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From: C0nc0rdance
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  • my neurotronical connectorators thank you

  • I vote this one into the running for "most extreme batshit insane pile of alt-med pseudoscientific dog-doo nonsense of all time, ever, no matter what"

    Seriously. This woman is just plain dangerous. Listening to her could make your head asplode from teh stuped.

  • Homeopatic medicine and prayer.

    Modern medicine is screwed, we don't need it any more.

  • Thanks a lot for making me watch that ConCordance. My IQ dropped 50 points in 7 minutes. It was only because a friend came and pushed me away from the monitor with a broom handle that I didn't achieve zero IQ. Doctors don't hold out much hope for a full recovery. I now have no option other than that becoming a creationist or homeopathist.

  • Comment removed

  • "Guess what the definition of disease is. It's not mass."

    ...I think I just had an aneurysm out of sheer stupidity.

  • Are these people smoking homeopathic pot. It seems to be causing a placebo that's making them talk out their own asses

  • peer review proved PROZAC, but look at what happened in the real world.“In 1992, Bill Forsyth, a retiree living in Hawaii, was prescribed Prozac for his anxiety and depression. The next day, he called his doctor to say he felt 200 percent better. The day after, however, he requested to be taken to a psychiatric hospital, where doctors continued giving him the drug. Eleven days later, he returned home, stabbed to death his wife of 37 years, then impaled himself on a kitchen knife.”

  • @RebornHammer Just in the same way I wouldn't take one example of someone getting better from homeopathy as proof it works, one example of someone having problems with prozac does not prove all conventional medicine works.

    From your very brief description it sounds like Mr Forsyth had a underlying mental health issue which 12 days of prozac would have been unlikely to resolve.

    If anyone reading this is feeling unduly depressed go and see your doctor and give the St John's wort a miss.

  • @RebornHammer Sorry the last sentence in that first paragraph should have read "one example of someone having problems with prozac does not prove all conventional medicine DOES NOT WORK."

    Perhaps I should take some Kali Phosphoricum to improve my concentration.

  • peer review is crap. It is fabricated often involves bribery and corruption and it cannot be trusted. If homeopathy works for you then why should anyone stop you? Homeopathy is inexpensive compared to pharmaceutical drugs. Peer review studies are for weak people who need someone to hold their hand. Homeopathic remedies are gentle without side effects, the same cannot be said about pharmaceuticals. But go ahead and get some side effects if that is what you want.

  • @RebornHammer Clearly you are suffering from some mental illness, here I will sell you my cure-all, its called deplenerational ditoxin. It comes from all natural organic cat urine(diluted of course) and I added some special new age crystals that control the power of a pyramid and reforce the spiritual stream of meridian lines into your ass, where we believe you head to be located.

    Only 199.99 while supplies last.

  • @RebornHammer I actually agree with you here. People should be free to take a homeopathic remedy if they wish to do so.

    But why so hostile to peer review? I would have thought having people check your work to prove it was reliable, truthful, unbiased and accurate would be a good thing. The alternative to to take people at their word. In a perfect world we could do this but the are some shady characters out there who might prey on the uniformed. Like homeopaths.

  • @davidheffron Also, the reason that there are no side effects from homeopathy is that there are no active ingredients in its remedy. There are no side effects because there are no effects at all.

    Once a substance has been diluted to a point where there's no trace of the substance, how could it possibly have an effect?

    It could not.

  • My left ear disagrees.

  • "Stephen Hawkings gave us the string theory"

    So much stupid packed into one sentence.

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  • Steven HawkingS ? Never heard of the guy.

  • Jesus, cant people take 2 seconds to shit out a properly formed sentence rather than just splattering us with their verbal diarrhea?

  • @PreyingMantisMan credit o john cjg for the quote :)

  • Jesus that girl is stupid.... Mass and volume are two different things. Sure molecules are 95% void but the mass is determined by the electrons, protons.

    So E=c2 is not and will never be correct stupid woman!

    Owe and Stephen Hawking didn't think up string theory! Get your fucking research straight! Hawking adheres more to the M-Theory a derivative from the String theory and no he's not the brain behind that either.

  • Jesus that girl is stupid.... Mass and volume are two different things. Sure molecules are 95% void but the mass is determined by the electrons, protons.

    So E=c2 is not and will never be correct stupid woman!

  • Their sense making...where is it?

  • This is such a priceless and warranted collection of colourful folkies. Homeopathy and other immaginative immaterial "healing" thingies do bring out the most colourful and ummm... creative descriptors from members of our species. Thank you so much for sharing this.

  • So who's description of Homeopathetic woo is right? Should we put the question to Bandershot?

  • @sngcoach ...and sent by God too. Don't forget that.

  • It really is a load of old nonsense isn't it, and yet the British Government spend my taxes on homeopathic remedies within the NHS.

  • You can always tell when people are members of an idiotic cult - they either talk like robots or can't stop smiling

  • My apologies, ma'am. That was MY dog who pooped him your yard.

    Yeah - I taught him to do that.

  • Watch out! Wilfred Brimley's going to kill us all with oatmeal!

  • I just had to shut the sound off and masturbate to the pretty Asian woman.

    That's the only way I could get through this video.

  • Also, I have a license as a Nanolawyer, specializing in small cases.

  • @mphello a google search for nanolawyer comes back with 2380 hits. That's enough to suggest there is no such thing as a nanolawyer and that you have made it up. Where are you licenced?

  • Just letting everyone know:

    I'm a lawyer.

    More specifically, a homeolawyer, with a clerking degree at the East California Superior Courtroom of Labor Union Studies.

  • @mphello Also there's no such thing as a homolawyer. All the google searches just came back with your statement about how you are a homolawyer. Usually on batshit homeopathy ralated websites.

    If you mean you are a lawyer who is gay then that might make some sense. Homotherwise you're homotalking out of your homoarse.

  • @davidheffron Based on your favorited videos on your channel, I ASSUMED you were one of the critical-thinking smart ones and would have gotten my joke.

    Correct: there IS no such thing as a homeolawyer (or a homolawyer) or a nanolawyer.

  • Yeah I know what H20 it's 99% of what you charge people $75 an ounce to drink while telling them what they want to hear.

  • Why is professor John Benneth silent? Is he homeopathically speaking? Like ummm "infinitely diluted bullshit becomes powerful truth" ?

  • @mikefromwa Actually, you can overdose on water too.

  • Yes, it's the chromostatic vibrations in the nanocrystaloids polarization that makes homeopathy work. *FACEPALM*

  • If you can't overdose on it, it's not medicine.

  • Modern practitioners of the ancient art of doubletalk.

    But this doesn't prove that every form of health treatment advocated by every person classing themself as homeopathic is necessarily quackery.

  • @MagiMysteryTour while the existence of such double talk doesnt demonstrate that all homeopath-delivered healthcare is quackery, all homeopathy is quackery regardless of the form in which it is delivered. Homeopathic treatments, as they are defined by homeopaths, fail to demonstrate their claimed effects in any objective, controlled observation. Even the more modest claims of homeopaths (e.g. descreasing flu symptom severity and duration) fail to stand up outside of anecdote. It's quite telling.

  • Needed a morning chuckle - I'm glad I found this. Bandershot is the homeopathic equivalent of NephilimFree. They both have PhDs in Google.

  • I'm wondering who this Steven Hawkings is.

  • 7:41 Diabeetus!

  • why is "pseudo" in parentheses?

  • This is just Great

  • Not going to lie: When she said "My neighbors dog pooped in my yard", I thought she was just going to stop there or it would cut out. I was thoroughly disappointed (Except using a bomb against a neighbor to get revenge is somehow okay in today's age?)

  • @ludikalo It's fine, it's a homoepathic bomb which means it, like homeopathy, does absolutely nothing.

  • Here have a glass of water, ... you're cured.

  • The Star Trek babble makes more sense.

  • @hingeslevers cos it actualy has some bassis in real science, and real writhers to wright it.

  • For the record: How does anyone go through four year of college, followed by four years in an optometrist college and become called, "Doctor"? This person woud be a pround embarassment for any college, not to mention a post-graduate "Doctor" degree in ANY FIELD OF STUDY. I wonder if Dr. Werner would like to "materialize" on this site?

  • @otissumnerbrown the simplest explanation is that they don't believe a single word of the crap they say, and just realized that selling water to idiots is really, really, really easy profit.

  • I want a nanobubble.

  • OW OW OW OW my brain hurts.

  • At 1:09 I was expecting "Bullshit". But I was disappointed.

  • Alternative to what?, logic? Reality?

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  • How convenient that the entire universe's mass is the exact same size when compressed as a ball that fits into our hands. How perfect that is for a self serving quack like this. I hope no one's actually buying whatever she's selling because it smells like, . Cough Cough BULLSHIT cough Sneeze fart puke sniff.

  • OK, one last response, then DEFINITELY bed. Please read up on some of the criticisms levelled at the M.D.s you've been quoting. I'm sorry too that you've had to deal with 'lunatic critics', but we can't have meaningful debate if we're overly hostile to each other! I require empirical proofs of efficacy in the form of meta-analyses and independent peer review if I'm to trust a healthcare modality, and so far complementary and alt. medicine has failed to satisfy. Whilst there are legitimate

  • 40 % of the studies we count on to make medical decisions are authored by scientists who act as "spin doctors" distorting medical research to suit personal needs or corporate economic interests."Spin" can be defined as specific reporting that could distort the interpretation of results and mislead readers.If 40% of conclusions of the papers published in medical journals are spun toward independent interests,this cannot be solely evidence based,Dr.Mark Hyman MD.

  • Alan C. Nixon, PhD, former president of the American Chemical Society, states, “As a chemist trained to interpret data, it is incomprehensible to me that physicians can ignore the clear evidence that chemotherapy does much more harm than good.” Dr.Alan Levin, MD, of the University of California Medical School agrees: “Most cancer patients in this country die of chemotherapy." Isn't this ironic?

  • @TheFriendlyEngineer Really don't want to get drawn into a massive debate, but this is highly selective quoting from a handful of websites which use the same names again and again and promote things like healing cancer with light/herbal formulas. While chemo is not effective in combating certain types of cancers, testicular cancer in particular is responsive to it. I'm sorry you've had such bad personal experience with pharmaceutical industry

  • @godyah Most of the research posted here are findings from med/governmental agencies and reports from law companies having actual claims against dangerous drugs.It is well known of the dangers and complications of prescriptions by MD's.This type of pharmaceutical doctor focuses on drugs and surgery.I have noticed an integrative medicine approach or even complementary approach are considered by millions also with positive research resuslts and success rates.Critics usually judge without searches

  • @TheFriendlyEngineer criticisms that can be made about the state of pharmaceutical industry (it's composed of companies with self-interests just like any other) alternative modalities are inferior in their evidential requirements. Science has no agenda other than to discover what works, how it works, and why. Homeopathy, intercessory prayer, crystal healing, holistic healing, chiropractic, etc. are totally or significantly based on ideas which do not correspond to the physical nature of reality.

  • @TheFriendlyEngineer Goodnight mate, it's been fun talking to you, and thanks for keeping me on my toes!

  • @godyah Goodnight it's now 11:25 p.m here,keep having an open mind.There is alot of information out there and it's your right to be skeptical.Continue being objective and I am sure you will get your answers.This is not my field but my friends and I have benefited from complementary medicine and have seen actual results.I had skin problems and tried dermatologists and the drugs but I never got results and I got worse.Alternatives helped me within a two week period.I also believe in emergency meth

  • @TheFriendlyEngineer But this may indicate problems with the privatised US healthcare system. The fact is that scientifically-proven treatments are more effective than unproven quackery, and that science is self-correcting. For every spin-doctor, there are 1000 researchers making their names by tearing down biased research. Everyone reacts differently to medications, and it's a doctor's job to find the most positive health outcome based on what's demonstrated to be effective.

  • @TheFriendlyEngineer If I may, it seems you are starting at a conclusion you find palatable and working backwards to find evidence which suits your conclusions. Look how rare it is for a new drug to make it past Stage 3 trials. Psychiatry is objectively effective. Alternative modalities are not bound by the same necessities of proof, research, and peer review, and are largely scams perpetuated by knowing individuals who want to make a fast buck.

  • @godyah I understand your objective way of thinking compared to many of the lunatic critics out there who are not open minded.There have been positive results with certain medications,however,drugs definately create new problems or side effects and you have to take another drug to counter attack the side effext.Basically I never agreed with symptomatic treatment.I would search for the root cause of problems.I have both MD friends and ND friends,infact they have an integrative health approach.

  • At least its not a SCAM and quackery like psychiatry.LOL

  • @TheFriendlyEngineer Except it is....

  • @jackh4eva I believe certain individuals like you who do not fully understand something would call it a scam.I do not understand it myself but I would investigate something before I make conclusions.I have investigated certain areas of medicine and most of it seems like quackery and scams.Especially psychiatry.

  • @TheFriendlyEngineer Don't be so patronising, homeopathy is a complete and utter scam, and I understand fully the principles behind it and how its supposed to work.

  • @jackh4eva The real scams are in the pharmaceutical industry.Look at all the medications that have killed thousands of people per year.A real scientist should be objective and unbiased.Scams are psychiatry and that has been proven true.

  • @TheFriendlyEngineer I know that the pharmaceutical industry, in America at least, is totally corrupt, in it for the money and actually quite dangerous, but that doesn't mean that homeopathy isn't a load of rubbish.

  • @jackh4eva Well you have a right to your opinion.However,I think we should be open-minded.

  • @TheFriendlyEngineer ...but not so open-minded our brains fall out! There's a difference between being unbiased and ignoring fundamental aspects of science. The dilutions used by homeopaths are so extreme that not a single molecule of the 'medicine' is left in the water. If homeopathy worked, you'd only have to drink a drop of seawater to cure anything! Water does not have any sort of molecular 'memory', and the idea of 'like curing like' is childish at best. Read 'Bad Science' by Ben Goldacre!

  • @TheFriendlyEngineer Not to say there aren't problems with the pharmaceutical industry, but at least it's based on treatment modalities which are scientifically proven to work, and don't violate fundamental aspects of existence! Don't believe me if you don't want to, but you owe it to yourself to look into this on a molecular, SCIENTIFIC level!

  • @godyah Recent report in the Journal of the american medical association french scientists reviewed 600 studies published in the top medical journals during an entire year,analyzed in detail 72 of those they considered to be of the highest quality.In their analysis they only included studies with the most respected and reliable design-the randomized controlled trial.Their findings call into question the scientific reliability,Dr.Mark Hyman MD

  • @godyah I agree with the emergency care unit,however the majority of the pharmaceutical industry and the drug doctors solely focus on symptom treatment.The same drugs they prescribe either induce serious side effects,death or complications which would create new sicknesses so they would need another drug to counter attack the new sickness.Sounds like a scheme.However I have MD friends who I trust and they are open minded.They also share insights of their experiences with pharmaceuticals.

  • @TheFriendlyEngineer OK I used faaar too many exclaimation marks there

  • @godyah Stimulant drugs prescribed for the treatment of ADHD are not only dangerous, they are highly addictive. From January 2000, through June 30, 2005, FDA identified nearly 1,000 reports of psychosis or mania linked to the drugs, including Ritalin, Adderall, Concerta, and Strattera.

  • @jackh4eva Not only do I completely agree with you here, I think its a point that is conveniently ignored by many pseudoscientists & homeopathy-promoters. It needs to be restated more often & it is irrefutable. Yes, there are MAJOR problems with the biomedical model of health and industries that develop and regulate drugs. Yes, these problems have terrible consequences for many people. HOWEVER, the existence of these problems does NOT at all support the claim that homeopathy is effective.

  • @TheFriendlyEngineer Psychiatry denial? You're not a scientologist, are you?

  • @godyah No my field is petroleum engineering.I do not know much about scientology.I however believe that psychiatry is more of a belief system and the drugs prescribed are deadly.I have looked at psychiatric drugs and the side effects are terrible.My family member used paxil for over one year and almost died.Infact she had to slowly come out of the treatment.However her problem was a financial problem.I found it was shady a psychiatrist would prescribe a drug,which never dealt with therootcause

  • @godyah The recent widely quoted JUPITER trial(proving crestor) could prevent heart attacks with people with normal or low cholesterol.The trial researchers twisted the data to suit the commercial sponsor of the study.The Archives of Internal Medicine showed that it was deeply flawed and the actual data did not show any benefit for the prevention of heart disease.Thus proves fraudulent patterns for which have been consistent.Dr.Malcolm Kendrick MD,Cardiologist.

  • @TheFriendlyEngineer Hey, I'm an amateur skeptic (or 'sceptic', since I'm in th UK). Can I recommend you the excellent 'Skeptic's Guide to the Universe' podcast? Even if I can't bring you round to my way of thinking, the podcast is an excellent exploration of all things scientific and pseudoscientific. It's fascinating and funny in equal turns, and it's what got me into skepticism. The SGU team are more eloquent than me, too. 3:32AM here; must sleep!

  • I almost started drooling on my computer.....

  • By actevh...activization.

  • They recorded it in betasyntilation films!!!

  • Diabeetus!!!!

  • Diabeetus

  • Diabeetus!!!!

  • WOOt

  • Oooh, so the dingle arm is used REDUCE sinusoidal depleneration, that actually makes sense, can't believe I managed to read the blueprints wrong.

  • @mrdaym Listen I don't want to be an asshole here but only a moron would think that the dingle arm is used to increase sinusoidal depleneration, were did you get your degree in turbo encabulator engineering, glenn beck academy?

    Everyone worth there flux logrithmic marzels viens would know that sinusoidal depleneration is only destabilized with rockwell retro encabulators. Seriously dude do your research before you post.

  • At 2:16 she encased it in a... in a... you know... "Bong"

    She's got my vote! Homeopathy must work! ha-ha.

    Stupid homeopathy.

  • Activization for my diabetis! Oh wait, that's not good...

  • WTF ARE ALL THESE LUNATICS SAYINIG!?!?! THE WORDS THEY MAKE NO SENSE!!!!

  • Trollistic medicine.

  • lol I typed nanocrystalloids into wikipedia and got no results.

  • @octopusgatlingsquad Exclusive knowledge, bro. Only Benneth and Werner know 'bout this shit and they are revealing their divine knowledge to you. Can't you see that?!?!

  • Yeah that's funny stuff alright. I have found Homeopathy to work but I really don't think Homeopaths should try to explain it using quantum theory which they clearly don't understand. It doesn't do them any favours. Hahnemann, the founder of Homeopathy, said that the remedies work on man's subtle body, which is something science hasn't discovered yet, although religions and indigenous cultures know about it. They say the hardest thing to become aware of is...the one who's doing the looking.

  • I lost my train of thought with "nanocrystoloids"...it's one of those words that makes you stare blankly at a moron for a few seconds, then uncontrollably blurt out "Bullshit!"

  • But what about the midichlorians?!?

  • The essence of homeopathy: drink more water!

  • The Star Trek technobabblers actually sound MORE knowledgable than these bozos.

  • The fact that they're both theists tells me something too. Is there

  • That woman is infuriatingly stupid.

  • what a laugh, thanks! great use of star trek gabber not too much not too little - it was actually difficult to tell when the star trek clip and homeopathy clips began and ended if I wasn't looking hahaha

  • this is truly homeoPATHETIC!

  • That scene with Riker and the Ferengi is awesome when you consider that in the context of the episode, Riker was intentionally speaking in technobabble to convince the Ferengi that the Enterprise was way too complicated for him. Brilliant.

  • Okay, so just looking at the estimated number of hydrogen atoms in the observable universe, 3e79, if we say that these hydrogen atoms are single protons, with an estimated diameter of 1e-15 meters, we find that taking the volume per proton times the number of protons gives a volume of about 1.26e35 meters cubed. This would be a sphere with a diameter of about 3.11e11 meters. NOT, as this wack-job asserted, a sphere with a diameter of about 10 cm.

    That's just hydrogen, too.

  • What about Clathrtes? How they get there? Can you tell me? Ok What about Nano-Bubbles? How they get there?huh? The Bubbles come in the bubbles go out..

  • so far i only have "vibrated" with women.

    I gues if you have "vibrated" with animals and plants, E=c might seem reasonable.

    "Hawkins an other Einstein" that cracks me up

    tank you C0ncordance best quote mining ever!!

  • The physics of homeopathy medicine is that it doesn't function that way. You guys are just abusing the very basic knowledge on physics and chemistry that people have.

  • The star trek technobabble makes a lot more sense (or is at least more relevant to the problem at hand) than the other stuff... except for the voyager stuff in the beginning, but voyager always fixes it's problems with magic...

  • Energy equals the speed of light.....wow, apparently this woman never took high school physics, 'else she'd know that energy is measured in joules and the speed of light is measured in meters per second.

    I can't help but laugh at this. Not because it's funny, but because it's just so unbelievably sad.

  • Lets make up some big words and shit !

  • LOLOL!!! Hydrate Clathrates!! The definition of disease is not mass, its an energy state!! LOLOL!!

  • I just about lost it when Wilford Brimley.

  • "It's called prayer...yeah baby."

  • "Guess what the definition of disease is? Its not mass" Wow, really? Were did you get this ground-breaking, revolutionary idea from?!

  • I don't think Michael Okuda could ever come up with as big a load of crap for any script written for Star Trek.

  • please stop, i cant watch give me a chance to stop laughing

    HA HA HA HAAAAAAAAAAA HA HA HA HA HA HAAAAAA

  • My M.Sc. Physics is clearly being wasted because these people so obviously didn't need to go to school to know all, they just started spouting the 'truth'.... Is there any way we can send them to another planet where we can't hear them anymore?

  • Wow! This is the best science I've heard since god first sent us Stephen Hawkings to invent string theory!

  • Well ... I can talk nerdish, I know sources for purified water and icing sugar. I guess I become a Homeopath and make a bunch of money!

    But I can't stand in front of people, telling such crap w/o falling into hysterical laughter. Bummer ...

  • Lady! WTF? Disease is not energy!

  • Someone find me a person with a PhD in medical science to get these people to SHUT THE HELL UP!

  • I've noticed in Star Trek, whenever they go into the technobabble, there's always some poor, completely lost character present to look confused—a placeholder for the audience. And there also, I think, as the authors' jab at the silliness of their own attempts to be science-y.

    If only homeopaths could be as honest.

  • After watching this video I remembered that I praised a truckdriver co-worker of mine who told me he once was a homeopathic doctor, thinking he meant osteopathic. Boy, do I feel like an idiot.

  • Yes, homeopathy works.

    The empty clathrate behaves like negative substance and is able to annihilate the corresponding substance. To know how, search 'homeoscience'

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  • The question is this: Did Charlene have science and physics -- way back when"? She spent 4 years in college, followed by 4 years in OD college. How could that education so totally miss the point that E = M * C^2, CONFIRMS that both mass and energey CAN NOT BE CREATED OR DESTROYED -- ONLY CONVERTED ONE INTO THE OTHER. She just destroyed mass.

  • These people are the most obvious bullshit artists in the universe. It's worse than the Mormons.

  • oogle "escaping the cult of homeopathy" for an excellent article by Le Canard Noir;

  • Ha! Unbelievababble. My brain hurts having to listen to so much tosh. Trouble is there are people around who are ignorant to the most basic science and are taken in by this pseudo science crap. My mum is one of them unfortunately...

  • The Star Trek clips made more sense.

  • @soulure Even though Riker is spouting nonsense. It does actually make more sense.

  • Congratulations on your victory for science and reason!

  • So, who did file a DMCA on this? Funny sound man John Bennet? Charlene Werner, who's arguably cute in some ways but sadly has a bowl of mashed potatos for brains? Paramount?

  • wow.. These guys really believe they're "doing science". They think a pseudo-magical set of practices with no basis in observable evidence can be made scientific by a sprinkling it with scientific-sounding terms. Watching these guys I can't help but be reminded of Theramintrees vid about the Dunning-Kreuger effect. Have any homeopathy advocates ever suggested exactly how much evidence of ineffectiveness it would take to falsify homeopathy in their view?

  • If prayer is so powerful, why do we need your homopathic bullshit?

  • @alfyakuza because even though you pray for something, you don't trully believe in it. If u were believing, that thing would've happened long ago.

  • @ljupcopetkovski1 Your comment makes absolutely no sense as a response to mine. Either way it's bullshit.

  • Wow! This video actually made me COLLAPSE from the load of bullshit it contains!

  • AH HA HA HA HA HA Diabetus!

  • I almost get the impression that both John and Charlene are slightly drunk; they're slurring their words, they're jumping all over the place. It's like listening to a schizophrenic who's gone without their meds. What. Utter. Crap!!!

  • @vryc Hey, if I were to go on a stage and sell a room full of people a load of manure by telling them it's french pastries, I would partake in some liquid courage too.

  • Concordance, are they speaking Klingon?....this is too funny!

  • Glad to see this video back! I think it is one of your best.

  • We vibrate with a plant, animal or mineral... oO

    I don't care how smart they are trying to make their shit sound, it still sounds like shit.

    Good to see you got this back up =D

  • Woot! Awesome x)

  • welcome back video

  • Stephen Hawkings. Einstein number two.

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  • OK, a High School student might say this. Perhaps an "English Lit" student -- in four years of college (no science) might say this. But, for an additional four years of optometry college (with some science -- I would hope) to say this is staggering. I like the concept of the "second-opinion". But this "pitch" gives behavorial optometry a "poor name". Perhaps a retraction (or explanation) would be in order.

  • Would be better placed in the comedy category :P

  • Scrubbing nanobubbles. They irradiate your toxins so chemotherapy doesn't have to.