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Colloidal Minerals: Unnecessary and Potentially Hazardous
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"Quackwatch Home Page
Colloidal Mineral Supplements:
Unnecessary and Potentially Hazardous
James Pontolillo
Colloidal mineral promoters would like you to believe that
mineral deficiency is a widespread cause of disease. To counter
this alleged problem, they are marketing products said to be water-leached
from shale in the Emery Coal Field of central Utah. According
to various sales pitches, an ailing cattle rancher named Thomas
Jefferson Clark was told about a healing stream by Chief Soaring
Eagle, a Paiute medicine man and elder. The miracle waters were
well-known to the local natives who supposedly had benefited from
them for hundreds of years [1]. Clark drank from them and quickly
recovered from his malady. Intrigued, he followed the stream back
to its source in organic-rich shales. By 1931, after several years
of experiments, he sold his own brand of tonic rich in "colloidal
minerals." As word spread, a minor legend was born. Light
Energy Productions has recorded an
account of Clark's many adventures [2]. Curiously, according
to an article in Self magazine, the present-day Paiutes
have never heard of either Chief Soaring Eagle or the renowned
healing powers of their ancestral waters [3].
The most notorious colloidal mineral promoter is Joel D. Wallach,
DVM, ND, who says that Americans desperately need his minerals.
Wallach has a long
history of involvement in dubious healthcare schemes , such
laetrile treatment for cancer, as well as chelation and hydrogen
peroxide therapies for coronary artery disease. He has also hosted
an AM radio talk show in San Diego titled "Let's Play Doctor"
and briefly plied naturopathy at Kurt
Donsbach 's Hospital Santa Monica. His widely distributed "Dead
Doctors Don't Lie!" audiotape [4] quotes from U.S. Senate
Document 264:
[Erosion and unwise farming methods] have led to mineral-depleted
soils resulting in mineral-deficient plants, livestock, and people
. . . . .the alar"
....
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