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Have you not understood that when the druggies develop a medicine that doesn't work as planned they invent a malady for it to treat? It's Victor Borge's old business about inventing a cure for which there was no disease: http://thinkexist.com/quotatio...e-was-no/362856.html It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society. -J. Krishnamurti | |||
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I agree, Proof. It's a huge market, and in my opinion it's all for naught. It seems to attract the most highly educated. | |||
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I always take echinacea as the first signs of a cold. That, and a couple of pints or Real Ale, seem to stop the real cold from developing. Richard English | |||
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My dh (dear husband) recently fought off a virus at pre-cold stage, in anticipation of business travel (lots of vit-fort-orange juice, vitamins, & zinc pills)-- the trip went well, but he came down w/a 2ndary infection post-trip that cost him a couple of wks of illness! | |||
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p.s., RE, I'm w/you on the echinacea,tho I fortify w/Aquivit...which is standing me in good stead in the NJ blackout (the Aquivit, that is), & it's also helping w/stomach issues brought on by days of strange canned food.. | |||
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I can only say that the research studies don't support using echinacea. However, it's like using a placebo. You think it will work, so you perceive the symptoms differently. | |||
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Maybe it's the Real Ale, then... Richard English | |||
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OR...maybe Real Ale is a placebo! That is, maybe really Budweiser is the excellent beer, but you think Real Ale should be (since it's more expensive, comes from England, etc.) so you perceive it to be better. I do think that's true of some of the hugely expensive European clothes we get that are all the rage. The Italian shoes wear out in a few weeks, the Louis Vuitton bags are ugly and the Burberry plaid is downright childish. | |||
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How could Real Ale be a placebo? Everyone knows * that medicine must taste nasty if it's to do any good, so it must be that Budweiser is the most efficacious of all! It must also mean that RA isn't a medicine (placebo or not), I suppose. * See here. Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life. | |||
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You can still stand after all that Aquavit? It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society. -J. Krishnamurti | |||
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In the USA Dudweiser is a cheap beer - along with other chemical fizz such as Swiller and Curse. In the UK it is an expensive beer because AB/Inbev have, very cleverly, positioned it as a premium product - a wonderful exotic import from the US of A. Ignorant drinkers fall for this hype (promotion is a very powerful part of the marketing mix - more important than price in many cases) and happily pay up to twice as much for a pint of chemical fizz as they would for a pint of beer. AB/Inbev keep very quiet about the fact that Dudweiser is actually manufactured (I won't grace it with the term "brewed") in London (England, that is, not Ontario). It is, of course, made from such rubbish ingredients as rice (instead of barley) just as it is in the USA. UK craft beers are more expensive in the USA than mass-market chemical fizz for rather different reasons; they are imported and beer, being around 95% water, is a very expensive thing to ship across the world. And even US-brewed craft beers are expensive compared with US chemical fizz; it is difficult to get the economies of scale that the mega-brewers enjoy and, of course, US craft brewers use good ingredients which are more expensive than rice and the other adjuncts that the chemical fizz manufacturers use, so their cost base will be higher in any case. I can't speak about clothes and shoes as I rarely ever buy them. My moste recent pair of shoes - bought when I was till living in Reigate, have started to crack on their uppers and so, after around 12 years, I will have to buy another pair. I buy quality; not prestige brands. If the two coincide, fine. If I could justify it I would do as does Prince Philip and buy my shoes from Lobbs - but I doubt now I would live long enough to amortise the very high price (at least £2000) that they charge for pair of their hand-made to measure shoes. http://www.johnlobbltd.co.uk/main/main.htm Richard English | |||
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BTW, folks, I was just kidding about Real Ale being a placebo. | |||
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Of course you were. Everyone knows that it has genuine medicinal properties. "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
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Here is an article on the medicinal properties of beer. Here are some cardiac properties: There are others, too! | |||
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A fascinating article. In fact, it proves that beer is even more beneficial to health than I had originally thought. Richard English | |||
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Just remember, it's for drinking beer in moderation. | |||
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Absolutely. Everything should be in moderation; excess is almost always bad, no matter what it might be. Richard English | |||
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