Pick a date. Examine the literature coming to you in either your mailbox, your email, or even a book you picked up. "This heals that!" "That heals this!" "Yoko juice stops cancer!" "BumBum berries cure lumbago!"
It never stops. Some say it increases by the day. Reams refused to go there. His students refuse to go there. Perhaps the whole story can be told in this short excerpt from Choose Life Or Death...
I am often asked, ―Is this food or that food good for you?‖ Many times people think I just do not want to tell them. They ask the RBTI testers if this or that food is good or bad for them, and the testers give the same answer: ―I do not know whether it is good or bad for you because we do not have scientific facts to back up our answers. Until we have the RBTI test made we do not know whether something is good or bad for anyone...
Human nature being what it is, we probably will never be able to completely shake our fads---but we can try. We can have our "Sure," or "Right," at the ready when friends or family try to earnestly, oh so earnestly, get us to understand the value of this miracle food or that miracle juice, or perhaps even a miracle powder or two. And then we can quietly go by the numbers. We can be less faddish and more scientific. It is a better way.