|
| Natural Cures "They" Don't Want You To Know About | 
enlarge | Author: Kevin Trudeau Publisher: Alliance Publishing Category: Book
List Price: $29.95 Buy Used: $0.01 You Save: $29.94 (100%)
New (403) Used (1091) Collectible (26) from $0.01
Avg. Customer Rating: 2350 reviews Sales Rank: 5814
Media: Hardcover Edition: Updated Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 572 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.8 Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 6 x 1.5
ISBN: 0975599518 Dewey Decimal Number: 615.535 EAN: 9780975599518 ASIN: 0975599518
Publication Date: June 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Millions of satisfied customers and climbing. Thriftbooks is the name you can trust, guaranteed. Spend Less. Read More.
|
| Also Available In:
|
| Accessories:
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Kevin Trudeau blows the lid off a nest of deception and double standards concerning general and individual health in this new book, "Natural Cures 'They' Don't Want You To Know About." Kevin has risked government prosecution to bring you the full story of an intricate conspiracy. From the retail supermarket outlets of huge, publicly traded corporations comes processed, manipulated, engineered "food products" produced by other wings of the same corporation. These artificial, toxic treats are then sold with the blessings of the Federal Trade Commission and Food and Drug Administration government organizations charged with safeguarding the public good laying the foundations for future disease and chronic ill-health for the consumer, and a guaranteed source of revenue for the medical and pharmaceutical sectors. Kevin reveals the shocking truth of how drugs which are being advertised directly to the consumer, pushing their use to an all-time high are actually the cause of illness and disease climbing to near epidemic levels. And, though it sounds dire, Kevin offers a light in the darkness and directs the reader to scores and scores of alternative therapies, medical practices, philosophies and most importantly potential cures that help your body regain its natural state of health and vibrancy. So follow Kevin on an amazing journey through the behind-the-scenes world of corporate sponsored "nutrition" and "health," and learn about "Natural Cures 'THEY' Don't Want You To Know About."
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 2345 more reviews...
Natural Cures is a winner! Amazon we need more stars!!!! September 25, 2005 209 out of 228 found this review helpful
Yes you may be able to live to be 150 years old. Kevin Trudeau explains how animals have their lifespan doubled merely by changing from the poor foods pushed by advertisements and going into organic foods that are actually good for them. Dogs who normally live to be 13, live to be 20 or 30! Think what good eating and proper nutrition can do for we humans!!!!!!
...I have a bridge to sell you... October 3, 2007 161 out of 165 found this review helpful
Way too much marketing and hype with this book when there are good legitimate books by actual biologist that are very down to earth and simple to read for a proactive reader....as Cure the Incurable by Mikhail Tomak
Snake Oil April 25, 2007 128 out of 144 found this review helpful
A few things to keep in mind.
1. The information in this book concerning naturalistic treatments are not Trudeau's. This is common knowledge found in countless other venues, books, Web sites and from educated doctors...often at no cost, such as when viewed on Web sites addressing the topic.
2. The book acts as a device to sell more product. The majority of the book is focused on conspiracy theory mumbo-jumbo about government suppression and media censorship keeping people from speaking the truth (insert roll eyes here). Very little of the book is about actual remedies, because in order to know more, you must sign up for his Web site membership (for an extra fee), or buy his follow-up book (for an extra fee). It's typical con-artist fluff meant to extract more money from your wallet. If he was truly concerned about the health of his victims/readers, it seems as though he'd be more willing to provide the information up front, following the purchase of the book, without having to bait-and-switch his way to the supposed answer posed in the title of his book.
4. The title says "cure". Trudeau mentions "cure" in all of the infomercials. Yet, within the first few pages, he says that there is no cure, but that his suggestions are instead a general lifestyle change that will promote healthy living. The statement in the book is the only true statement. If there is a cure, why is there such blatant contradiction to the idea of a cure in the book itself? If there is a cure, where are the studies? Where is the proof? Why would everyone in the medical industry, the media, the government, the FDA, scientists, doctors...throughout not just America, but throughout the entire world, deny their own loved ones and family members cures to their terminal illnesses to further an agenda? Nothing so grand could be kept under wraps in any one of those forums, let alone all of them spread across the vastness of our entire planet to earn more money for a handful of pharmaceutical enterprises. The very argument is so silly that it doesn't even make proper sense, let alone stand against even the slightest hint of contrary argument.
5. The above reason is most likely why he is almost cultish in the way he explains away any criticism. He proclaims his message as the only "one truth", and denounces any opposition as conspiracy from government, FDA, media or anyone that disagrees with him. His protective bubble that dismisses any opinion that is not his own (no matter how uneducated and un-informed he might be) is near religious in its inception. When any person refutes a counter-argument with smoke and mirrors without addressing the actual point, always be wary and start asking questions. If you are unable to defend yourself with sensible reasoning, you most likely don't have a solid argument. He can't support his claims. He has no proof. All he has is conspiracy theories that he can't prove in the slightest.
6. Trudeau is a convicted felon. He was also barred from selling his other infomercial snake oil by the Federal Trade Commission. This is the same guy that promised super memory, speed reading abilities, real estate gimmickry and an assortment of other snake oil nonsense over the past decade or more. He's a modern-day con artist preying on the ill-informed.
7. Look at the facts. Modern medicine has reduced death rates related to illness over the past fifty years like no other period in the history of humankind. Life expectancy is constantly rising. We tried using nothing but natural treatments for hundreds of years, and what was the result? We had a short life-expectancy, diseases that would kill that can now be cured with a single shot and a long list of terminal illnesses that are now no longer a threat. Natural remedies have been around for eons, yet it wasn't until the advent of modern medicine that positive, measurable change has taken affect. While far from perfect, and not the only answer by any stretch of the imagination, modern medicine should not be discounted as though it is a tinfoil hat conspiracy. Naturalistic remedies and treatment from INFORMED experts, often when combined with modern medicine, can produce positive effects. Natural treatment is a great thing, but a deep-seated distrust of your family doctor born from an uneducated, convicted felon that sells snake oil on late-night tv is not healthy...or even sane.
8. Don't trust the reviews here. Do a little research on your own abut Trudeau himself, as well as his claims. Research natural treatments on your own. The information is readily available from sources that don't claim conspiracy and are simply honest and direct with you about something you might be interested in. Many of the extremely positive reviews here that mention what a "great man" Trudeau is may be false. There are marketing efforts that include paying individuals to make positive claims in sites such as this. This is a fairly common practice, and one that is especially beneficial for someone as untrustworthy as Trudeau. As stated, do your own research when it comes to things as important as health.
Not what expected March 5, 2006 114 out of 117 found this review helpful
The health information was helpful and interesting, but only a very small portion of the book dealt with health. Most of the book is devoted to anti-government commentary which I feel should have been in a separate book entitled "What the Government Won't Tell You". I purchased the book after watching the infomercial during which the author stated several times "I am forbidden to mention this on t.v., but it is in the book". Well once you buy the book you read that "the information cannot be printed in the book" and that you need to refer to a website for which, coincidentally, there is a charge. I am not so naive to go further and pay for the website access. - Who knows, maybe at the website I would learn again that most of the information I paid for cannot be provided at the website, and that I would have to pay for a Newsletter or something else to get the info... And so on, and so forth... I feel that the little section on health info is very useful, but viewers are misled by the television infomercial into believing that they are to purchase the book to get answers, only to find this info is NOT in the book. For that reason I find Cure the Incurable as much better book, and it is also less expensive.
Book Wrongly Titled; Maybe overpriced by $10.00 December 4, 2004 88 out of 95 found this review helpful
The "Health Information" was helpful and interesting, although only a very small portion of the book dealt with health. The book's topic matter was 90% of anti-government commentary which I feel should have been in a separate book entitled "What the Government Won't Tell You". I purchased the book after watching the infomercial during which the author stated several times "I am forbidden to mention this on t.v., but it is in the book". Well once you buy the book you read that "the information cannot be printed in the book" and that you need to refer to a website for which coincidentally there is a charge. I feel that the little section on health info. is very useful, but viewers are misled by the television infomercial into believing that they are to purchase the book to get answers only to find this info. is NOT in the book.
|
|
| Powered by Associate-O-Matic
| |