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A Song You Never Expected to Hear on Solo Acoustic Guitar: Luca Stricagnoli, "Thunderstruck" (AC/DC)

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blueraven2/17/2015 10:15:10 am PST

re: #249 Prof. Backpfeifengesicht, PhD

Is there a possibility that his fame has been exaggerated? OK, he separated those twins, but maybe that time it was dumb luck. Sorry, he’s shown himself to be too ignorant to give him any benefit of doubt.

I think one can be very talented in one specific area, while having absolutely no wide ranging knowledge aside from that one area of expertise.

That said, he has certainly been associated with some questionable quacks. Dumb.

Carson:

The wonderful thing about a company like Mannatech is that they recognize that when God made us, He gave us the right fuel. And that fuel was the right kind of healthy food. You know we live in a society that is very sophisticated, and sometimes we’re not able to achieve the original diet. And we have to alter our diet to fit our lifestyle. Many of the natural things are not included in our diet. Basically what the company is doing is trying to find a way to restore natural diet as a medicine or as a mechanism for maintaining health.

ooops

In November 2004, the mother of a child with Tay-Sachs disease who died after being treated with Mannatech products filed suit against the company in Los Angeles Superior Court, seeking damages for intentional infliction of emotional distress, negligent misrepresentation, and conspiracy to commit fraud. The suit alleged that the Mannatech sales associate who “treated” the three-year-old had shared naked photos of the boy — provided by his mother as evidence of weight gain, with an understanding that they’d be kept confidential — with hundreds of people at a Mannatech demonstration seminar. The sales associate was further accused of authoring an article, in the Journal of the American Nutraceutical Association in August 1997, explicitly claiming that Mannatech’s supplements had improved the boy’s condition, even though the boy had, by that time, died. The suit also presented evidence that Mannatech was still using photographs of the boy in promotional materials on its website in March 2004, “with the clear inference that [the boy] was alive and doing well some seven years after his actual death.”