Another interesting website on the subject is maintained by the "California College of Ayurveda". Be sure to see the article on Parkinson's at: http://www.ayurvedacollege.com/services/articles/parkinson.htm It explains a lot, but only if you develop a new vocabulary and a new belief system. NKPorter On Friday, December 27, 2002, at 10:18 PM, Rick Hermann wrote: > 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 > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to: mailto:[log in to unmask] In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn