways you can get an unvaccinated kid in school.

I know parents who get fake records, this way they don't have to "lie".

BTox
2nd February 2004, 08:25 PM
Originally posted by Eos of the Eons


Of course they are. Now people can say they are part of this religion and say it is against their beliefs to get their kid a vaccine.

One of the only ways you can get an unvaccinated kid in school.

I know parents who get fake records, this way they don't have to "lie".

Unfortunately, there are a few other religions that give exemptions from vaccinations. I don't think, however, that this concocted chiroquack religion would pass muster with the courts, at least not here. But don't know for sure.

Yahweh
2nd February 2004, 08:44 PM
Originally posted by Eos of the Eons
Of course they are. Now people can say they are part of this religion and say it is against their beliefs to get their kid a vaccine.

One of the only ways you can get an unvaccinated kid in school.

I know parents who get fake records, this way they don't have to "lie".
Good ol' US of A, we've already got that...

There are a group of people called "Christian Scientists" (I know, its oxymoronic), they do not believe in vaccinating their children.

(You know, its only after I came to JREF that I found out people believe some many insane things... thanks a lot, skeptics...)

Eos of the Eons
2nd February 2004, 08:56 PM
The issue has never come before the Supreme Court, but state laws that have listed exempt faiths — Christian Science, for example — have been struck down in courts on the basis of the First Amendment.

I'm still trying to figure out what that means exactly.

They are pretty extreme, but boast thousands of members in 28 states.