Hulda Regehr Clark (1928–2009)
Author of The Cure for All Diseases: With Many Case Histories
About the Author
Works by Hulda Regehr Clark
The Cure for All Cancers: Including over 100 Case Histories of Persons Cured (1993) 115 copies, 2 reviews
Syncrometer Science Laboratory Manual (Syncrometer Science Laboratory Manual Series, 1) (2000) 9 copies
Handboek zelfgenezing een revolutionaire techniek ter behandeling van chronische ziekten (2009) 7 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1928-10-18
- Date of death
- 2009-09-03
- Gender
- female
- Nationality
- USA
- Education
- University of Saskatchewan
University of Minnesota
Members
Reviews
You May Also Like
Statistics
- Works
- 11
- Members
- 395
- Popularity
- #61,387
- Rating
- 3.4
- Reviews
- 5
- ISBNs
- 34
- Languages
- 7
And what a boon to read "That we humans don't have hundreds of different maladies and disturbances. We only have two! Things that crawl or climb into us. And toxins: unnatural chemicals that we unknowingly inhale or consume." [589] So parasites and pollutants.
By reclaiming our sovereignty "by throwing the rascals out", the late Hulda Clark not only offers healing for our bodies, but offers a remarkably prescient remedy for our nation at large.
CAUTION. After studying the work as a whole, and researching the technical information offered, in my considered opinion this book is a work of "pseudo-science". Hulda Clark boldly diagnoses, "tests" and "cures" a wide range of afflictions, using devices of her own devising, but was never a "medical" doctor or trained expert across a biological or electronic realm. Very intriguing grasp of technical information and up to a point, common sense. However, what appear to be a few laboratory or case histories, are woefully inadequate. We find we are reading speculation and pretend.
Place this work in the cheery and sad category of patent medicine and pseudoscience. Having said that, however, we actually owe a great debt to hucksters and con-artists. Clark is certainly one who has grasped "a little knowledge" and writes with counselling cheer and clarity--of her incomplete and misinformed remedies. Scientists, however, are unable to concur with her conclusions. For example, those with expertise in parasitology find numerous examples of error. This is but one of the numerous scams which are posted and sold on the web. The suffering public has very little protection from an unprotected market which is rife with fraud. Our legal system only protects wealthy offshore corporations, and "consumer protection" is extinct.… (more)