The US government is telling people that homeopathy is a sham | Health Supreme | Scoop.it

The FTC’s policy statement explains that the agency will now ask that the makers of homeopathic drugs present reliable scientific evidence for their health claims if they want to sell them to consumers on the US market... 

My comment: 

It is remarkable to see a renewed push to eliminate homeopathy in favor of chemical/pharmaceutical medicine. 

Homeopathic medicine works. It was mainstream in the U.S. up to the time Rockefeller came in and financed "medical schools" which deviated medicine towards only using pharmaceuticals. 

Since homeopathy would be a distraction from what has now become to be known as "real medicine", it is suppressed and ridiculed. 

Homeopathy is actually more advanced than chemical medicine as it works with vibrations closely associated with life itself... 

Chemical medicine is of course "good business". Never mind people are dying by the hundreds of thousands every year from the drugs they are prescribed. That's just an unfortunate side effect of business. 

 

Wikipedia talks about the history of this suppression:

"The Flexner Report is a book-length study of medical education in the United States and Canada, written by Abraham Flexner and published in 1910 under the aegis of the Carnegie Foundation. Many aspects of the present-day American medical profession stem from the Flexner Report and its aftermath."

"When Flexner researched his report, "modern" medicine faced vigorous competition from several quarters, including osteopathic medicine, chiropractic medicine, electrotherapy, eclectic medicine, naturopathy and homeopathy.[13] Flexner clearly doubted the scientific validity of all forms of medicine other than that based on scientific research, deeming any approach to medicine that did not advocate the use of treatments such as vaccines to prevent and cure illness as tantamount to quackery and charlatanism. Medical schools that offered training in various disciplines including electromagnetic field therapy, phototherapy, eclectic medicine, physiomedicalism, naturopathy, and homeopathy, were told either to drop these courses from their curriculum or lose their accreditation and underwriting support. A few schools resisted for a time, but eventually all either complied with the Report or shut their doors."