The folks at Healthwyze are either pharma-plants, or too stupid for their own (and their readers) good.
The Healthwyze editor, Mr. C. Thomas Corriher:
Thomas Corriher states in the comment section, talking about MMS:
"It wasn't the MMS that helped. Chlorine is actually known to"
As you can see, Mr. Corriher is clearly not the sharpest knife in the drawer.
Corriher even offered an article commentator who was worried about her husband using MMS on his daughter, to call child protective services on her husband:
healthwyze.org/ index.php/component/content/article/320-jim-humbles-mms-fraud.html
-- where
a scared and illinformed lady wrote the following comment:
"annie - my daughter is being fed mms
my 17 year old daughter has chosen to live with her father (my ex) and while visiting me i discovered that she was taking MMS on a regular basis. her father bought this stuff online and uses it on himself and his family and has convinced my daughter, her friends that it is a natural "miracle cure" for whatever ailes you. she even left 2 bottles with me. before i injested it, i checked up on it and found articles like this one.
it scares me to death that my daughter is taking this!! i don't know what to do -can't send her the site - if it's from me - because she has total faith in her father. he is NOT a doctor nor does he have ANY experience in the medical field. please help me decide what to do."
Mr. Corriher responded with the following:
"Don't bother trying to win anybody over, because that is just wasting precious time on something that may not be unfruitful. You should immediately
contact your local department of child protective services, and inform them that the child is being poisoned regularly with an industrial bleaching compound that the F.D.A. has issued warnings about. Tell them that they can verify the dangerousness of it by asking a poison control center about chlorine dioxide, or the F.D.A. Be sure to mention that this compound is an explosive. Mention that this is being used for the purpose of "medical neglect", instead of getting her standard medicine -- to get the biggest impact.
Call us if you need any assistance, and we're willing to call it in for you if you provide us the necessary information. He is probably feeding her iodine too, as a "supplement". I'm sure the local sheriff's department would love to ask her about his "medical" care. If you don't do anything, then you're just as guilty as he is."
In other words, either they are deceiving their readers on purpose, or they are too stupid to do proper research.
In any case, as journalists, the folks at Healthwyze cannot and should not be trusted - under any circumstances.