Hi, I visited Paneri's web site to see for myself. The stuff therein is obviously bogus. The testimonials sound as if they were written by the same person. And the "media" article, allegedly by Robin David of the "TIMES NEWS NETWORK" is full of obvious ESL-isms. If Dr. Paneri is a real person, with humanitarian tendencies, why doesn't he give us all the "recipe" for his Parkinson's cure? I have to say, the web site is so blatantly a scam that it is funny. What is not funny is that some people are taking this guy seriously. For crying out loud, he doesn't even spell "Aryuvedic" correctly!!! People, don't shell out money for something this transparently out to hoodwink you or your loved ones. Rick Bellingham, WA ---------------------------------------------------------------------- To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to: mailto:[log in to unmask] In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn