Med Bed

Started by Solar, March 25, 2023, 05:53:28 AM

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Solar

Has anyone else heard the ludicrous promises being made about these so called "Miracle Beds"?
I have, I won't say who has fallen for the promises, but these guys swear it's real and it can cure everything.

I've done all the research I can to find answers, but all I get are testimonials on how great they are, by those selling them and nothing else.
Youtube is packed with videos, and the Net is blaming Q for their rise in popularity.
Problem is, Q never said a word about them but somehow the left is using this as a cudgel against us.

Anyway, I remembered when this shit hit the airwaves and was quickly quashed, and I finally found an article showing when it all began.
Oh, and the people I mentioned, they actually believe these beds are being built on the moon and will use antigrav tech to ship them back to earth.
I fuckin kid you not!


In the late 1980s, an out-of-work math instructor in Colorado built an electronic device he claimed could diagnose and destroy disease — everything from allergies to cancer — by firing radio frequencies into the body.

But the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, which regulates medical devices, ordered William Nelson to quit selling his machine and making false claims. Nelson refused, and he was indicted on felony fraud charges. He fled the country, never to return.

That should have been the unremarkable end of another peddler of medical miracles.
Today, Nelson, 56, orchestrates one of America's boldest health-care frauds from a century-old building in Budapest, Hungary. Protected by barred gates, surveillance cameras and guards, he rakes in tens of millions of dollars selling a machine used to exploit the vulnerable and desperately ill.

This device is called the EPFX. In the U.S. alone, Nelson has sold more than 10,000 of them. More have been sold in the Northwest than in any other region, company officials said.

Nelson built his business by recruiting a sales force of physicians, chiropractors, nurses and thousands of unlicensed providers, from homemakers to retirees, drawn by the promise of easy money.

Nelson is just one profiteer, with one device.

https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/how-one-mans-invention-is-part-of-a-growing-worldwide-scam-that-snares-the-desperately-ill/
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Q PATRIOT!!!

Possum

Quote from: Solar on March 25, 2023, 05:53:28 AMHas anyone else heard the ludicrous promises being made about these so called "Miracle Beds"?
I have, I won't say who has fallen for the promises, but these guys swear it's real and it can cure everything.

I've done all the research I can to find answers, but all I get are testimonials on how great they are, by those selling them and nothing else.
Youtube is packed with videos, and the Net is blaming Q for their rise in popularity.
Problem is, Q never said a word about them but somehow the left is using this as a cudgel against us.

Anyway, I remembered when this shit hit the airwaves and was quickly quashed, and I finally found an article showing when it all began.
Oh, and the people I mentioned, they actually believe these beds are being built on the moon and will use antigrav tech to ship them back to earth.
I fuckin kid you not!


In the late 1980s, an out-of-work math instructor in Colorado built an electronic device he claimed could diagnose and destroy disease — everything from allergies to cancer — by firing radio frequencies into the body.

But the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, which regulates medical devices, ordered William Nelson to quit selling his machine and making false claims. Nelson refused, and he was indicted on felony fraud charges. He fled the country, never to return.

That should have been the unremarkable end of another peddler of medical miracles.
Today, Nelson, 56, orchestrates one of America's boldest health-care frauds from a century-old building in Budapest, Hungary. Protected by barred gates, surveillance cameras and guards, he rakes in tens of millions of dollars selling a machine used to exploit the vulnerable and desperately ill.

This device is called the EPFX. In the U.S. alone, Nelson has sold more than 10,000 of them. More have been sold in the Northwest than in any other region, company officials said.

Nelson built his business by recruiting a sales force of physicians, chiropractors, nurses and thousands of unlicensed providers, from homemakers to retirees, drawn by the promise of easy money.

Nelson is just one profiteer, with one device.

https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/how-one-mans-invention-is-part-of-a-growing-worldwide-scam-that-snares-the-desperately-ill/
Sounds like something the CDC/WHO would not have a problem with. The claims listed above fit right in with wearing a mask, distancing, shutting down the economy........

AND OF COURSE MY FAVORITE, THIS JAB WILL PREVENT YOU FROM GETTING COVID!!!!!!! :lol:  :lol:  :lol:  :lol:

Solar

Quote from: Possum on March 25, 2023, 07:39:10 AMSounds like something the CDC/WHO would not have a problem with. The claims listed above fit right in with wearing a mask, distancing, shutting down the economy........

AND OF COURSE MY FAVORITE, THIS JAB WILL PREVENT YOU FROM GETTING COVID!!!!!!! :lol:  :lol:  :lol:  :lol:
Well, the FDA banned it, but has done nothing to stop its imports into the US.
But I'd swear, they must all have a hand in it, because a lot of people are making a lot of money off of it.
Official Trump Cult Member

#WWG1WGA

Q PATRIOT!!!