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#1551: Elaine Donnelly

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Wikipedia sums her up rather pithy in the first sentence of their entry: “Elaine Donnelly is an American conservative activist and anti-feminist principally concerned with preserving the traditional culture of the U.S. military.” Now, you might wonder what “the traditional culture of the U.S. military” might be, but you probably have an idea what Donnelly might mean by it.

Donnelly is the founder of the Center for Military Readiness, and has spent several years in opposition to the Equal Rights Amendment as National Media Chair of Phyllis Schlafly’s Eagle Forum. Her stance is aptly summed up in her claim that “[t]he concept of equality does not fit in combat environments .... Women in combat units endanger male morale and military performance.” Sort of like how women failing to cover their hair are just inviting otherwise honorable men to rape them. In 2006, when the Department of Defense considered addressing sexual harassment and violence in the military by creating an Office of the Victim Advocate in the Pentagon, Donnelly wrote that it would serve as “an ‘Office of Male Bashing,’ which nuclearizes the war between the sexes;” in other words: Addressing sexual harassment and violence is unjustly antagonizing the perpetrators. Such is the warped world of Elaine Donnelly (and yes, she’s been pretty explicit about that being her argument). She has also said that allowing women in combat is like forcing cheerleaders to play in NFL games, which is an interesting analogy on so many levels (Sandy Rios blamed Spider-Woman, but that’s a different story).

As you might imagine, Donnelly is no fan of gays and lesbians in the military either, and she called efforts to repeal the DADT a “big P.R. campaign” (yeah …), claiming that “[t]he law is there to protect good order and discipline in the military, and it’s not going to change.” She has also “argued” that allowing gays and lesbians to serve in the military would lead to a draft, as well as “forcible sodomy,” “introducing erotic factors,” and the proliferation of “HIV positivity”. She actually used the draft argument against women serving in the military in the 1980s as well, but is apparently unfazed by the poor performance of her predictions back then. (In fact, Donnelly doesn’t even really seem to realize that her predictions have failed.)

In short, allowing gays to serve will lead to the military’s downfall. Thus, the culture of the military (yeah, that one again – think 300) is in grave jeopardy due to the “process of diversifying and imposing LGBT agendas.” Such agendas would at least put an “immediate strain” on the defense budget (no, she didn’t elaborate). Donnelly could, accordingly, not help but lament how “the civil rights movement is being co-opted by the advocates of diversity, by advocates of the LGBT equality group.” Indeed.

Allowing gays to serve in the military will also make straight people feel unwelcome: You see, not allowing straight people to throw gay people out is as bigoted as bigotry comes. Allowing gays to serve is also a threat to religious freedom, because that claim resonates with Donnelly’s target audiences; and the military evidently has a duty to prevent opponents of homosexuality from feeling offended – wasn’t that perhaps what all that civil rights stuff was all about?


Diagnosis: Completely deranged. Elaine Donnelly is a Phyllis Schlafly-protégé, for crying out loud. She is also, apparently, pretty influential.

#1552: Kurt Donsbach

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Dave D’Onofrio appears to be a creationist and David Abel’s coauthor on those few papers they actuall got published in some low-tier but peer reviewed science journals (and has accordingly been lauded by the WND as making significant scientific breakthroughs) but I struggle to find much further information about him. We’ll leave him be for now. 

Kurt Donsbach, however, is a legend. Donsbach is an unlicensed chiropractor and altmed promoter, whose Hospital Santa Monica operated in California until 1987, whereupon it moved to Mexico and was in operation until the death of Coretta Scott King – widow of MLK – while under treatment at the clinic in 2006, when Mexican health officials promptly shut it down. Donsbach moved his practice to Mexico after several troubles with American authorities, first in 1971, when he was convicted of practicing medicine without a license in California after undercover agents observed him prescribing unproven remedies and claiming e.g.  that various vitamins, minerals, and herbal tea were effective against cancer, heart disease and emphysema to patients while claiming to be a medical doctor. Many of the remedies prescribed were only available from Westpro Labs, a company – coincidentally, of course – operated by Donsbach himself. (He pleaded guilty and received a fine and two years’ summary probation).

Coretta King was one of many desperate people who sought out Donsbach’s clinic during its two decades of operation in Mexico, where they would be treated with vitamins and herbs, iron lungs, and a variety of other useless procedures (the clinic was recommended to King by members of her church.) Of course, clinics like Donsbach’s thrive on survivors providing compelling (and personalized) anecdotes and the dead telling nothing, which they usually don’t unless the victim was a celebrity of sufficient note for the press to care. Had it not been for King, who knows how long Donsbach would have been allowed to continue.

Donsbach’s list of troubles with the authorities is extensive, though. Apart from the 1971 incident and the 2006 closing of his hospital, incidents include at least the following:
- In 1973, he was charged with nine more counts of illegal activity, including misbranding of drugs and manufacturing drugs without a license.
- In 1974, he was found guilty of violating his probation and was fined again.
- In 1975, Donsbach owned and operated Metabolic Products, a company that marketed supplement products with claims they didn’t bother to back up. That year, he also began his fourteen years of service as board chairman of the National Health Federation, a true quack organization if there ever was one.
- In 1976, he acquired a license to practice naturopathy in Oregon, based on a document that was later revealed to be a forgery (authorities prohibited him from holding the license in 1990). If you have to commit fraud to be able to even practicenaturopathy
- In 1979, he began operating Donsbach University, a nonaccredited correspondence school that awarded bachelor, master, and doctoral “degrees” in nutrition. That the “institution” was  unaccredited did not deter Donsbach from claiming that it was (by the National Accreditation Association, which consisted of a telephone in the living room of a single quack with a fake degree in Maryland – the California Department of Education was not impressed). He was also operating the International Institute of Natural Health Sciences, through which he marketed numerous misleading publications and a “Nutrient Deficiency Test”: The test consisted of a questionnaire about symptoms, and the answers were fed into a computer that issued a report of supposed nutrient deficiencies and medical conditions – the answers, however, did not affect the printout of supposed deficiencies in any systematic and reliable way.
- In 1982, Donsbach formed and became board chairman of Health Resources Group, Inc., which sold supplement products to health-food stores through HRG Enterprises and a multilevel company named Nutrition Motivation.
- In 1985, the FDA sent Donsbach and HRG a regulatory letter indicating that claims made for Orachel made it an unapproved new drug that was illegal to market.
- In 1985, the New York Attorney General brought actions against Donsbach, his university, and his International Institute, on the grounds that they lacked legal authorization to conduct business within the state and that it was illegal to advertise nonaccredited degrees to state residents. The Attorney General also charged that the “Nutrient Deficiency Test” was a scheme to defraud consumers (duh!).
- In 1988, the US postal service ordered him to stop claiming that a hydrogen peroxide solution he sold could prevent cancer and ease arthritis pain (it can’t).
- A 1996 case, based on a 1993 Complaint for Forfeiture, states that Donsbach obtained money from insurance companies by misrepresenting the nature and location of treatments he rendered there.
- In 1997 he was sentenced to a year in federal prison for smuggling more than $250,000 worth of unapproved drugs into the US from Mexico.

On April 9, 2009, he was arrested again, this time during his Internet radio health show, and charged with 11 felony counts, including dispensing unapproved drugs and offering neuropeptides to his patients (which contained nimesulide, which is banned in Europe because they cause high rates of liver failure and have resulted in some deaths). The case ended with a plea deal with Donsbach facing up to a year in jail, followed by probation. In 2010, however, he pleaded guilty to 13 additional felony charges, including practicing medicine without a license and selling misbranded drugs.

That should give you an idea. Donsbach himself is a pupil of Royal Lee, who – at least before Kevin Trudeau – was “probably the largest publisher of unreliable and false nutritional information in the world” (according to an FDA official). His website states that he has produced more than 50 books and pamphlets that have sold a total of 14 milion copies (most of which were titled “Dr. Donsbach Tells You What You Always Wanted To Know About …”)

Donsbach’s partner Harry R. Alsleben used to run his own correspondence school offering pseudo-credentials in nutrition, such as “Clinical Nutrimedicine and Biological Sciences”, “nutri-medical dentistry”, “nutri-medical eye and visual health care,” “nutri-medical homeopathy” and “therapeutic nutrimedicine”.


Diagnosis: It’s hard to believe that Donsbach actually thinks he is helping people, but I suppose the powers of delusion should not be underestimated. At least the continued success of Kurt Donsbach demonstrates how and why there’s still a market for spam. A horrible, horrible person.

Note: Most of the information for this entry was taken from Quackwatch's very informative articles on Donsbach and his antics.

#1553: David M. Dosa

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Psychic pets are pets that some, uh, “researchers” claim are … psychic. They communicate using ESP. These researchers generally know that the animals in question are psychic because the researchers are now able to predict what the animal wishes in certain situations (yeah, that’s pretty much it). Having lived with the animals for a while has also provided plenty of … uh, “evidence” for the assessment. Bringing up Clever Hans when commenting on these people’s abilities to critically assess evidence is probably too charitable.

One of the most famous “psychic” pets is Oscar, a cat who lives on the third floor of a Rhode Island nursing home. Dr. David Dosa, a geriatrician there and an assistant professor of medicine at the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, claims that Oscar can tell when a patient is about to die, since when a patient is about to die, Oscar curls up next to that patient and leaves after the patient dies. Dosa has published an article in the New England Journal of Medicine and even written a book about Oscar. As Robert Carroll puts it, “[n]obody doubts that Oscar curls up on the beds of patients and leaves when they die. He also curls up on the beds of patients who don't die. He leaves those beds, too.”

The book (German translation).
During his research for the book, Dosa – rather predictably – failed to make any records or apply any methods to control for bias; instead, he relied on his memories of the events. Nor did he control for any confounding factors (such as activity around the beds of dying patients). In other words, the “research” was conducted precisely the way all research “establishing” the psychic abilities of animals is conducted. Dosa could report that Oscar had curled up to patients “50 times”, but provided no further information about the patients and didn’t actually count the instances (he did admit that the cat didn’t always do this, but often). Why he chose to interpret Oscar as a “gentle angel of death” rather than something more sinister is not clear either.

Of course, news outlets picked up the story en masse, followed by a plethora of silly “natural explanations” for the correlation between the cat’s behavior and patients’ deaths. Too few pointed out the obvious: Dr. Dosa had given not a shred of evidence that a correlation existed in the first place. (And if there were a correlation, the obvious explanation would of course be that the cat was spreading some kind of infection, a possibility that Dosa doesn’t consider.)

Dosa also made it to Renée Scheltema’s ridiculous Something Unknown is Doing We Don’t Know What (yes, note the What the Bleep do We Know inspiration), a “spiritual journey into the science behind psychic phenomena,” with his cat musings.


Diagnosis: Dosa makes it really, really hard for us to avoid concluding that he is very much aware of the absence of any indication of evidence for his claims. Out of generosity (if it is) we choose to conclude that he is seriously deluded and utterly deficient in critical thinking skills.

Most of the information for this article is credited to the skepdic website.

#1554: Richard Doty(?)

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This is a tricky one. Though Richard Doty is a legend in UFO circles, he qualifies as a “loon” only under the satisfaction of certain conditions, the main one being “Doty is not a cynical liar”, that we are not entirely sure he satisfies. Doty is the main, uh, witness of Project Serpo, a science fiction story presented as fact on several web forums in November 2005, quickly convincing numerous UFO “researchers” such as Bill Ryan, Kerry Cassidy, Linda Moulton Howe and Len Kasten (who even wrote a book about it) about his claims (they didn't need much prompting).

The basic idea is that Serpo is a planet of the binary star system Zeta Reticuli, 39 light years from Earth, with a breathable atmosphere, populated by an extraterrestrial race known as Ebens – short, brown, village-dwelling creatures of which there are some 650,000. One such was a survivor of the infamous 1947 flying saucer crash at Corona, New Mexico, and the American military, by reverse-engineering the spacecraft, has since sent missions to Serpo (excerpts here), missions they are (but of course) covering up. No, it doesn’t add up, but who cares? The UFO community certainly doesn’t. In any case, the story was spread in 2005 through an e-mail from “Request Anonymous” to a Ufology mailing list. “Anonymous” claimed to be a retired US Government official with top-secret clearance, and was only later revealed to be Richard C. Doty, a former security guard with the Air Force Office of Special Investigations. Doty, interestingly, had a book to sell (The Black World of UFOs: Exempt from Disclosure,coauthored with Robert Collins), and the surge of interest in the story coincided nicely with the release of that book. One can't but admire the marketing strategy.

Doty has later claimed that he was tasked with hoaxing documents and feeding false information to UFO researchers, a claim that seems to have put off the UFO communities (on the one hand it reaffirms their conspiracy theories; on the other it suggests that many of their cherished UFO delusions may be false).


Diagnosis: Hard to tell, really, but serious delusions and clever marketing ploys are not mutually exclusive. It is also a bit early to tell how his efforts have affected the UFO communities, but they are unlikely to have made them into better critical thinkers.

#1555: Jock Doubleday

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A standard ploy among denialists is to offer pseudo-challenges to scientists to provethat the scientific fact they deny is true or that their pseudoscientific delusions are false – where the protocol for testing or standards of proof are set by them, of course, to ensure that they will (with some exceptions) never be satisfied. Kent Hovind’s $250,000 challenge is probably the most famous, but Ray Comfort’s $10,000 prize to anyone who can present a “genuine living transitional form” has received its share of scorn as well (Comfort defines a transitional form as “a lizard that produced a bird, or a dog that produced kittens, or a sheep that produced a chicken, or even as Archaeopteryx–a dinosaur that produced a bird,” which is not what a transitional form is, making the challenge an impossible one). Deepak Chopra’s “explain consciousness” challenge is arguably even dumber.

Jock Doubleday, also known as the director or Natural Woman, Natural Man, Inc. and the author of such intriguing works as ‘The Burning Time (Stories of the Modern-day Persecution of Midwives)’ and ‘Lolita Shrugged (THE MYTH OF AGE-SPECIFIC MATURITY )’ has, in the same vein, gained himself some ridicule for his offer of “$75,000.00 to the first medical doctor or pharmaceutical company CEO who publicly drinks a mixture of standard vaccine additives ingredients in the same amount as a six-year-old child is recommended to receive under the year-2005 guidelines of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (In the event that thimerosal has recently been removed from a particular vaccine, the thimerosal-containing version of that vaccine will be used.)” The mixture will be body weight calibrated. By 2006 Doubleday claimed that “14 doctors, or persons claiming to be doctors, have contacted me about publicly drinking the vaccine additives mixture. None have followed through.” And to ensure that no one actually follows through with the challenge, Doubleday has created a pretty substantial list of criteria to be satisfied: Any participant must go through a psychiatric evaluation, a history of any mental health based counseling, an email exam of 10 questions regarding vaccine theory and history, compulsory purchase and reading of at last five altmed anti-vaccine books, a 20 question written exam, a certificate of good health, and so on and so forth. In short: You’re not going to pass; just forget it. In fact, several doctors have approached Doubleday, but they have all been rejected by him because of various details with regard to their application or because Doubleday just rejected them – it is, after all, up to him to determine whether the challenger is eligible). Of course, the test itself has been passed with flying colors: In 1996 a German guy ingested a dose of at least 1500 times the maximum dose of thimerosal a 6-year old with a complete vaccine history would theoretically have received in one go (weight adjusted!). It seems to have been unpleasant, but the guy recovered completely and did not develop autism.

Doubleday is, of course, a hardcore anti-vaxx loon. Not only are vaccines dangerous, “vaccines have never been shown by science to prevent any disease (you’d need a long-term controlled study for that).” Yeah, it’s kind of precisely like claiming that no one has shown that falling to the ground from 9000 feet is harmful. And no, Doubleday doesn’t understand science, or how evidence is measured, at all. Not that it would matter; all the science in the world wouldn’t change Doubleday’s mind, since it is all a conspiracy. Writes Doubleday: “There is a dark force working to undermine all ecosystems on Earth. This force is a trans-century cult that calls itself the Illuminati – because its members believe that one day they will be ‘illuminated’ and become gods on Earth. Illuminati members have infiltrated all world politics and control all financial systems. They have engineered the present financial crisis and they are responsible for the events of 9/11 and for the majority of false-flag events in recent history. Through war and other means, they are responsible for the hyper-poisoning of the planet.” Why they would be deliberately trying to undermine “all ecosystems” is a bit unclear, but Morgoth and Ungoliant, Skynet, the Harkonnens and the aliens in the classic documentary “They Live” have all been up to stuff like that before.

Here is Doubleday documenting chemtrails over Belgrade in 2015. Yes, chemtrails.


Diagnosis: Mike Adams, Sherri Tenpenny and Ken Adachi all rolled into one, only dumber (well … less influential, at least). A joke, really.

#1556: William Campbell Douglass

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Fundies do say the darndest things, but the whereabouts of the “Lee Douglas” supposedly associated with the Christian Coalition and described here cannot be determined and he probably doesn’t exist.

William Campbell Douglass II unfortunately does. Douglass is a doctor, woo peddler, hardcore conspiracy theorist and president of the Douglass Center for Nutrition and Preventive Medicine. In particular, Douglass believes that the WHO developed AIDS as a strategic element in their evil plan to usher in the New World Order by depopulating the Earth.

As for woo, well, Douglass has quite a number of … unusual ideas. He has been caught claiming that a little bit of tobacco smoking is good for you – in fact, he has written a book about that: The Health Benefits of Tobacco (I suppose “editor and researcher Tracy T. Douglass” is a relative), which seeks to rebut all those studies linking smoking to negative health effects and concluding that it’s a conspiracy. Probably by the government. The purpose of the conspiracy is left unclear. The quality of the rebuttals are well exemplified by his observation that even according to CDC studies, only 0.5% of the smoking population died at ages less than 35 – but 8% of the general population is dead before age 35; which prompts him to ask “does smoking prevent death in the relatively young – from murder, automobile and other accidents, infection or boredom?” No prize for spotting the rather obvious flaw in the reasoning (I haven’t even doublechecked the number).

Apart from his defense of smoking, Douglass has argued that exercise is overrated and that vegetarianism is bad. He has moreover promoted the idiotic raw milk fad (he is the author of The Milk of Human Kindness-Is Not Pasteurized– the title gives you a glimpse of the mind of W.C. Douglass methinks). Fluoride, however, is really bad and water fluoridation is yet another element in a grand conspiracy, as is aspartame. And sunlight, according to Douglass, preventsmelanoma. Gary Null apparently really liked that claim.

Douglass has been most widely noticed, perhaps, for his anti-vaccine views. Vaccines don’t really prevent anything, according to Douglass (and the diseases they are meant to prevent aren’t really big deals anyways). Instead, vaccines are – you guessed it – a conspiracy. For instance, in his article “Pandemic Panic Hits World Health Organization”, published in the positively deranged pseudojournal Medical Voices (it’s actually a somewhat useful journal – anyone who has published anything in that journal can be safely dismissed as an insane crank), he claimed the H1N1 flu epidemic was faked by the WHO to sell drugs and vaccines. After all, according to Douglass the epidemic was “no more than a sniffle”, killing only a from a World War I battle commander standpoint insignificant number of people.

His relationship to critical thinking and evidence is, in other words, a matter of pick-and-choose. For instance, Douglass is – unusually for woo promoters – critical of the use of anecdotes in assessing a hypothesis. Of course, to Douglass, “anecdotal evidence” means any well-controlled, large study that yields results he don’t like. Personal anecdotes are, however, really valuable when they support his own, science-contrary beliefs.

Unsurprisingly, Douglass also runs a webstore that sells his special brand of supplements, and pushes at least two “periodicals” that have succeeded in making this list, Real Health and Second Opinion.


Diagnosis: A critical-thinking disaster that makes Mercola look positively wise (ok, so that’s an exaggeration). And though Douglass doesn’t quite enjoy Mercola’s level of influence, he is far from negligible.

#1557: Joni Dourif

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Joni (Jonina) Dourif is the (a?) ex-wife of the legendary Ed Dames, and the one who took over Dames’s company Psi Tech (most famous, perhaps, for telling us where Elizabeth Smart’s dead body was located and naming her killer months before she was found alive; Psi Tech’s spin is pretty legendary) after Dames stepped down (that story is summarized here). Psi Tech offers “remote viewing” services. Dourif herself was, according to this website “one of the first civilians trained in CRV technology,” but claims, like a lot of these people, to have been “the subject of PSI research and precognition most of her life.” Apparently, she had a background “specializing in Jungian clinical Psychology,” which she apparently achieved to establish the existence of innate psychic abilities. For the last 20 years she has been training others in “technical remote viewing” (initially a 10-day course) and has produced a couple of “Remote Viewing training tapes” to “provide the public at large with specialized training” (hey, the tapes were “filmed by an Oscar nominee,” no less; support by peer reviewed publications pales in comparison). She currently runs Psi Tech with CEO Dane Spotts, and publishes newsletters and e-zines and runs “an active chat room and several bulletin boards.” They still haven’t found any missing girls.

Undaunted by the lack of tangible success, they’re currently apparently even building a psi research center and a distance learning college, a “degree” from which is probably not something you should put on your CV. One of their training sessions is described here.


Diagnosis: We actually suspect that Dourif really believes that these abilities exist. And no amount of falsification is gonna convince her otherwise.

#1558: Christopher Doyle

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There’s something obviously and deeply sad about “ex-gay” activists, to the extent that even despite their often despiccable behavior we almost feel a bit reluctant to include them in our Encyclopedia. But here you go. Christopher Doyle is an “ex-gay” activist with Voice of the Voiceless and Richard Cohen’s International Healing Foundation, and he feels mighty oppressed (just look here) by the non-“ex-gay” gays. According to Doyle, gay rights activists are communists. Therefore it’s their own fault that countries like Russia, Uganda and Nigeria have passed severe anti-gay laws: “Gay activists continue to play the victim card around the world, but their story is getting old,” according to Doyle. The laws in the aforementioned countries are enacted “as a response to gay activists’ intolerance towards traditional views on marriage and sexuality, and their attempts to silence the speech and beliefs of those who disagree with them. These activists are largely succeeding with their goals in Western countries, and are now importing their Communist strategies into other non-Western countries to achieve global dominance.” Yes. Just like the Jim Crow laws in Southern states, enacted in response to intolerant civil rights activists. Or women in abusive relationships who just can’t stop complaining – it’s their own fault, and the abusive husband is really the victim of intolerance and attempts at silencing him.

When Exodus International shut down and its leader Alan Chambers admitted that reparative therapy doesn’t work, Doyle demanded that they apologize to “ex-gays” like himself for shutting down and renouncing sexual orientation conversion therapy. Here is Doyle’s “expert defense” of ex-gay conversion therapy.

Doyle was also the guy who organized the disastrous 2013 Ex-Gay Pride Month and Ex-Gay Awareness Month.


Diagnosis: One can’t help but feel some sympathy for Doyle. Of course, that doesn’t change the fact that he’s a bigoted lunatic.

#1559: Patrick Doyle & Kristen Luman(?)

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Ghost Mine is an exceptionally idiotic – perhaps the most idiotic – paranormal “reality” TV series on Syfy channel. It features a group of miners together with paranormal investigators Patrick Doyle and Kristen Luman. The idea is that some old mine in Oregon is so haunted that no one will work there, so while the workers are working Doyle and Luman will run around and interpret literally everything that happens – from power outages to mislaid equipment to non-mislaid equipment as signs from the spirit world. In the process, they use a number of items with blinking lights (“ghost busting technology”) that purportedly indicate whether an area is safe or filled with gold.

Even paranormal fans have complained about how fake the show is. Partially because Doyle has more or less admitted that all paranormal shows are staged, and Luman’s claim to have studied “paranormal psychology” at Portland University is dubious (she does have a background from low-budget horror movies, though).

Diagnosis: Probably not loons at all, but whatever: They deserve to be shamed as much and as often as possible.


Note: I’ve pinched this entry mostly from rationalwiki’s entry on Ghost Mine”. You won’t get me to actually watch that show.

#1560: O'Neal Dozier

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I suppose many associate the Ft. Lauderdale area with relatively liberal attitudes. I guess it might be, which means, of course, that the local fundamentalist crazies have cranked their volume up several notches in response. One such is Rev. O’Neal Dozier of Pompano Beach’s Worldwide Christian Center (no, but Dozier certainly possesses a streak of megalomania), who attracted some attention during the 2012 Republican primaries when he called on Mitt Romney“to openly renounce his racist Mormon religion.” It is, in fairness, not too hard to see where he is coming from. His claim that Romney’s Mormonism would “taint the Republican Party” is still, shall we say, a bit … off.

For Dozier’s anti-equality campaigning there is no possible excuse, however. Tensions in the Ft. Lauderdale area ran high for awhile in 2007 when then-Democratic-mayor Jim Naugle – who said that the American Civil Liberties Union acronym ACLU means “Atheists and Criminal Lobbying Union” and that a proposal for reducing greenhouse gases was “hate-America stuff” concocted by “a bunch of scientists meeting in Paris who’ve had too much wine” – launched a rather aggressive anti-gay campaign. Naugle, who regards homosexuality as a sin, defended rather quaint anti-sodomy laws, and Dozier was one of several bigoted lunatics who emerged as his allies (the group from Koinonia Worship Center in Pembroke Park led by Elder Mathes Guice even donned paramilitary attire for one of the press conferencse with Naugle). “We love the homosexual people,” said Dozier for the occasion, and was apparently suffering from the delusion that the campaigns for “Healthy Public Places” were really attempts to reach out to gays “in the spirit of love.” To try to clarify: “Our coalition is not anti-gay. We are anti-sin” (one of the negative impacts of the “abomination” that is homosexuality, said Dozier, is the spread of HIV/AIDS). Dozier just doesn’t “want to see God destroy America in the way he destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah.” Gays also “make God want to vomit,” according to Dozier. You probably don’t want to meet him when he’s not in his “spirit-of-love” mood.

Dozier is concerned with social issues beyond gay rights, however. A staunch dominionist, Dozier has declared that “[w]e should take control of every facet of society” (adding, for good measure, that God was “100 percent for capital punishment. Oh, yeah, God knew some were going to slip through, a few innocent ones. He knew that. But you cannot have a society without capital punishment”). In 2006, he also declared war on a local Islamic group trying to build a mosque: “One day,” claimed Dozier, “our grandchildren will live under the grips of sharia law. It’s coming our way. Islam has a plan, a 20-year plan, to take over America from within. And they’re doing it.” Moreover, Darwinism is a liberal plot, and teaching evolution in school is an obvious violation of the Constitution: “Why is it that no one ever challenges the teaching of this Darwinian religion on constitutional grounds?” asked Dozier, without checking whether anyone has, in fact, tried to do precisely that. It is also racist. 


Diagnosis: So full of hate, bigotry and impotent rage that it’s almost fascinating. Stay well clear of this one.

#1561: Steve Drain

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Unlike most members of the Westboro Baptist Church, Steve Drain is not related to the Phelpses and was not born into the cult. In the 1990s, however, he made a documentary film involving extensive interactions with the group, and upon the completion of the film he and his family joined the church. His initial role seems to have been to handle multimedia, design and website maintenance (including their usual segments “Beast Watch,” “Jews News,” and “WBC Video News,” in which Drain, Fred Phelps and his son Timothy offer their take on the latest news – “God Hates Malaysia” being a typical example), but he quickly rose to power and was, allegedly, one of the main forces behind the excommunication of Fred Phelps from his own church right before he died. Drain is, after outmaneuvering Shirley Phelps-Roper (a woman!) now apparently the de facto leader of the WBC, no less.

There is a portrait of Steve Drain, based to a large extent on the book by his estranged daughter, here. Brent Roper of the Westboro Baptist Church responded to the book’s allegations by identifying passages in the Bible that indicate that “a man’s enemies are of his own household” and that “in almost every case where you have a father or mother properly believing in Christ, they will be contradicted, opposed, or persecuted by their own son or daughter.” (He didn’t address any of the content.)


Diagnosis: Yup. It’s the heir of Fred Phelps, no less (though in fairness, the WBC seems to have lost a bit of their momentum after Fred Phelps’s demise).

#1562: Raymond Drake, Michael Drake and the TFP

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Yes, yet another wingnut organization, this time something called the American Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family and Property (TFP), and it’s precisely the same as, and just as idiotic, as all those other Family™ organizations. The American TFP is a ”special campaign” of The Foundation for a Christian Civilization, Inc.,which forms ”the world’s largest anticommunist and antisocialist network of Catholic inspiration,” according to themselves. (It claims to have more than 120,000 members.) The organization is based on the ideas of crazy Brazilian fundamentalist Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira, and their goal is to oppose what Oliveira believed was an anti-Christian process that had undermined Christian civilization since the 14th century, a three-stage “revolution” that would progressively undermine the Church and social order as follows:

1. The Protestant “Pseudo-Reformation” and its rejection of religious authority and inequality.
2. The Enlightenment and the French Revolution and its rejection of temporal authority, in particular the King and nobility.
3. The Communist Revolution and its rejection of economic inequality, which also seeks to eradicate the Church and Christian civilization in favor of neo-paganism.

Oh, yes – there be conspiracy, and America is already headed for communist tyranny and persecution of Christians and all the associated terror: equality, freedom, science (they’re staunch creationists), and so on. Their president is Raymond E. Drake (the vice president is one John Horvat II).

As you can imagine, the TFP isn’t fond of gay marriage (the tornadoes in Illinois in 2013? The state’s recent approval of a marriage equality bill, of course, at least according to executive director Robert Ritchie, who apparently was just JAQing off). A good example is the comments by Michael Drake (whom I assume to be closely connected to President Raymond Drake), who said that conservatives must fight against marriage equality because the real reason behind efforts to “destroy marriage” through marriage equality is to bring about socialism (Karl Marx’s target was apparently marriage all along, for instance) … just like during the end of the Roman Empire.


Diagnosis: Utterly deranged conspiracy theorists – this is whale.to and Icke forums level batshittery – the group is relatively obscure but apparently economically relatively well-oiled. Thoroughly insane, and although their actual level of influence remains to be determined they're definitely dangerous.

#1563: Mark Driscoll

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Mark Driscoll is the disgraced founder and former head of the Seattle-based Mars Hill Church, a megachurch with distinct cult-like traits. He’s also the founder of The Resurgence, which sought to train church leaders in conservative reformed theology, co-founder of several other organizations, author of several books, and writer e.g. for the “Faith and Values” section of the Seattle Times and the Fox News website.

Among his books, Real Marriage: The Truth About Sex, Friendship & Life Together, written with his wife Grace, raised some controversy (also because the sales figures were manipulated to get the book onto bestseller lists). Fundies missed the point and criticized it for describing sex; more enlightened critics (including some evangelicals) rather highlighted its rank misogynism. Driscoll is a “complementarian” about gender roles and accordingly endorses “male headship of the home and church”. According to Driscoll many modern spiritual and social problems are to blame on the emergence of female leadership and feminism, which is a doctrine originating in the serpent’s temptation of Eve – her eating the fruit was “the first exercising of a woman’s role in leadership in the home and in the church in the history of the world. It does not go well.” Not only that, but Christianity has been “feminized”: “The problem with the church today, it’s just a bunch of nice, soft, tender, ’chickified’ church boys. Sixty percent of Christians are chicks, and the forty percent that are dudes are still sort of chicks … The whole architecture and the whole aesthetic [of church buildings and services] is really feminine.” By contrast, Biblical figures like Jesus, Paul the Apostle, and King David, “... these guys were dudes. Heterosexual, win-a-fight, punch-you-in-the-nose, dudes.” There’s some serious theology going on there. Driscoll doesn’t like gays either, obviously. Nor masturbation: According to Driscoll, if you engage in such acts you’re gay.

When Ted Haggard fell from grace Driscoll went after his wife, arguing that a “wife who lets herself go and is not sexually available to her husband in the ways that the Song of Songs is so frank about is not responsible for her husband’s sin, but she may not be helping him either.”

He is, of course, also a Biblical literalist and inerrantist, and hence also a creationist according to whom Christians are not free to assent to evolution; that is, “the yet unproven and highly suspect thesis of macro-evolution” – no, he really doesn’t get neither evolution nor science, but what did you expect? An equal sensitivity to science, reality and evidence was demonstrated in 2014, when the Mars Hill Church announced that it would cure mental illness through “demon trials”. Driscoll is also a defender of the doctrine that Christianity is not a religion (“religion” only encompasses superstitious belief systems) and presumably hence not encompassed by any sort of separation between church and state.

In 2014, The NY Times wrote that Driscoll’s empire appears to be imploding” under public criticism and formal complaints from Mars Hill staff members and congregants, and in October Driscoll announced his resignation from the cult. Two weeks later it was announced that Mars Hill Church would be dissolving by January 1, 2015. Among the factors leading up to the decision was (none other than) Janet Mefferd accusing Driscoll of plagiarism – 14 pages of Driscoll’s A Call to Resurgence quoted “extensively and without citation” two books by crazy fundie Peter Jones, including Gospel Truth/Pagan Lies: Can You Tell the Difference? (do we need to comment on the intellectual bankruptcy of someone who resorts to plagiarizing Peter Jones?) – Mefferd later apologized for catching Driscoll plagiarizing and the interview in which the issue was raised was deleted from Salem Radio’s webpage since Salem Radio unsurprisingly doesn’t possess a single shred of intellectual honesty. More plagiarism accusations soon followed.


Diagnosis: Deranged madman, hopefully to an extent neutralized by now.

#1564: Jeanne Drisko

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The University of Kansas Medical Center, like so many university medical centers these days, has its own program for quackery and pseudoscience: the KU Integrative Medicine Program. It was developed by its current director, Jeanne A. Drisko, MD, Riordan Endowed Professor of Orthomolecular Medicine [which is not, emphatically not, a science-based discipline] and one of the most notorious anti-science campaigners in the US at present. In this position, Drisko has played a central part in developing “research projects” on CAM therapies, and she is heavily involved in the education of medical and nursing students at KU. She has also worked closely with legislators to develop and pass CAM-friendly and CAM-legitimizing laws.

As usual, the KU Integrative Medicine Program seeks to “integrate” the best of two worlds – efficacious conventional therapies and bullshit – including “healing foods”, neurofeedback, detox and Drisko’s own orthomolecular medicine. Among the quackery Drisko supports is high dose intravenous vitamin C, which does not have any non-negligible positive effect on anything, yet which the Program still touts as a cancer treatment. Drisko, of course, also claims to have studies to back up her claims. It would be hard to believe that she is even trying to be honest, but her own “studies” are so laughably bad and blithely ignorant of even minimal standards for quality control, that one might actually wonder whether she might, in fact, be.

Drisko’s impressive lack of understanding of how science is done is nicely emphasized by her creationist sympathies, and she is, for instance, a signatory to the Discovery Institute’s petition A Scientific Dissent From Darwinism. That should tell you quite a bit also about the quality of the signatures that list has gathered.

She is also a member or board member of a range of Cam cults. She is, for instance, Program Director of the American College of Advancement in Medicine (a chelation therapy promotion group), staff member at the Center for the Improvement of Human Functioning International, a “medical, research and educational organization.” and research director of its affiliated Olive W. Garvey Center for Healing Arts, which has a “Bio-Communications Research Institute” where “scientists” are “dedicated to biomedical research and education, including … subtle energies” (healing energies that are supposed to be scientifically undetectable, which, since scientists usually detect the presence of energy by its effects means that they don’t have any effects whatsoever). That center also offers hair analysis, cytotoxic food sensitivity testing (banned by the FDA) and training in a variety of pseudoscientific disciplines (including Kirlian photography); their store (it’s a pretty good indicator that your “research institute” is not a research institute when it has a store) also sells a range of quack remedies.

Drisko is furthermore a member of the American Association for Health Freedom, which represents the economic and political interests of promoters of quackery. And importantly, she served on the Institute of Medicine’s Panel on “Complementary and Alternative Medicine”, a group consisting primarily of people (including naturopath Leanna Standish of Bastyr University, Susan Folkman, Florence ComiteJoyce Anastasi, Brian Berman, David Eisenberg and Sherman Cohn), with financial interests in quackery and no relevant scientific background, but which was expected to“develop conceptual frameworks to guide decision-making on these issues and questions.” Then there is the Alliance for Natural Health USA, of which Drisko is the chair. ANH-USA is one of the most important “health freedom” organizations in the US (which means that it fights for the rights of quacks and frauds to do whatever they want without pesky legal ramifications or responsibilities). And she’s a board member of the Institute for Functional Medicine, a nebulously defined discipline of amazing quackery.

Keep in mind that this lady is deeply involved in the education of the next generation of medical doctors in Kansas – though her influence extends far beyond Kansas. It’s absolutely horrifying.


Diagnosis: Anti-scientific attitudes are rarely confined to a single scientific discipline, and Drisko is a staggering example of crank magnetism. Though she’d never admit it, Drisko is a very powerful opponent of everything science – sufficiently influential, in fact, to cause significant long-term harm. Deeply tragic and very scary.

#1565: Eric Dubay

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Dubay busted "using Masonic 666
Hand Sign", according to critics who
conclude that he is part of the Conspiracy.
So it goes in these circles.
We have a bit of a hard time determining whether this is parody, but if it is, it is pretty thorough, so much so that Eric Dubay would probably not mind being identified as a loon either. Dubay runs a website called The Atlantean Conspiracy: Exposing the Global Conspiracy from Atlantis to Zion, a name that remarkably doesn’t even begin to suggest the level of insanity of its the contents (though it points you in the right direction). In fact, it is impossible to do justice to the range of amazing insanity on that website, so we will have to give you a link: Here it is. Dubay is also pretty active on youtube.

The latest article posted when we last checked was “Santa Claus the magic mushroom”, which seems to argue that our Christmas celebrations originated in worship of the mushroom amanita and its potent drug effect (not recommended) that allows you to contact the Gods within you: “Santa, an anagram for Satan, dresses in red, keeps lists of naughty/nice children, and seems to steal Christmas from Jesus. But if understood in its original mushroom context, Santa’s not a conniving, omniscient, list-keeper. He’s an Entheogen – a plant or substance which is said to ‘generate the God within.’” (The naughty list refers to bad trips: “If you have mischief, wickedness, or secrecy in you, then entheogens will take you down into the depths of your own hell.”)  The article, which quotes heavily from Cannabis Culture, is remarkably incoherent (it consists primarily of long quotes interspersed with Dubay’s own notes that often bear little obvious relation to the content of the quote or anything else) but in passing makes some fascinating claims, such as “the word Christmas originally comes from the Egyptian KRST (oiled/anointed one) and Mes, the sacred cakes annually made/ingested by the Egyptians.

The previous article was “Ape-Men Never Existed!”, which argues that the theory of evolution is a fraud because of Ernest Haeckel’s embryos: All contemporary archaeology supporting the existence of early hominids can be linked to Haeckel, which is proof enough for Dubay that everything is a conspiracy and evolution is bunk. He has previously argued that dinosaurs never existed either. Heck, Dubay even has “proof” that the Earth is flat and motionless and has self-published a book, 200 Proofs Earth is Not a Spinning Ball, and no: He doesn’t know what “proof” means. But yes: Eric Dubay is a flat-earther, and if you believe the Earth is flat then, really, everything is up for grabs. We have to mention a comment from one of his fans: “Simply outstanding work! I have been debating with multiple trolls and a few real people for like 3 days now after mentioning the flat earth in the natural news comments,” something “even prompted Mike Adams to take an indirect jab at all of us in one of his latest articles.” Apparently Mike Adams is considered a representative of the mainstream scientific establishment. Which sort of puts Dubay’s fan base in perspective.

Dubay also links to David Duke’s website and has argued that Hitler was really a nice guy who is just misunderstood by the contemporary world: “Adolf Hitler was actually a vegetarian, animal-lover, an author, an artist, a political activist, economic reformer and nominated for a Nobel Peace prize. He enacted the world's first anti-animal cruelty, anti-pollution, and anti-smoking laws. Unlike the demonic portrait that the ‘allies’ painted of him, Hitler was beloved by his people, he wanted nothing but peace, and never ordered the extermination of a single Jew.” The bad rep is really due to a conspiracy created and promoted by the “Jew world order”.

So, yes: According to Dubay, the Earth is flat, Hitler was a nice guy, and the Jews control everything. He also has articles on Atlantis, HAARP, global warming conspiracies, the Freemasons, out-of-place artifacts, chemtrails, FEMA concentration camps, the moon landing hoax and numerology (and he really focuses on the most familiar and inane line of argument in each and every case). But all of that really pales in comparison.


Diagnosis: Worth a visit. Eric Dubay is possibly the craziest and most delusional person on the Internet, and that is something of an accomplishment.

#1566: Karl Duff

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Dumpster diving among the signatories to the Discovery Institute’s petition A Scientific Dissent from Darwinism produces some hilariously inane results, and Karl Duff is definitely one of the sillier. Duff has an Sc.D. in mechanical engineering from MIT but is not a scientist, and has as far as we can tell no academic affiliation. He is, however, on the Flood Science Review panel for In Jesus’ Name Productions, a production company that apparently wants to make a movie about the Flood (no idea of how the project is proceeding) that “could have historic impact […] if the science upon which it is based can be sufficiently defended. It could even represent a significant challenge to the validity of the theory of Evolution.” Indeed it could, but the antics of the panel bear little resemblance to anything remotely connected with science. Their webpage is here. According to the webpage the panel consists of “independent highly qualified scientists”, including, in addition to Duff:

-       Our old acquaintance John Reed.
-       David K. Bassett, affiliated with nothing less than Carl Baugh’s Creation Evidence Museum.
-       Mark Horstemeyer, who – unlike the others – enjoys a real academic affiliation (though utterly unrelated to the scientific issues at hand, of course) by being a professor in the Mechanical Engineering Department at Mississippi State University; he is also the founder of the Association for Christian Graduate Researchers.
-       Ian Juby, the “founder of Canada’s first creation museum”.
-       Todd Styer, who, the website assures us, “has studied mainstream science” (though his education consists of a Master of Business Administration).
-       Christopher Lyndon, (disconcertingly) a high school physics teacher with some science background in irrelevant fields.
-       Rob Thomson, another fundie with an unrelated “MS in applied physics” (i.e. utterly disqualified for the kind of scientific work the panel claims to be engaged in).
-       Wayne Spencer, yet another non-scientist.
-       Raymond Strom, a Calgary-based businessman with – big surprise – little or no scientific background.

It’s the type of motley crew that usually is found behind these kinds of projects, in other words: a minority of them has any science background whatsoever, and none of them has a science background in any remotely relevant fields.

Duff himself has built a bit of a career writing books like Dating, Intimacy, and the Teenage Years (check out the editorialreview), as well as Bride of the High Places, Restoration of Men and Restoration of Marriage, which presumably continues in the same vein. He has also written numerous creationist screeds, such as Life is Organized Without Darwinian Transitions; I leave it to readers to spot the creationist PRATTs in that one (seriously, this is Kent Hovind-territory). Bingo sheet here.


Diagnosis: Cargo cult science hardly comes more pitifully delusional than this, but Duff’s impact is probably limited – he doesn’t exactly put the Discovery Institute’s petition in a good light, but neither does anything else.

#1567: Jim Bob & Michelle Duggar, et al.

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We are loath to give space and exposure to the Duggars, but I suppose a brief note is in order in an Encyclopedia like this. And Jim Bob Duggar actually did serve in the Arkansas House of Representatives between 1999 and 2002. The Duggars are followers of the Quiverfull movement and members of the Institute in Basic Life Principles organization, a Bible-based homeschooling program run by the deranged monster Bill Gothard. The oldest daughter, Jana Duggar, is a leader at the IBLP’s Journey to the Heart youth ministry. Josh Duggar, supported in all his antics by Mike Huckabee, is the executive director of Family Research Council Action, which would have been hilarious if it weren’t so tragic.

Jim Bob himself has enjoyed something of a star status among the crazier segments of the religious rights and did, for instance, give an appropriately inane speech at the 2013 Values Voters Summit, where he – as people like him tend to do – compared the US to Nazi Germany on the grounds that the majority of Americans fail to agree with his crazy, bigoted insanity. Then there is this (oh, yes). In a 2011 book Jim Bob and Michelle argued that women are “defrauding men” by dressing immodestly, since any abuse by men should be blamed on the women leading men into temptation. They clearly don’t know what “defrauding” means. Jim Bob is a realtor in his daily life.

Here is a discussion of the scientific musings of Jessa Duggar. Clearly the homeschooling she received did not include a focus on logic, reasoning or use of cognitive faculties, but what would you expect from parents like hers? Her husband, Ben Seewald, doesn’t like evolution either (and has no more idea of what it is than you’d expect from a Kent Hovind-acolyte).


Diagnosis: Repugnant monsters. These people are not only stupid; they’re evil. All of them (though Jim Bob, Michelle and Bill Gothard are primarily to blame – yes, even compared to Josh Duggar, since those three should be held morally responsible for that one).

#1568: Selwyn Duke

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A wingnut’s wingnut (and a particularly crazy one at that), Selwyn Duke writes for the inaccurately named American Thinker and Alan Keyes’s website RenewAmerica. Duke is perhaps particularly known for writing about issues concerning race, and has for instance claimed that Obama is purging the military of white, Christian men in order to make the soldiers loyal to him for the inevitable imposition of martial law. Evidence? It’s what Duke imagines he would have done if he were a commie, which tells you quite a bit about Duke and not very much about Obama or the military. His rant was duly picked up by the Liberty Counsel. Apparently Obama is also trying to instigate a race war by not being white. Here Duke defends the South African apartheid regime (among other things). Here he denounces Michelle Obama’s positive view on desegregation.

Later Duke twisted Neera Tanden’s remark that the president “doesn’t like people” – by which she meant he is a “private person” – to claim that the president is a “misanthrope.” Said Duke: “You know what kinds of leaders didn’t like people?” he mused. “People like Joseph Stalin. People like Ivan the Terrible,” adding: “I’m reminded of Hitler here.” Which is a pretty remarkable display of the workings of a mind unencumbered by reason.

He has also recommended that America should break up like Yugoslavia did since he doesn’t want to live in a country where gay people are treated equally and because liberals are evil heathens. According to Duke the fact that wingnuts are losing the culture wars is “nothing less than a superior culture being subsumed by an inferior one,” and secession is the natural response. Just like 1861. If they do not secede, it will mean “a thousand years of darkness. Oh yes, the end of civilization! And humanity!”

As you’d expect he doesn’t have the faintest clue about how the First Amendment (or the legal system in general) works.


Diagnosis: Yeah, one of those. Zealously idiotic.

#1569: Lindsey Duncan

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Lindsey Duncan is a naturopath and one of many scammers and hucksters pushing phony drugs and supplements and fake weight-loss aids, in particular, in Duncan’s case, green coffee bean extract, which Duncan claimed could cause you to lose lots of weight in a short time without diet or exercise. There are plenty of these people out there, but Duncan is a bit special since he was invited on Dr. Oz’s show to promote his products, an appearance Duncan would use for all it was worth (which, given Dr Oz’s lack of moral and intellectual integrity, should be nothing but isn’t) for marketing purposes.

Duncan, who told the show’s audience that his weight loss claims were backed by a clinical study (found to be “severely flawed”), began selling his extract at Walmart and on Amazon after agreeing to appear on Dr. Oz but before that particular episode aired, which gave him time to build up a serious marketing campaign around that appearance (apparently it was the Oz show who contacted him and asked him to promote green coffee bean extract as a weight loss remedy; Duncan had apparently had nothing to do with it beforehand but said “yes” and immediately started pushing it). Through his companies Pure Health LLC and Genesis Today, Inc., he also paid spokespeople to promote the products without disclosing their financial ties. Apparently he eventually sold tens of millions of dollars’ worth of the green coffee bean extract (other supplements he promoted included fake “cancer-fighting” supplements, such as black raspberry). The FTC ultimately forced him to pay $9 million to customers, and he was barred under the settlement from making further deceptive claims about the health benefits of his dietary and drug products. He was also charged by Texas authorities with falsely claiming to be a physician and doctor, which, as a naturopath with his education from a diploma mill, he isn’t. We haven’t really followed more recent developments but can only hope that he’s been put out of business (probably not).

A 2014 study found that half the medical claims made on The Dr. Oz Show had no scientific basis or were directly contradicted by available evidence. It also found that Oz himself neglected to address potential conflicts of interest on his program. So yes, this post is ultimately another one about the intellectual and moral bankruptcy of Dr. Oz and his show.


Diagnosis: A standard scammer and snakeoil salesman. It is, of course, unclear whether Duncan himself believes a word of the falsehoods that keep dropping from his mouth, but with these high-profile supplement providers the distinction between true believer and opportunistic fraud is very, very hard to draw. Counts as a loon for our purposes.

#1570: Don Dwyer

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Don Dwyer was a member of the Maryland House of Delegates from 2003 until 2014, when he was defeated presumably largely because of his legal troubles and certain hard-to-market drinking-related incidents. Dwyer, though, blamed his drinking problems on gay marriage: When Maryland passed their marriage equality resolution, which Dwyer had ardently campaigned against for years, he “was physically ill. You pour your heart into an issue like that and it’s devastating.” During the aforementioned campaigns Dwyer appeared precisely as erudite and reasonable as you’d expect:  “Do you realize that the homosexual agenda – not homosexuals but the agenda – is a cultural predator? And it's going after the minds of our most vulnerable, which are our children.”

Dwyer, a genuine theocrat, also used to be the executive director of Michael Peroutka’s theocratic Institute on the Constitution. And like his fellows there, Dwyer has advocated the nullification of any laws that do not conform to the group’s “Biblical worldview.” Dwyer accordingly introduced nullification bills in Maryland, explaining that “[n]ullification is not an act whereby a state simply refuses to comply with a Federal law it does not like, it is the claim that the law is not a law at all because it is unconstitutional.” He is himself a defender of legally required religious tests for office (more here).

In 2013 Dwyer, who gained some fame when he acted out an Annapolis version of the Boston Tea Party (donning a tricorner hat and Colonial breeches to dump tea into the Annapolis harbor) and was named Legislator of the Year by Larry Pratt’s group Gun Owners of America, started a DINO campaign to get wingnuts to register as Democrats in order to pull the Democratic party to the right: “If the gun community alone follows me in this strategic plan, we will have a devastating effect on the next statewide election,” he argued. One who followed Dwyer’s advice was Consitution Party candidate and League of the South chaplain Pastor David “God-given right to secede” Whitney.


Diagnosis: Abysmally crazy theocrat. Fortunately (relatively) neutralized, but his allies are still running disconcertingly strong.
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