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#837: Peter Klevberg

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Peter Klevberg is a Civil Engineer affiliated with Creation Ministries International, and hence a hardcore young earth creationist. In fact, Klevberg appears to be affiliated also with Answers in Genesis, and has written or contributed to several articles for their house journal Answers Research Journal. To volume 1, for instance, Klevberg coauthored (with Michael Oard) “Green River Formation Very Likely Did Not Form in a Postdiluvial Lake”, which looks at the data that fits their concluion and disregards the rest, which they are apparently allowed to do because of Jesus. The article, of course, appears to assume the most recent developments in Flood Geology, developments that have made Flood Geology just as respectable as it was before.

Apparently flood geology is something Klevberg considers an area of expertise, and his work is sometimes cited by other creationists in lieu of anything better that doesn’t completely contradict whatever they want to believe in.

Diagnosis: Stock denialist fundamentalist. His personal influence is probably limited, though he does add momentum to the denialist movement by sheer deadweight.

#838: Robert Knight

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Robert H. Knight is wingnut writer and activist. He was a draftsman of DOMA, and currently senior fellow of the Orwellian American Civil Rights Union and regular columnist for the Moonie Times (as well as frequent contributor to e.g. Townhall and WND). He has also been affiliated with Coral Ridge Ministries (now Truth in Action), director of the Culture and Media Institute, and director of the Culture & Family Institute, an affiliate of Concerned Women for America.

Yes, zeh gays figure prominently on Knight’s radar. According to Knight, as explained in his article “Counterfeit Marriage is Anti-Religion”, marriage equality “violates the very essence of marriage;” and legalizing same-sex marriage would do “incalculable” damage to religious freedom and endanger the future of society because where “marriage is weak, devalued or redefined, communities fail.” (What that has to do with the anti-religion stuff is a different matter.) He concludes that “creating a counterfeit and then forcing it down people’s throats is straight out of George Orwell’s Newspeak in 1984,” though a quick glance of the names of the organizations Knight is involved with suggests that he should be careful about making accusations of “Newspeak”. According to Knight “the left’s drive for ‘gay rights’ poses the greatest domestic threat to the freedoms of religion, speech and assembly.” The justification for the claim seems to be that they favor things Knight doesn’t like, therefore tyranny, woe, and Armageddon. He has also accused Obama of trying “to invoke Christ when doing the devil’s work” and creating “the sinews of tyranny,” when Obama came out in support of marriage equality. “Weare in the grip of an unholy regime,” – but we were warned; Knight did point out that Obama’s reelection in 2012 could destroy America).

Knight’s reaction to the overturning of Prop 8 was also … well, he isn’t afraid of going over the top, at least: “The judge’s contempt for the rule of law and a constitutionally guaranteed self-governing republic cannot be overemphasized,” said Knight. “With courts turning traditional values into a form of ‘hate’ actionable under the law, we are seeing the criminalization of not only Christianity but of the foundational values of civilization itself.” In other words, once again not allowing Christian fundamentalists to use the government to enforce their bigotry means that the government is criminalizing Christianity itself. As a response to the ruling he advocated for southern California to secede to “stop gay jihad”.

Here he blames Abu Ghraib on the gays and how gay culture and sin have come to permeate the military through conscious efforts from liberals to purge the armed forces of Christianity.

As the careful reader will have gathered, Knight has somewhat non-standard understandings of notions such as “freedom” and “values”. His idea of religious freedom, for instance, is that it amounts to his right to impose his religious views on everyone while preventing others from imposing theirs. He has even invented a novel legal strategy for ensuring that Christianity can legally be imposed on everyone: Argue that if you don’t allow them to impose Christianity on everyone, you’re establishing the religion of atheism. It is actually not novel. It has been tried before without particular success. He has also claimed that defending voting rights in America is “treason", because, in Knight’s deranged mind, defenders of voting rights long for “an electoral system like those in Cuba, China or Saudi Arabia, whose representatives hung on his every word, trashed his own country. I was not there, but I’m assuming these regimes enjoyed seeing a certified ‘civil rights’ leader [Benjamin Jealous of the NAACP] criticize the United States.” He does have an uncanny ability to draw mindboggling conclusions from premises that completely contradict those conclusions, we’ll grant him that.

Sometimes he drives, howlingly and garbledly, into pure conspiracy land as well, as when he tried to argue that Steven Spielberg made the movie Lincoln to help Obama implement health care reform. In fact, conspiracies are staple fare. When Knight encounters legislations or reports or projects he disagree with, he is always careful to report to his readers that the sponsors are homosexuals, know homosexuals, have homosexuals in their family, or, in the case of Henry Waxman (D. Calif.), “represents West Hollywood, a homosexual enclave in Los Angeles County.” Thus he doesn’t even need to discuss the contents of those legislations or reports or projects; they are clearly evil and designed to undermine Christianity.

And sometimes it is hard to even describe what he is doing, as when he called Peter LaBarbera “today’s Paul Revere”.

Some attention was awarded Knight when Bryant Gumbel called him a “fucking idiot” on The Early Show (Gumbel thought he was off the air). Tim Graham was shocked, but the rest of us probably realize that “fucking idiot” is a pretty mild way of describing Robert Knight.

There is a fine resource on Knight here, and here is a good article on Knight’s bizarre rants on feminism.

Diagnosis: Even for a wingnut’s wingnut anti-freedom activist this guy is unusually incoherent and dense. 

#839: Jake Knotts

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John M. “Jake” Knotts, Jr. is a Republican member of the South Carolina Senate and previously member of the South Carolina House of Representatives. He is most famous for calling the gubernatorial candidate and currently Republican governor of South Carolina Nikki Haley a “fucking raghead” (Haley is an Indian-American). He later apologized for having used the word “fucking”. The thing is, Haley is a methodist, but Knotts does not believe that. Knotts believes Haley is really a non-Christian: “Have you ever asked her if she believes in Jesus Christ as her lord and savior and that he died on the cross for her sins? Have you ever asked her that?” His evidence of subversiveness is of course her skin color. To further bolster his candidacy for inclusion in the Encyclopedia, Knotts also invoked Obama: “We got a raghead in Washington; we don’t need one in South Carolina,” which suggests that Knotts has a, shall we say, traditional view of race. Being dimly aware that this could become an issue Knotts also emphasized that “many of his supporters are black.”

And of course, it is never complete without some real conspiracies. Knotts asserted that he believed Haley had been set up by a network of Sikhs and was programmed to run for governor of South Carolina by outside influences in foreign countries, and that she is – for this purpose – hiding her “true” religion. Having Haley as a Sikh running for high office in America is a problem, Knotts says, in part because “we’re at war over there.” He didn’t attempt to clarify.

Diagnosis: Good ol’ Southern boy, apparently. 

#840: Marion Knox

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Marion Knox is a farmer in Lebanon, Oregon who “more and more is called upon to do the work of deliverance, not deprogramming.” For $5 you can obtain a copy of his Biblical Perspective of Ritual Abuse, that lays out how Illuminati programming is structured and how Knox delivers – and reintegrates – DIDs through Jesus Christ. It takes some effort to unravel that one, but the gist of it is that the government is run by the Illuminati and Freemasons and the Rothschild family; he – yes, it’s a guy – lays out their master plan in an interview with Ron Patton here), and they use their powers to create mind-slaves through various forms of brainwashing technology (particularly through the Monarch Program).

Knox offers to deprogram you. How does Knox know that you have been brain-manipulated by the Jews? Well, here is a statement from Knox that may give you a hint: “the presence of Elohim spirits usually indicate Freemasonic programming that is installed by sodomy.” As he puts it “based on what you might call research,” Knox has discovered that most mindslaves of the Illuminati have been programmed at the age of 2-4, and “in order to be programmable there needs to be a change in the way their mind works between two and four. That change can only be achieved by sodomy.” Wait, what? According to Knox sodomy “attacks the nerves at the base of the spine and causes something neurological to happen within the brain. It also has a spiritual, demonic component to it […].” Apparently “sodomy puts in a deaf and dumb spirit and causes memory loss so that some people may remember occult rituals but won’t remember the sodomy. But sodomy is the foundation of the whole thing. It is called ‘the key of David’ by the Rothschild Illuminati,” and apparently it “goes back to Nimrod. This is the Egyptian initiation of the child to open the third eye. […] Sodomy is always used in the occult going clear back before the Flood. Sodomy is Satan’s sex or Satan’s new birth of the child. I don’t believe anybody can become fully illuminated unless they have been sodomized at around three years of age […] because you can’t open the third eye after about five or six years of age.” Or to sum up: “I say that Monarch programming is basically sodomy programming.”

Migraines are another piece of evidence of tinkering by occult sodomists, though, as he admits in an interview with Elana Freedland, he is not “saying all migraine headaches are from sodomy because I had one once that was put on me by a retired chiropractor and he did not sodomize me. But I think he was a sodomite.”

To sum up, it seems that sodomy is a necessary condition for people to have their pineal glands attain magical powers and “to be able to become a mystic, whether it’s a Catholic mystic or any other kind of mystic.” But what does it have to do with mind control? I suppose it is once again best to let Knox explain: “Those who have been programmed have a locked-in three-year-old mindset which is the core of the programming. Say they’re eighteen or twenty years old and somebody comes up and knows the signal or says the code word to call out the three-year-old core. The person then goes into the three-year-old state to be sodomized, then the sodomites program into their minds what they want to program in.” Yeah, I suppose that must be it.

Like Scott Lively, Knox thinks that “the Nazis were not Right-Wing Conservative Creationists; they were Left-Wing Darwinian Evolutionary Socialists” (and he does even cite Lively’s book The Pink Swastika as evidence). And you’ve got to love the solid evidence he presents for the claim that occult sodomy has been around for a long time: “Ignatius Loyola, founder of the Jesuits, was a Catholic mystic; he had to have been a sodomized one. He was the guy who headed up the Inquisition to persecute those who didn’t adhere to the tenets of the Catholic faith. Terribly cruel! How could you be that cruel if you didn’t have the sodomy rage?” Could you ask for more evidence? And problems in the Middle East? According to Knox in Saudi Arabia “women are for children and men are for love. The violence and hatred in that kind of stuff is produced by sodomy; it produces the internal rage.”

And so it goes. You could find more on Knox here or here, if you wanted to.

Diagnosis: It is remarkable what interesting other notions utter Biblical literalism and fundamentalism can be combined with. There are probably limits to Knox’s influence, but we would probably recommend that you keep a reasonable distance.

#841: Mark Koernke

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A.k.a. “Mark from Michigan”

Mark Koernke and his wife Nancy are prominent militia activists and shortwave radio broadcasters in Michigan, which is already well known for its militia groups. Mark Koernke is renowned as an early proponent of – and to a large extent responsible for popularizing – the black helicopter paranoia so widespread among conspiracy theorists (there is a fine take on it here. He used to be a host of his own radio show, “The Intelligence Report”, on World Wide Christian Radio until the station indefinitely suspended his broadcasts, partially because Koernke claimed that authorities were setting up Timothy J. McVeigh for assassination, thereby suggesting that McVeigh was some kind of militia hero. Koernke is also known for his various educational videos on the New World Order, including “America in Peril”, the first in a trilogy.

After he had served a three to seven year sentence in prison for assaulting police, resisting arrest, and fleeing from police in a car chase, Koernke claimed that he had been set up by the  co-founder of the Republic radio network syndicating his show, which was not taken into consideration by the courts. He currently hosts “The Intelligence Report” on Liberty Tree Radio and the Micro Effect. He and his wife is also behind the website Patriot Broadcasting Network – their website here is worth a look, in particular their recommendations regarding TACMARS - where they appear to give advice to militia groups and people on the run from the guvmint. It is sometimes a little scary, as illustrated by this exchange. Koernke also creates youtube videos to flaunt his lack of comprehension of reality and his paranoia.

Diagnosis: Deeply crazy. Though his impact is probably relatively limited (depending on how you view the militia movement – his influence is substantial there) one is always afraid that Koernke’s is a situation that may at some point end rather sadly.

#842: Kelly Kohls

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Kelly Kohls is (the former) Chairman of Warren County Tea Party who was elected to the Springboro school board on a platform of fiscal responsibility. And then you know where this is going. She requested that the district’s curriculum director look into ways of providing “supplemental” instruction dealing with creationism in public schools. According to Kohls, “[c]reationism is a significant part of the history of this country,” which is silly, and “it is an absolutely valid theory and to omit it means we are omitting part of the history of this country,” which is even more stupid – even though John Silvius, professor of the insanely fundamentalist creationist teaching institution Cedarville University and signatory to the Discovery Institute-led petition A Scientific Dissent from Darwinism, apparently offered his support. As did the fundamentalist organization the Liberty Institute, which “focused solely on protecting and restoring religious liberty in the United States,” (by “religious liberty” they mean, of course, not liberty), and the board indeed accepted their help in hammering out the policy.

Board members in favor of the creationist move included Scott Anderson, the other tea party school member, and Jim Rigano.

The situation was discussed in some more detail here, and some interesting details are discussed here and here. Encouragingly, parents and students in the district were not unequivocally favorable toward Kohls’s et al.'s lunatic attempts to undermine science in favor of their cherished fundamentalist views. Apparently Kohls decided not to run for reelection in 2013, and though we don’t have the full overview things look to have improved significantly in Springboro, Ohio (though Rigano, at least, is still on the board, it seems).

Diagnosis: Stock loons whose lack of competency, intelligence or knowledge is apparently viewed as an asset in some parts of the country. Springboro, however, does seem to have voted for sanity in the end.

#827: Roy Kerry

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Roy Kerry is an alternative medicine practitioner (he runs the Advanced Integrative Medicine Center in Portersville, Pennsylvania), member of the American College for Advancement in Medicine (a pseudomedical organization), and one of the foremost champions of chelation therapy as a treatment for autism. Now, chelation therapy, in addition to being ineffective against autism, is a rather dangerous affair, and in 2006 a boy died during a chelation therapy regime administered by Kerry, which finally led officials to scrutinize the use of this particularly insidious treatment. Kerry (who was an M.D. at the time) had his license temporarily suspended, was barred from chelating children under age 18 in the future, and sued by the victim's parents (the suit was settled in 2010 with payment of an undisclosed sum). At least the case is one of many counterexamples to people who are prone to claim that although alternative therapies may not have been proven to be efficacious, at least the do no harm.

Kerry, in this case and others, is apparently convinced that autism is linked to heavy metal poisoning, and admitted to using bogus tests in this case to back up his diagnosis.

Diagnosis: Living proof of the fact that alternative treatments are actually directly harmful (and not just that accepting them poses a long-term danger). Kerry is still afoot, however. 

#843: Gary Kompothecras

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A.k.a. Dr. Gary

Gary Kompothecras is a Florida chiropractor with quite a bit of money and particularly strong anti-vaccine beliefs. The money can be used to purchase political influence, of course. Kompothecras did for instance contribute heavily to Charlie Crist’s campaign and was subsequently appointed to the governor’s task force on autism. He used his influence to bully Florida health officials in support of quackery, in particular Mark & David Geier’s Lupron protocol, and he got the governor’s office to put weight behind his bullying – which included requests to violate HIPAA in the process. In fact, Kompothecras is a big contributor to the Geiers’ antivaxx organization CoMeD (whose president is one Rev. Lisa K. Sykes, an interesting qualification given the nature of the effort).

Kompothecras also pushed for a weakening of Florida’s vaccine requirements for public schools. Indeed, he managed to get himself the nickname “rainmaker” because of his political connections.

Diagnosis: Although he’s not among the loudest or most often cited members of the denialist movement, Kompothecras is certainly one of the more dangerous – few would be able to cause as extensive damage as him. Definitely one to keep an eye on.

#844: Gene Koonce

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Gene Koonce is the President of VIBE Technologies, LLC in Greeley, CO. They sell stuff, and as you might expect, the stuff Koonce is out to sell you has to do (at least according to the marketing) with healing, and with vibration, and hence we are up for some truly serious woo: “We at VIBE Technologies are committed to raising the physical, emotional, mental and spiritual vibrations of each living individual on the planet,” says the VIBE people.

One of the great inventions manufactured by VIBE technologies is the V.I.B.E. machine. How does it work? It is an “electronic device that brings the vibrational level of your body back to its natural state of being. VIBE stands for Vibrational Integrated Bio-photonic Energizer” (which I think means that it is a lamp). It is worth quoting the product description in some detail:

Human DNA conformational changes have been previously used to measure energetic influences of subtle energy generated by healers. This new bio-assay measures direct resonances with the physical DNA as well as underlying quantum process associated with hydrogen bond formation. Experiments reported here were designed to measure possible correlations between psychotronic and biochemical measurement of DNA in real time as physical DNA rewound following thermal denaturation. Physical measurements of DNA were made in NY using a spectrophotometer and radionic measurements were made in Ohio using the Harmonic Translator. An active phone line created a connection between the two locations and allowed exact timing for simultaneous measurements using both devices.”

Oh boy. They used realphone lines. Clearly this must be taken seriously, though we were, admittedly, not aware that DNA worked the way the authors claim it works. There is also a lot of talk about energy and intent:

Have you ever wondered why one person walking down a dark alley at night will get mugged while the previous person goes by untouched? Bad things may happen to apparently ‘good’ people and good things may happen to seemingly ‘bad’ people. This phenomena is all based upon the level of positive or negative energy that they are sending out into the Universe. You are like a radio tower that is constantly sending out a certain frequency of energy. Your thoughts and feelings together create an ‘energetic blueprint’ that is constantly being emitted out into the world. The interesting thing is that this vibration is always being reflected back to you, showing up as physical results in your life. What you send out is EXACTLY what you get back!

I don’t think the universe works that way.

What about the experiments they are talking about ? The study in question is called “Clinical study on Direct Correlations between Psychotronic and Biochemical Measures of Human DNA”, and the authors are:
- Glen Rein, who does Quantum Biology Research for The Society for Scientific Exploration, where he has also contributed “Homeopathy: Energetic Mechanism For Information Storage”; and
- Peter Moscow, who is a holistic philosophy consultant.
In other words, they are precisely the kind of "researchers" whom you'd suspect would be able to find the contraption to be effective.

In any case it seems that the V.I.B.E. machine is unavailable at present: “Currently the V.I.B.E. Machine is going through FDA clearance …,” says the company’s website, which should be translated into saying that the FDA sent Koonce a rather angry warning letter. Fortunately, “[i]n the meantime, learn how to heal your mind-body with ancient techniques in our Manifesting Manual,” which is probably just as effective and much cheaper.

Diagnosis: Since this is, by assumption, not fraud, we have to conclude that there is some serious crazy going on here. It is doubtful that the efforts of VIBE Technologies will have very much impact, however. 

#845: Jay Kordich

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A.k.a. “the Juice Man”

Jay Kordich, the Juice Man, is a television personality, author, motivational speaker, and lecturer, and is known as “a father” (which is, of course, deliberately not the same as “an expert”) in the field of vegetable juicing, fruit juicing and nutrition. Kordich is an advocate of rawfoodism, and suggests that avoiding cooked food and drinking a lot of juice is helpful with regard to health issues.

According to his bio he was at some point diagnosed with bladder cancer, for which he sought out Max Gerson’s quack treatment focusing on raw juices and cleansing diets, went on a regimen of 13 eight-ounce glasses of carrot-apple juice a day, and claims that the regimen cured him. He doesn’t have a shred of proof that juice cured him of cancer, but – you know – nothing beats a dubious anecdote, especially when it is coupled with some fallacious appeals to nature. From there on, he would devote his life to making television appearances promoting juicing, and actually managed to gain some popularity for that. He is also the author e.g. of Live Foods, Live Bodies, a raw food preparation book coauthored with his wife Linda.

He has a substantial Quackwatch presence, and his methods are covered in detail here.

Diagnosis: As usual, we assume that his efforts are intended to help, but, sadly, when critical thinking skills and understanding of evidence and reality are absent, such efforts can have rather insidious consequences. Dangerous.

#846: Jason Nicholas Korning (?*)

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Jason Nicholas Korning is, according to himself, a Roman Catholic scholar and writer specializing in the Hebrew Bible, the Maccabees, and the Talmud. He is also the founder of the Eternal Order of St. Judas Maccabeus. Their website is here, and it is not for the faint of heart. Most of the material concerns politics. Korning does, for instance, dismiss democracy as unbiblical and totally gay:

It should be remembered that ‘democracy’ was originally advocated by the philosophers Plato and Socrates, both homosexual pedophiles. Some contend that these historical facts are irrelevant. There are others who claim that, because of this, democracy is inherently homosexual. This may well be the case. Consider the fact that, just recently, the people of Canada and Spain, along with quite a few other democratic Christian nations, actually voted in favor of same sex marriages. For the first time in more than 2,000 years, the State was now allowed to sanction sodomy as an individual right and to give explicit approval and encouragement to the act of anal sex.”

You can also find Korning discuss the Russian revolution, and the extent to which Moses was a scientific genius, 3000 years ahead of his time (it requires some, shall we say, charitable interpretation of certain passages in Genesis, and a certain amount of shoehorning) – he also manages to dismiss alternative creation stories as fairytales: “not a single ancient Creation story ever truly addresses the material world’s origins in a scientific manner, with the sole exception of the Book of Genesis.” Right.

Diagnosis: Korning is hardly a threat to anything or anyone, which is a rather good thing considering that his aptitude for reality and reason is a bit shaky.

*Why the question mark? I simply cannot quite shake the feeling that he is an elaborate poe. 

#847: Robert J. Krakow

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Robert Krakow is a lawyer affiliated with the antivaccine movement, whose main goal, it seems, is to get parents of children with vaccines to sue. Thus far, the court cases have been more or less failures, of course, but who knows what will happen next time? Krakow isn’t just a cynical opportunist, it seems, but an actual, true believer in the idea that thimerosal in vaccines causes autism, which – given the distance between that hypothesis and reality – doesn’t really help in court (or make is efforts relevantly less vile, for that matter).

With well-known anti-vaccine activists Mary Holland, Louis Conte, and Lisa Colin, he authored “Unanswered Questions from the Vaccine Injury Compensation Program: A Review of Compensated Cases of Vaccine-Induced Brain Injury,” which attempted to bolster the case for a legal (and scientific) argument, an article that would have been hilarious for its fallacies were it not for the fact that it could potentially be the source of some real harm. It is discussed in some detail here. The same people were also behind an embarrassing “study” called “Vaccine Epidemic: How Corporate Greed, Biased Science, and Coercive Government Threaten Our Human Rights, Our Health, and Our Children,” which also committed all the fallacies associated with this particular brand of denialism, in addition to being ethically questionable.

Diagnosis: Crank lawyer whose primary move in the denialist movement is the predictable one: Since science doesn’t support our claim, let’s take it to the courts. Though wrong, Krakow is of course still dangerous. Stay away.

#848: Lorie Kramer

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A.k.a. Lo the Seektress

Lorie Kramer is among the most ardent critics of Alex Jones on the web. Unfortunately, her criticisms of Alex Jones come, shall we say, from a different angle than ours. Kramer runs the website The Alex Jones Machine, a website allegedly “created in self defense” in order to expose Alex Jones for who he is – a central part of the Zionist conspiracy to take over the world. Just like Glenn Beck and Fox News, Jones is in the hands of powerful Jewish bankers, and Kramer sets out to prove Alex and Kelly Jones’s connections to Bronfman. On the other hand, Jeff Rense is apparently a hero because he once called out Alex Jones and was promptly forced out of the Jones fold. The evidence is clear. At one point Kramer had to ask herself “who really runs the GNC network”, and given that Kramer is the person she is, the answer was more or less a given once that question was asked.

Currently she also runs seektress.com, where she panders conspiracies and various rants about spirituality, channeling, politics, UFOs, chemtrails, and Morgellons (which, according to authority Clifford E. Carnicom, is caused by chemtrails).

Diagnosis: In ardent combat with oppression and evil. It would have been an advantage if Kramer would spend her efforts in a manner that was informed by reality instead, but that’s apparently too much to ask for. Probably harmless.

#849: Arthur Krigsman

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Arthur Krigsman, MD, is a pediatrician and gastroenterologist best known for his controversial and widely-criticized research in which he attempts to prove that the MMR vaccine is the cause of diseases, especially autism. In fact, Krigsman may not be among the flashiest, but he is certainly among the most influential member of the antivaxx movement.

He has, in particular, written in support of the existence of autistic enterocolitis, which is, to put it mildly, not particularly widely accepted – Andrew Wakefield’s original study that tied the MMR vaccine to autism has of course been found to be fraudulent, and it was on the basis of this “research” that Wakefield coined the notion of “autistic enterocolitis”. In other words, Krigsman is fringe; but he still, to an extent, knows what he is talking about, which makes his contributions all the more insidious. In 2003, Krigsman reported similar findings as those of Wakefield, saying he found the intestines of 40 autistic children showed signs of inflammation, thus lending support to Wakefield’s ideas that MMR was related to autism and also to gastrointestinal disease. This information was, predictably enough, not formally published until 2010, and then in the pseudo-journal Autism Insights. The results were also obtained through failing to follow standard protocols and through questionable (or even scandalous) ethical behavior. Indeed, in 2004 Krigsman had to leave Lenox Hill hospital under “questionable circumstances,” and in 2005, he was fined by the Texas State Board of Medical Examiners for multiple violations, including failing to report previous regulatory sanctions by the Florida medical board, and for the disciplinary action by the Lenox Hill Hospital.

Krigsman later joined Wakefield at the antivaxx organization Thoughtful House (though left when Wakefield was forced to leave after his original study was shown to be fraudulent). He is currently a perennial expert witness in vaccine-related court cases. His participiation in these cases seem to regularly raise discussions regarding his CV and how he represents his publication list. In one case, the judge noted that he thinks Krigsman failed to be a “credible witness” and that the parents who brought the case were “misled by physicians who are guilty, in my view, of gross medical misjudgment.” In another case, the judge noted of Krigsman’s qualification for identifying a new disease like “autistic enterocolitis”, being “unrecognized by other authorities in the field, were, even when inflated, sadly lacking” and that his testimony about its existence was “speculative and unsupported by the weight of the evidence.”

Diagnosis: Though his cause has taken some fairly serious damage Krigsman is still in the running, and must still be considered dangerous.

#850: Ray Kurzweil

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The infamous Danie Krugel is South African and hence disqualified. That means that our next entry is Ray Kurzweil. Yes, Kurzweil. Now, Kurzweil has a large fan base, and that is not without reason. The guy is a genius and one of big pioneers of optical character recognition, computer-assisted reading and digital music synthesis. His technology optimism and view about the singularity, while often bordering on the ridiculous, is also probably more positive than negative for the development of society. At least he’ll get a pass on that one, even though he doesn’t really seem to understand nanotechnology, and doesn’t quite grasp the potentials and limits of nanobots.

Far more questionable sides of his efforts include his motivational courses at the Singularity University, as well as his failure to grasp that knowledge about computer science is not directly transferable to biology – he just doesn’t understand how the brain works and even less how the genome works: the genome does not work like a blueprint containing all the information needed to build a brain. It just doesn’t, and when he is promoting his singularity idea, Kurzweil doesn’t quite get that, much to the chagrin and exasperation of those who do.

Yet even that could be pardoned, and is surely not enough to qualify Kurzweil as a loon. What clinches the matter is his promotion of nutritional woo. Kurzweil is very fond of nutritional supplements and alkaline water. That he uses them himself is one thing. But Kurzweil also sells nutritional supplements for longevity on his website with Terry Grossman. The purported effects of the products are, of course, just as well backed up by evidence as such products are in general. These are products that “assist detoxification” and have “noticeable anti-ageing effects”. He also pushes anti-science news (such as pushing a particular anti-science spin on this story). That is unpardonable. It is pure quackery, backed up by conspiracy theories and pseudoscience.

Diagnosis: Seems to be evolving into a standard woo-meister. Kurzweil is a super-technologist, but too many factors suggest a profound lack of understanding of science and even critical thinking. His promotion of altmed quackery really settles it. Kurzweil is a loon. End of story.

#851: Michio Kushi

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Michio Kushi is something of a grand old man in the domain of food and health woo, which he mixes with an unhealthy dash of spiritual development talk. He is responsible for introducing the idea of macrobiotics to the Western world. Macrobiotics is an arbitrary schema for breaking the foods consumed by human beings down into yin and yang foods, and subsequently proposing a balance scheme. Sticking to the scheme will then help you achieve significant life extension and prevent cancer (that particular idea is discussed here and here). According to the material issued by Kushi’s institute the macrobiotic way of life should include chewing food at least 50 times per mouthful (or until it becomes liquid), not wearing synthetic or woolen clothing next to the skin, avoiding long hot baths or showers, having large green plants in your house to enrich the oxygen content of the air, and singing a happy song every day.

Yes, it is complete bullshit, but his ideas have nevertheless achieved significant popularity. And no, it is not “ancient wisdom” (as if that would have made a difference). The idea was invented by Georges Ohsawa in the 1930s, who also proposed that the blue or gray smoke coming out the front of a cigarette is yin (cancer-causing) while the yellow or orange smoke coming out the back that the smoker breathes in is yang, and who subsequently died of smoking-related cancer. There is a discussion of the macrobiotics crackpottery here.

But food woo is big stuff, and Kushi has his own center in Massachusetts, where “health comes naturally.” According to Kushi, natural and macrobiotic medicine encompasses: (a) astrological diagnosis; (b) aura and vibrational diagnosis – allegedly based on the color, frequency, ‘heat,’ and intensity of a one's "radiating aura" and "vibrations"; (c) consciousness and thought diagnosis, a variation of mind reading; (d) environmental diagnosis, whose theory posits “celestial influences”; (e) meridian diagnosis, which purportedly reveals valuable information about "internal energy flow"; (f) pressure diagnosis, which supposedly reveals “stagnation of the streaming energy”; and (g) spiritual diagnosis, an apparent variation of aura analysis. Yep, absolutely everything is there.

Diagnosis: Hardcore crackpot and woo extremist. Kushi has long been, and remains, one of the most seriously influential pusher of questionable (well, completely delusional) regimes out there and must be considered extremely dangerous.

#852: Vasant Lad

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Vasant Dattatray Lad, who likes to call himself ‘Dr.’ even though his “education” is from unaccredited crackpot institutions, is an Indian-born author and leading “expert” on Ayurvedic medicine in the US (though its popularity is of course to blame on Deepak Chopra). Lad is director of the Ayurvedic Institute in Albuquerque, and teaches woo in both the US and India.

Now, Ayurvedic medicine is basically medicine based on the same mythical picture that Western medicine was based on in the Medieval age: regaining health is primarily a matter of balancing the humeurs – something that Lad more or less admits: “unlike modern allopathic drugs, Ayurvedic treatments are tailored to the specific constitution (prakruti) and imbalances (vikruti) of each individual person.” And to back up the claim? Appeal to ancient wisdom: “Ayurveda relies on its own pharmacological ‘database,’ recorded in ancient texts such as the Charaka Samhita,” which is apparently supposed to provide evidence over and above clinical testing. And which is exactly the same evidence blood letting was based on in Medieval Europe. In addition to the humeurs, there are of course the life forces; the chakras and the prana, what Western medieval alchemists called élan vital, all fully and completely based on theological musings instead of evidence.

His numerous books include Ayurveda: A Practical Guide: The Science of Self Healing, The Yoga of Herbs: An Ayurvedic Guide to Herbal Medicine (with David Frawley), Ayurvedic Cooking for Self Healing, Secrets of the Pulse: The Ancient Art of Ayurvedic Pulse Diagnosis, and Marma Points of Ayurveda: The Energy Pathways for Healing Body, Mind, and Consciousness with a Comparison to Traditional Chinese Medicine [not evidence or reality].

Diagnosis: Pure woo, of course, but Lad (with some help from Chopra) has had quite a bit of success, despite the total lack of connection to reality characterizing his teachings, and must be considered highly dangerous.

#853: Christopher LaFond

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Christopher LaFond is an astrologer, and this entry could really end just there. At least LaFond attempts to spell out the connection between science and astrology – when the Star Tribune ran an article that was moderately critical of his discipline, LaFond responded by pointing out that scientists really had no clue about these things. You see, there are three kinds of zodiacal interpretations, the Sidereal, the Tropical, and the Constelllational, and while science may have pointed out certain worries with one of them, his version of astrology emerges unscathed. LaFond does “medieval astrology”, which has its own rules (apparently it must be different from “traditional astrology”, which one Valerie Livina tries to defend not entirely successfully here).

Of course, being dimly aware that his favored system of myths might not align particularly well with scientific evidence either, LaFond does in the end just assert that scientist should stay away from astrology (his points are nicely summed up here). As he puts it: “Being a Spiritual Science, if you will, astrology will never be proven correct, true, or valid to the satisfaction of the modern academy, which is still held captive by the materialist/atheist world view. I’m not suggesting that astrologers ignore everything that modern scientists say about astrology (or any other field), but why would we give it such weight? Is their goal to work with us? In most cases, their goal is to debunk astrology completely,” which I am not sure adds up to a validation of the discipline.

Apparently astrology is not supposed to issue empirically testable claims – the results that astrologers arrive cannot be measured or observed. Which I am not sure even counts as special pleading.

Diagnosis: super-kook, of the standard kind who reacts rather bizarrely when reality fails to line up with how he wants it to be (ordinary, sane people would modify their beliefs). Probably relatively harmless.

#854: Beverly LaHaye

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Beverly LaHaye is the founder of Concerned Women for America, and a rabidly insane author of books (several of them with Terri Blackstock) attacking gay rights and the feminist movement – according to Lahaye “[f]eminism is more than an illness. It is a philosophy of death.”. She is, for instance, a vocal critic of the Committee for Eliminating Discrimination Against Women, since she believes the committee is heading a super-secred conspiracy to pass the Equal Rights Amendment and give equal rights to gay people, which I am not sure would count as a secret conspiracy even if it were true. LaHaye was as such in the vanguard in the (successful) fight against US ratification of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, making the point that ratifying the convention would mean that a “twisted ideology of extremist feminism rebelling against God and His law” would allow communist China and North Korea to dominate American society and that communists would raise your children. Furthermore, the convention is not sufficiently Biblical, and what women really need is more Jesus.

Beverly LaHaye is married to certified madman Tim LaHaye, and they sometimes appear together to do or say silly but predictably wingnutty things.

Her organization, Concerned Women for America (CWA), is a wingnut extremist organization opposed to anything that smacks of sympathy with, well, anyone, really. Especially homosexuals, but also in general members of what they deem to be our “sex-saturated culture.” Their mission statement is “to protect and promote Biblical values among all citizens – first through prayer, then education, and finally by influencing our society – thereby reversing the decline in moral values in our nation,” where “moral values” of course means anything the organization’s members don’t fancy because they are hateful bigots, regardless of whether it has anything to do with morality or not. And since their fight against contraception, say, won’t fly particularly well, they have also taken the fights to third-world countries where success is more likely (also here).

The CWA is explicitly opposed to freedom of choice, Muslims, non-Americans and non-Christians, and more or less anything having to do with women’s rights, including equal pay, birth control, abortion, maternity leave (well – real women would of course leave the workforce for good, regardless of pregnancy) and Obamacare with its "super-death-panels", as well as anything that resembles pornography or gambling. They donated $409,000 in support of Proposition 8, which would ban same-sex marriage in California, and opposed the 1988 Act for Better Child Care, which would have provided government-sponsored child care for families in which both parents are working, since that would not, apparently, support a Biblical design of families. As for hate crimes, CWA apparently thinks that the very existence of hate crimes against gays and lesbians is doubtful and that false reports of ha hate crimes have been used to push legislation supporting the same-sex agenda (the conspiracy is apparently everywhere). Similarly with anti-bullying efforts – according to the CWA “the radical homosexual lobby has done a masterful job of infiltrating our government schools to gain control of the minds of America’s youth. Their propaganda tactics are time-tested. With liberal school officials in tow, they brazenly circumvent and abuse parental authority to use good-hearted but misguided children as pawns to further their deceptive agenda,” repeating the claims that homosexuals do not suffer from a history of discrimination, that reports of bias crimes against LGBT people are typically fabricated, and that such protections against discrimination would violate the religious liberties of Christians (i.e. restrict Christians’ (the CWA’s) right to violate the religious liberties of others). LaHaye has repeatedly called for more God in politics, and the group’s understanding of “freedom” is predictably Orwellian.

In fact, according to themselves, the CWA is not opposed to feminism at all. Indeed, they are taking it back. According to senior fellow and director of the Beverly LaHaye Institute Janice Crouse, feminism was initially a Christian movement until it “was taken over by lesbians” (she didn’t back the claim up with evidence). Real feminism, you see, is serving your husband and fulfill your God-ordained role as his servant.

The CWA has furthermore claimed that publicly funded HIV screening and publicly funded STD treatment are objectionable programs, apparently since such programs may save the life or happiness of people who live in sin and deserve to die. They also describe embryonic stem cell research as “deadly” but display no sign of comprehension of what stem cell research is.

Another one of their favorite issues is pushing religion and pseudoscience in public schools, including school prayer and Intelligent Design (because “courses only teaching evolution fail to give students a well-rounded view of the universe's creation,” which happened in accordance with the Bible). As for sex education their position is of course “abstinence only” (apparently other forms of sex education just “furthers the homosexual agenda”). The fact that it has been repeatedly shown that abstinence only programs are ineffective is dismissed as a liberal, economically motivated conspiracy.

Michele Bachmann has cited LaHaye as one of her political heroes, and the admiration is apparently mutual. There is a good CWA resource here.

Other central figures of CWA include:
- Penny Young Nance, the group’s CEO and president, and a notoriously unsympathetic person who e.g. claimed that if Sandra Fluke spent less money on beer she would be able to afford her own birth control, which is a rather irrelevant point but apparently a pretty accurate display of Nance’s personality.
- Shari Rendall, Director of Legislation and Public Policy
- Mario Diaz, the group’s Legal Counsel, who is definitely not opposed to using deception to further the group’s goals.
- Matt Barber, CWA’s Director of Cultural and Social Policy.

Diagnosis: A thoroughly repugnant person, LaHaye and her Taliban satellite group have actually managed to cause quite a bit of pain and damage during their existence, and they remain frighteningly influential. A serious threat to liberty, reason, freedom, and happiness.

#855: Peter & Paul Lalonde

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I sort of suspect this is a
rather old picture

Paul and Peter Lalonde are a pair of (Canadian-American) batshit fundie brothers who have managed to achieve semi-celebrity status inthe prophecy and endtimes movement, and who have a substantial fanbase and presence over at Rapture Ready. They are the founders of Cloud Ten Pictures, which specializes in Biblical and endtimes movies, such as the 1980s Biblical series This Week In Bible Prophecy and (co-producer of the) an apparently popular Left Behind film (which has no relation to Tim LaHaye’s book series). The company was started as a means of spreading the Gospel and producing inspirational Christian films and pseudo-documentaries.

Peter Lalonde is also the author of 2000 A.D. Are You Ready? (which, though I know nothing about it apart from the title, must have turned out to be an embarrassment) and 301 Startling Proofs and Prophecies, which, given the author’s previous predictive accuracy, is probably just as trustworthy and unbiased in the assessment of evidence. His RaptureReady page can be found here.

Diagnosis: Fundie morons. Probably pretty harmless, everything considered.

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