The Six Components of the 2008 Quackbuster Operation...
Opinion
by Consumer Advocate
Tim Bolen
Friday, February 22nd, 2008
Do not, for even a second,
think that the US "Quackbuster" operation, a plot to stop anyone, and
everyone, from changing the broken US health care system, is run, or even
maintained, by delicensed MD Stephen Barrett out of his 2421 West Greenleaf
Street, Allentown,
Pennsylvania address, or his condo at 287 Stoneview, Pittsboro,
North Carolina. It would be foolish to assume that this bitter, nasty,
old man, who stumbles through life, tripping from one professional failure to
another, is running a cleverly set up plot. He's just the "front man."
The one they want you to focus on. He's ill. He'll die soon, and
someone else will take his place as the frontispiece.
So, who really is running it?
And why? And, how is it being done? Keep reading, and all will be
revealed.
SUMMARY:
The 2008 Quackbuster operation
is involved in “info
wars” on the internet. It is a public relations "black-ops,"
run out of a New York misinformation agency. It has six components designed to do
two things: (1) provide false and misleading negative healthcare information,
primarily through the internet, to (a) the
general public, and (b) employees of health insurance companies, medical malpractice insurance
companies, health agencies, County, State, and Federal
enforcement agencies about those trying to fix/change the health
care system, and people, therapies, products, etc., that compete with the
current status quo, and (2) block, or diminish sources of substantial information
about positive aspects of those people, therapies, products, etc, that compete
with the status quo.
The plot is pervasive, well
funded, and well run. And, it's time to break it up. This article
will give you the information on how it works, and tips on how to stop it from
affecting YOU and your interests.
The New
York agency's
intent is to not
just defame, but to make that defamation, through organization, appear at the
top of the search engines like Google. Below, I’ll show you how they do
that. They have organized to manipulate the online encyclopedia
Wikipedia
information about health care. They also, through people trained in
disruption, troll Usenet (google) discussion groups, badmouthing advanced
health care,
regularly.
I emphasize that all of this
attack is “organized”… and can be traced back to the same people – about five,
or six, of them.
In other words,
it is not just about Quackwatch. Worldwide, there are four major “quackbuster”
centers: the US, Denmark, Canada, and Australia. In the US we are familiar
with Barrett, Baratz, etc. In Australia we have “ratbags,” Peter Bowditch.
In Canada we have Terry Polevoy. In Denmark we have Paul Lee PT (quackfiles).
The
up-and-comer in all this is Paul Lee PT from Denmark, for it is he who manages both the
Wikipedia information manipulation system, and the search engine top
ranking system I’ll describe below. Although, the TWO systems, in place, give
the quackbuster operation “info wars” advantage they also, because of how, and
where, they did it, bring Lee, Polevoy and Bowditch, and all of the foreign
operations under the jurisdiction of
the US Court system. In other words - they made a big mistake, in their
eagerness to corrupt.
Why? Because
Wikipedia is based in Florida. The search engine placement system they use,
called “webring” is based in Ashland, Oregon. Since they do business
with these US companies, they are subject to be sued for their activities in
this country.
THE COMPONENTS:
(1)
The Quackbuster Communication Network
has five parts:
(a) The Consumer Health
Digest is a newsletter with mailing list of over twelve thousand names.
The newsletter is sent out weekly to the mailing list. The list is made
up of lower and middle level employees of county, state, and federal
health administration and enforcement agencies, and employees of health insurance and medical
malpractice insurance company employees. The so-called "Digest" is a
simple tool to do two things: (1) propagandize those lower level employees into believing that
the targets of the so-called articles are "bad people," criminals, doubtfuls,
etc., and (2) convince those employees that they should
devote time to investigating, prosecuting, or, at the very least, watching, the
targets constantly.
If you, or yours, are the
subject of any article on this newsletter - beware, for the readers of these
articles are not the brightest people in the world, and would tend to believe
what they read.
(b) The Health Fraud
Discussion Group has two functions: (1) People making inquiries of
information on "quackwatch.org" are "invited" to ask questions on this
discussion group where, supposedly, "experts" will give the inquirer more
information. Those "experts" are just more quackbuster operatives
relaying more of the same lies and misinformation. (2) The
discussion group provides a format for the quackbusters to showcase subjects,
or people they want to defame or deride.
(c)
The Skeptics Discussion Group is simply a
means for the quackbuster propaganda system to tie into the worldwide
"Skeptic" organization by trying to interest the Skeptic movement in being
super-critical of the issues the quackbusters promote. Frankly, I don't
know how well this works, or doesn't work, for them, because the involved
so-called "skeptics" I see publicly are, for the most part, dolts - pseudo-skeptics
operating in a pseudo-intellectual mode, trying to impress others with their
claims to Mensa status - and not doing very well at it.
(d) The James Randi Discussion Group is an
odd thing. James Randi, who bills himself as "The Amazing Randi," is, it
appears, a fifth-rate magician who seems to play the Motel-6 Lounge Circuit in
the US. He gets himself on television promoting various "doubts" about various
things. Randi is not very impressive, and when you batch that together
with his gargantuan ego, and his pompous presentations, you get just about
what you would expect.
(e) SSR.com is the
lair of Scott Ballantyne and the ScottSoft Research group out of New York City. SSR.com
is the HOST for all of the above.
Ballantyne is a relative unknown, and there is no obvious reason apparent why
Ballantyne provides expertise, time, and labor to host, and manage, the four
activities above. I suspect he is funded directly out of the New York
misinformation
agency.
Note - for those of you who wish
to subpoena information (and you should) from SSR.com (Ballantyne), about the
activities of these entities above in regards to individual clients, contact
me, and I'll provide the data you need for subpoenas - and more.
Ballantyne, I think, is in a panic (and he should be), lately, for he destroyed
all of the archives of the Health Fraud Discussion Group, as he says, "for
legal reasons."
(2)
The Quackbuster manipulation of Wikipedia, the online encyclopedia:
Wikipedia is an odd thing.
It is made up of a so-called "volunteer system." Several years ago, a
team of quackbusters infiltrated various levels of the Wikipedia operation,
and are now entrenched in the middle, and lower, level volunteer management
system. If you try and put any positive information about advanced
medicine, or the problems of US health care, on Wikipedia, or change false or
misleading information the quackbusters have installed, you will fail. You will be blocked
from further "editing" and the pages of Wikipedia will now carry information
about what a "terrible person you are." The only way to have
ANY influence over what Wikipedia says about subject is to approach them
with a legal threat letter at the highest levels. Nothing else works.
Even that has problems, for Wikipedia management operates on a financial
shoestring, and apparently has no ability to police its own encyclopedia.
Unfortunately, people use the encyclopedia - and they get very bad information
about health care.
Below is a paragraph from
the editor’s section of Wikipedia. The editor, here, is discussing the
problem of the quackbuster slime, acting to control the information flow on
Wikipedia - and what to do about it. so you understand the abbreviation
POV stand for Point of View, and NPOV stands for No Point of View, which
Wikipedia wants. The part in red is for emphasis. Read this:
I guess it depends on what purpose the External Links section serves. Do the
links have to serve the NPOV interests of the article or can the links section
be a place where specific points-of-view can have a chance to be expressed? As
it is now, the chiropractic link section is broken down into Advocacy and
Critiques. I think that this warns the researcher that they are leaving the
NPOV environment that Wikipedia tries to provide and will be entering a POV
external site.
If these links are truly just linking to the page for marketing reasons and
don't serve a primary function of adding to the knowledge-base, I would then
say to axe them. I haven't checked every critical link, but they do seem to
link to essays or research on pages that don't directly try to sell you
anything (other than their POV). If they are all offering the same POV with no
really distinguishing differences, then they should be reduced in number.
The soapbox point is interesting. These are external links so it would seem
that Wikipedia is not being directly exploited as a soapbox. However, the
abundance of critical links could be seen as an attempt to present bias...
using the amount of negative criticisms to invoke a negative POV about
chiropractic. My solution up until now has been to add to the advocacy links to
balance out the criticism. You can certainly try to delete the critical links
and claim NPOV but I can almost guarantee you that you be quickly (and
improperly) accused of "vandalism" by one of three specific chiroskeptics who
police the chiropractic page all day long as far as I can tell. They love to
throw "vandalism" accusations around - and usually are vastly overstating the
matter. That being said, I have suggested a "disarming" strategy, where both
sides would remove links in a balanced way, but my suggestion was met with
silence.
Now as far as the link farming goes.
Yes, virtually all of the critical sites are linked
together through the SkepticRing, Anti-Quackery Ring, Chiropractic Subluxated
Ring and other ways fashioned specifically for the purpose of boosting Search
Engine ranking. A lot of those sites are operated by Stephen Barrett and his
buddy Sammy Homola - Chirobase.org, Quackwatch.org, and NCAHF. They're three
organizations all saying the same thing. What's really slimy is that they
state opinions then reference their sister-sites support to that opinion. A
lot of the links are operated or moderated by
Fyslee (one of the three chiroskepics users who regularly
accuse people of vandalism for removing links to his sites). Check out his
userpage to see which sites he operates and moderates for. These
chiroskepitics are working together to actively employ search engine tricks
such as artifically boosting Google ranking by adding external links to their
sites all over Wikipedia. I have documented this. Their goal is for a
researcher curious about chiropractic to encounter their anti-chiropractic
sites first on a Google search. Given these organizations' objective, I can
certainly understand why they would want to do this. Unfortunately, the
tactics that they employ are objectionable to both Google and Wikipedia.
Hopefully these organizations will get wise to the chiroskeptic ring and ban
their sites.
I'm not sure what to do in the meantime. One thing that I would like to
suggest is that a website is linked to only once in the external links
section. As it is now, they are linking to Chirobase and NCAHF several times
throughout the article and in the external links section. Talk about boosting
external link popularity!
I think that if you showed that some of these links are not providing anything
new and are just marketing tools, you should be able to justify deleting them
on the discussion page... just prepare yourself for an attack and false
accusations. If you can handle all of that with a cool head, I say, "Be bold
with your edits!"
I welcome your continued participation on the Chirorpactic and
chiropractic-related articles. I think that you have a lot of great insight to
offer Wikipedia and you seem to have a vary good graspe on Wikipedia's
guidelines. I look forward to your future edits and discussions.
As a side note, I think the reason the chiroskeptics are "shouting" so loud is
that they are realizing that nobody is listening to them. Chiropractic is
growing faster than ever and more and more patients are receiving the benefits
everyday.
Levine2112 00:41, 14 February 2006 (UTC)
Note - for those of you who wish
to subpoena information (and you should) from Wikipedia, about the activities
of these entities above in regards to individual clients, contact me, and I'll
provide the data you need for lawsuits, subpoenas, cease and desist letters - and more. Wikipedia is already
on notice about the problem. Frankly, their system is goofy, and I can
see how they got manipulated. The articles in the media criticizing
Wikipedia are on target, and there needs to be more of them. Wikipedia
deserves the criticism.
(3)
The Quackbuster manipulation of internet search engines (Google, Yahoo, etc.):
Ever wonder how the crap
quackbusters spew about people, therapies, or products they don't like appears
FIRST on the internet search engines? I'm about to tell you how they do
that, how to stop it, and how to sue them individually, and together, for having done it. You're
going to love this.
There is, on the internet, a
whole industry surrounding the idea of getting YOUR information on the first
page of search engines like Google. The quackbuster operation uses a
company to get their defamation, and false and misleading information on the first
page, and the first several pages, of a search engine. If you are a target of theirs, you need to know
this, and how it works.
How do they manipulate search engine placement? They use the services of a company called Webring
which, for a fee, ties their webring together in such a way as to give
each and every of theirr websites top google placement. The Anti-Quackery webring has 85 websites banded together. Their
Skeptic webring has 150
websites. Their Chiropractic Subluxation webring has about five websites.
They all work together.
Here is how
the company Webring explains their service:
WebRing
offers a unique and effective means of searching, locating and navigating
between web sites with similar themes. WebRing allows web site owners to group
their sites together into ring communities, and provides a navigation tool
that links web sites together called a NavBar. Linked sites not only eliminate
the necessity of repetitive searches, but
the NavBar also accumulates hits from all of the sites so that a
hit to one site is a hit to all sites. Additionally,
the NavBar acts as a link so your
web site is linked to every other site in the community. So now
your site is benefiting from higher search
engine results because it has more hits and more links.
I’m going to
give you a short tour of how it works by having you click on a URL. This will
take you to a page on the Webring website reserved for the “Anti-quackery
webring” manipulated by Paul Lee PT. When you scroll down to see the list of the 85 members, you will notice that there are but a few major websites. Most
of them are one-page “made up” stuff. Go here:
http://g.webring.com/hub?ring=antiquackerysite
Note - for those of you who wish
to subpoena information (and you should) from webring.com about the
activities of these entities above in regards to individual clients, contact
me, and I'll provide the data you need for subpoenas - and more. But,
for sure, subpoena all personal, and business, information gathered by Webring for each and every
member, and ringmaster, of the “Anti-quackery webring,” the “Skeptic webring,”
the “Anti-quackery links,” and the “Chiropractic is Subluxated” webring.
(4)
The Quackbuster infiltration of (Usenet) Internet AltMed Discussion Groups:
Ilena Rosenthal, the head of the
anti silicone breast implant Humantics Foundation has been a victim of the New
York agency's campaign for years. How has she been victimized? Two
ways. (1) First, she's a target by an organized group that seeks
to deride her, personally, so as to nullify her efforts to show the severe
health problems of silicone breast implants. The New York agency's
tactic is to attack her in the internet discussion groups. Their
favorite internet tactic is claim that this happily married woman has
constant sex with huge numbers of men, and animals. They get away with
this, for the most part, because they use "fake" internet IDs, difficult to
trace, and because those who are known live outside the US, and they know
Rosenthal does not have the money to sue them in several different foreign
countries simultaneously. (2) Stephen Barrett of
quackwatch.com, and Terry Polevoy from Canada filed a false
lawsuit against her - and, even though the lawsuit rebounded against them, and
they had to pay her attorney fees of over $500,000, the fight took its toll.
The New York based group invades
every internet discussion group it can find, and using similar tactics to
those used against Rosenthal, derides and defames those trying to upgrade the
health system. There are not that many of them, and we can now identify
who most of them are, and who they work for.
Note - for those of you who wish
to subpoena information (and you should) from discussion group files, and
hosting companies, about the
activities of these entities above in regards to individual clients, contact
me, and I'll provide the data you need for subpoenas - and more.
(5)
Blacklisting certain health
practitioners:
In the early 1990s, now deceased
John Renner MD, then president of the infamous National Council Against Health
Fraud (NCAHF) had put together a "blacklist" of health professionals which he
was distributing to Health Insurance companies and State licensing Boards.
There were about 2500 names on that list at the time. The idea of the
secret list was to, obviously, damage these health professionals behind the
scenes without those professionals knowing about the attack. Renner, I
think, was trying for secrecy so he wouldn't get his ass sued off. The
list did make an appearance, though, and Renner, and his minions began to have
trouble.
Then, a second list appeared,
this time assembled, and marketed, by an attorney named Grace Powers Monaco
who had started a company called Emprise, which received some of its funding
from a $500k annual grant from the National Institute for Health (NIH).
Emprise was killed after two things happened - (1) a group called "Act
UP" went after their funding, and (2) Emprise got named in a RICO suit
in Texas. NIH, among other things, pulled their funding.
So, what happened to the secret
list? Do you think the New York agency just dropped that idea? Of
course not.
I know where the list is, and
how its being used today, and who's doing it. There are over 40,000
names on that list now, probably the names of health professionals who have
side-stepped away from the drugs, drugs, and more drugs paradigm, and use
successful methods on their patients.
The list is part of a "clearing
house" operation used by insurance companies to make decisions about payment.
When either a practitioner, or a patient, files a claim for insurance
benefits, the data is fed into a computer which then checks the name of the
practitioner involved in the transaction. If the name of the
practitioner is on the 40,000 list, the claim is re-routed through the "fraud
unit" of the insurance billing system, who then handles the claim as though it
were fraudulent. From there, it gets bundled with other claims having
gone the same route, and goes to a special unit that has connections to the
Federal Health Fraud Task Force. Soon, the practitioner gets a visit,
not just from a Federal Investigator, but a State Licensing Board
Investigator. Why? What has the practitioner done wrong?
Nothing, of course. Someone just put him or her on the secret list so
that they would be the subject of intense suspicion and scrutiny, constantly.
As I said above, I know how its
being done, and by whom. But, I don't have enough information to, yet, prove
it in Court. What I need is a related Federal Court case with subpoena
power available. If someone has that, I can provide the information on
who, what, where, and why, certain things need to be subpoenaed. Why
"Federal?" Because the operation is spread over several States.
(6)
Blocking health information from the internet
Having trouble finding
legitimate research papers that back up the science of advanced health care?
Of course you are. There is a systematic attempt to make those kinds of
scientific research NOT available on the internet. I'm not going into
detail here, for the investigation of how this works, AND WHO, SPECIFICALLY,
is behind it is ongoing. But, it is happening.
MORE:
There is an awful lot of
money and power playing in the US healthcare system stakes. The system
is badly broken, and there are those who want to keep it that way because,
simply, the money flow is tremendous, and a healthy American public is not in
the interests of big pharma, and other multi-national groups. Alert,
healthy people tend to make reasonable demands of their government.
Our US health care system is
broken, and there is a misinformation group, based in New York City, that for
a price, will attack anyone, or any company, or group that exist. Just
write the checks, and they'll begin. Their customer list is impressive.
Stay tuned...
Tim Bolen - Consumer Advocate