Bleach: No not drink (Photo by Flikr user Joe Loong)
You don't have to complete a first aid course to know that drinking bleach is bad for you. It causes boils, intestinal bleeding and renal failure, yet some parents in Ireland have been using the "treatment" introduced by Jim Humble head of the US Genesis II Church of Health and Healing – regularly referred to as a cult. An active MMS website in Ireland pushes the solution as a cure for, well, loads of things.This is despite the HPRA releasing a statement saying that selling MMS is illegal. "The HPRA confirms that the product referred to as Miracle Mineral Solution ('MMS') is not authorised as a medicine for sale or supply in Ireland," it said. "Any manufacture, supply or sale of this product for the purposes of treating a medical condition is thereby illegal."I spoke to Patrick Merlehan, a member of the Genesis II church in Ireland. He told me MMS cures "pathogens" and is a miracle cure. He mentioned that the Red Cross have supposedly used MMS in clinical trials – a line often used by MMS supporters. There's even a YouTube video "proving" the treatment works against Malaria."MMS cures Malaria, it's been proven by the Red Cross. They're denying it now because big business influences all their decisions," said Merlehan. "I've met a few people who use MMS but they're nervous to go public because of harassment from the state through its organs like the HPRA. The media is very unfair on MMS here because they've got their advertisers to think about, who are of course big pharma companies."
Annons
The video "proving" that having bleach enemas cures autismUnsurprisingly, the Red Cross disagrees with Merlehan's assessment that bleach can cure Malaria. They issued a statement slamming the practice and distancing themselves from the church. "The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies dissociates itself in the strongest terms from the content of the Master Mineral Solution newsletter entitled 'Malaria finally defeated' and supporting YouTube video," said the unequivocal statement.On the MMS Ireland website, you can still register to become a "Health Minister" in Jim Humble's church. The ex-scientologist, described as a "former aerospace industry engineer and gold miner" is credited with developing lunar vehicles, atomic weapons and apparently he even invented the first automatic garage door.Humble recommends parents give their children up to 60 drops a day and claims the nausea that follows in a signs the treatment is working. Sickness and intestinal bleeding are explained away as "pathogens being destroyed" while parents are encouraged to check the faeces that follows ingestion for "worms" which are supposedly excreted, which is meant to prove that MMS is working.

Annons
Annons