In November 2002, the BBC's Horizon program tried to win Randi's $1,000,000 by demonstrating that there might be some science behind homeopathy. They failed on both counts. Part 4 of 5
its not affecting the cells but the spiritual aura which then affects the outward body nobody has thought of this but that explains to me why the cell remains unchanged by homeopathic water & pure water & then vs animals getting better. water has a memory spiritually this is probably alien science something 50 yrs ahead of human understanding ATM in science. This is why homeopathic remedies work more than placebos when teh humans don't even know what they are taking! meridians not organic!
Another excellent piece of popular science TV from the Horizon team at the BBC. Wonder if I could get a job there? Imagine the fun and the intrigue and the free junkets and jollies all at the expense of the licence payer-hurrah!
In the UK you have to buy a TV licence (£130) per annum. This pays for the BBC. It is quite a lot as there are 20 million households with TV's which is around £2.6 billion per year!
@goldhoarder Actually it's government funded, so your tax money goes towards it.
uruz88 1 week ago
its not affecting the cells but the spiritual aura which then affects the outward body nobody has thought of this but that explains to me why the cell remains unchanged by homeopathic water & pure water & then vs animals getting better. water has a memory spiritually this is probably alien science something 50 yrs ahead of human understanding ATM in science. This is why homeopathic remedies work more than placebos when teh humans don't even know what they are taking! meridians not organic!
uncreativeranter 9 months ago
Were the baseline variables between the two hayfever groups equivalent? Whawere the statistical analyses, given 35 people is a tiny sample size?
rush7777me7777 1 year ago
in Romania we have TVR but it's like 10 pounds per year I guess
dantheman1507 1 year ago
In Australia, we get the ABC, which is our equivalent of the BBC for free. Proof positive that you get what you pay for.
goldhoarder 2 years ago
Another excellent piece of popular science TV from the Horizon team at the BBC. Wonder if I could get a job there? Imagine the fun and the intrigue and the free junkets and jollies all at the expense of the licence payer-hurrah!
In the UK you have to buy a TV licence (£130) per annum. This pays for the BBC. It is quite a lot as there are 20 million households with TV's which is around £2.6 billion per year!
mik99D 2 years ago 2