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New Jersey Pastor passing "miracle cure" to Ugandan churches, actually bleach.
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<blockquote data-quote="dgiharris" data-source="post: 73971902" data-attributes="member: 322579"><p>not trying to troll or pick a fight</p><p></p><p>but there are plenty of die hard Christians on this site that firmly believe that vaccines are unnecessary and or harmful and dangerous.</p><p></p><p>This miracle cure is definitely in the same ballpark. I'm sure the people doing this "believe" with all their hearts that this is indeed a miracle cure in the same way plenty of others believe that vaccines cause autism and spread disease...</p><p></p><p>The same bad science and "I had a friend who had a cousin's who's girlfriend's son got a vaccine and died therefore vaccines are bad..." is the same logic being used with these sorts of miracle cures. I guarantee that people that believe in these miracle cures have a friend who has a cousin who's girlfriend's son had some ailment, took the miracle cure and is cured... </p><p></p><p>basically, my point is that we need to be consistent in our judging. This sort of scam is no different than pro anti-vaxxer arguments.,..</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dgiharris, post: 73971902, member: 322579"] not trying to troll or pick a fight but there are plenty of die hard Christians on this site that firmly believe that vaccines are unnecessary and or harmful and dangerous. This miracle cure is definitely in the same ballpark. I'm sure the people doing this "believe" with all their hearts that this is indeed a miracle cure in the same way plenty of others believe that vaccines cause autism and spread disease... The same bad science and "I had a friend who had a cousin's who's girlfriend's son got a vaccine and died therefore vaccines are bad..." is the same logic being used with these sorts of miracle cures. I guarantee that people that believe in these miracle cures have a friend who has a cousin who's girlfriend's son had some ailment, took the miracle cure and is cured... basically, my point is that we need to be consistent in our judging. This sort of scam is no different than pro anti-vaxxer arguments.,.. [/QUOTE]
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New Jersey Pastor passing "miracle cure" to Ugandan churches, actually bleach.
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