Without evidence of benefit, an intervention should not be presumed to be beneficial or safe.

- Rogue Medic

Sleaze Returns to Times Square with a Vengeance – Part III

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       
                           

Continued from Part I and from Part II.

Barbara Loe Fisher and Dr. Joe Mercola are running ads that suggest they are providing information about vaccines, but they are providing scare stories about the horrors of vaccines.

I wrote about Barbara Loe Fisher. What about Dr. Joe Mercola?

Dr. Mercola is paying for Barbara Loe Fisher to make the world more dangerous for our families. Dr. Mercola makes his money selling natural remedies. Dr. Mercola pretends that natural medicine is safer than vaccination. Selling natural remedies is very profitable for Dr. Mercola. We should not be surprised by advocacy from this salesman.

With all websites, newspapers, magazines and other publications offering health advice, with every new multi-million dollar TV ad for another proclaimed miracle drug, with any recommendation offered by traditional and natural physicians, it is essential to answer this question above all others: what is their real motivation?[1]

I agree.

What are Dr. Mercola’s motivations?

Mercola.com is not, in other words, a tool to get me a bigger house and car, or to run for Senate. I fund this site, and therefore, am not handcuffed to any advertisers, silent partners or corporate parents.[1]

But Dr. Mercola is the millionaire profiting from selling these products.

No conflict of interest in making millions of dollars selling these drugs, while criticizing others for doing the same thing.

Are there any other reasons to believe that Dr. Mercola is a sleaze?

I don’t doubt Mercola’s sincerity—and I know nothing about how he allocates his income. But I recently made some interesting observations. The word “Mercola” on the labels of his “Dr. Mercola Premium Supplements” is service-marked. Records at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office say that he began using the mark in commerce in 2000, applied to register it in 2009, and was granted registration in 2010. The registration address is for his home in South Barrington, Illinois, which the BlockShopper Chicago Web site states has 5,083 square feet and was purchased by Mercola in 2006 for $2 million. The Bing Maps aerial view indicates that it is quite luxurious.[2]

OK. Dr. Barrett doesn’t doubt Dr. Mercola’s sincerity, but Dr. Barrett is no supporter of Dr. Mercola. Here is some more from Dr. Barrett. Dr. Barrett writes Quackwatch. Dr. Mercola is just one of the quacks Dr. Barrett reports on.

In 2005, the FDA ordered Mercola and his Optimal Wellness Center to stop making illegal claims for products sold through his Web site [10]. The claims to which the FDA objected involved three products:[2]

The information about these illegal claims made by Dr. Mercola are available at Quackwatch.

In 2006, the FDA send Mercola and his center a second warning that was based on product labels collected during an inspection at his facility and on claims made on the Optimum Wellness Center Web site [11]. This time the claims to which the FDA objected involve four products:[2]

The information about these illegal claims made by Dr. Mercola are available at Quackwatch.

In 2011, the FDA ordered Mercola to stop making claims for thermography that go beyond what the equipment he uses (Medtherm2000 infrared camera) was cleared for. The warning letter said that statements on Mercola’s site improperly imply that the Meditherm camera can be used alone to diagnose or screen for various diseases or conditions associated with the breast, they also represent that the sensitivity of the Meditherm Med2000 Telethermographic camera is greater than that of machines used in mammography. The statements to which the FDA objected included:[2]

The information about these illegal claims made by Dr. Mercola are available at Quackwatch.

There appears to be a pattern of making unsupportable claims to make money for his multi-million dollar business. What a hypocrite.

Also covered at Respectful Insolence, Skeptical Teacher, and Skepchick.

Footnotes:

[1] Dr. Mercola’s Background
mercola.com
Article

[2] FDA Orders Dr. Joseph Mercola to Stop Illegal Claims
by Stephen Barrett, M.D.
Quackwatch
Article

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