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Parents are giving children anti-vax bleach enemas to cure autism

The promoters of Miracle Mineral Solution (MMS) advise parents to administer it orally or through enemas — that is, injecting the corrosive bleach solution into their children’s rectum.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has issued a warning to parents, saying that the so-called Miracle Mineral Solution being peddled to ill-informed parents as a “miracle cure” for autism is a “dangerous” and “potentially life threatening” product.

According to FDA, MMS contains sodium chlorite. The marketers instruct users to mix the solution with citric acid (obtained from orange juice) to yield chlorine dioxide, an industrial product used as a powerful oxidizing agent for industrial water treatment and bleaching wood pulp.

But according to FDA, “The product (MMS), when used as directed, produces an industrial bleach that can cause serious harm to health. High oral doses of this bleach, such as those recommended in the labeling, can cause nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and symptoms of severe dehydration.’

However, the snake-oil salesmen marketing this dangerous product to parents online claim that it cures autism, HIV/AIDS, Ebola, malaria, hepatitis, acne and cancer by “flushing” out of their children’s systems, “vaccines, viruses, yeast, bacteria, parasites” that cause autism and other diseases.

According to If You Only News, MMS was created by Jim Humble, a former member of the Church of Scientology who left the group to form the Genesis II Church of Health & Healing, because he wanted to promote his “miracle cure” product.

Humble is being assisted in his project by Kerri Rivera, who founded a website called CD Autism to promote MMS.

Rivera, who describes herself as a biomedical consultant and certified homeopath, promotes the product with the marketing slogan: “Autism: Avoidable. Treatable. Curable.” She has written a book on how to use bleach to cure autism, titled “Healing the Symptoms Known as Autism.”

She posts regularly to her Facebook page testimonies from parents who claim they have used MMS to cure their children’s autism. She recommends her prescribed “CD protocol” (chlorine dioxide protocol) with the claim that it has cured at least 164 children. A parent testifying to the efficacy of the CD protocol writes:

“I just wanted to tell you great news we have received yesterday from bioresonance diagnostic treatment. We went there actually for the first time, just to check how we have improved with CD, which my 6 years old son has been using it for a year and a half now, and she said: I don’t know what’re doing but just keep doing what you’re doing, because you’re doing GREAT! She couldn’t find viruses, bacteria, parasites, yeast; his body has been cleaned a lot, also from heavy metals, she did saw (sic) a virus of measles inside in the intestine, that’s because of the vaccines he got we will try to treat that now and of course not stopping CD and parasite protocol.”

Many parents report having to force their children to use the dangerous solution because children are unwilling to use it. Stories of parents forcing the corrosive solution down their children’s throats or up their rectums are very disturbing.

Bleach is corrosive. Ingesting a solution of bleach could corrode the inner linings of the intestines and destroy normal healthy gut flora, causing the user to shed the corroded linings in the feces. According to If You Only News, when worried parents reported the effect, one of the promoters of MMS, Andreas Kalcker, claimed that the sloughed intestinal linings being expelled by children was a parasite he named “rope worm.”

According to Kalcker and Rivera, “rope worm” is one of the parasites that cause autism.

Raw Story reports that on Jan. 12, following a tip from an anonymous caller, Arkansas state and Garland country officials removed seven children from the home of an Arkansas “prepper” couple, Pastor Hal and his wife Michelle Stanley, after they found MMS in the house while executing a search warrant.

WND’s Bob Unruh, however reported the case with the website’s typical slant, under the headline: “7 homeschool kids ‘stolen’ by sheriff’s deputies.”

However, despite earlier denials, a statement by Michelle Stanley suggests that the couple had been using the preparation for their children.

“Never has it been used in any way to ‘poison’ our kids or even expose them in such a way as to endanger their lives,” Michelle said.


Several professional bodies, including the Autism Science Foundation, have issued warnings to parents about such questionable autism cures. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has also issued a warning.

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) warned that long-term exposure to the chlorine dioxide could cause extensive damage to the reproductive and neural system.

FDA is cracking down on MMS and its purveyors. Fighting back, promoters of the product are relying on the conspiracy theory claim that “Big Pharma” is trying to take the “miracle” solution out of the market to keep their profits flowing.

A friendly reviewer of the product on Amazon writes: “This stuff is a game changer, I have taken it for several years now and illness is a thing of the past. Thumb your nose at the FDA and big Pharma. Believe this book and all Jim Humble has to say. You don`t need your doctors permission to be healthy.”

Another reviewer writes: “Go Natural… do not be just another Cash Cow for Big Pharma and Allopathic M.D.’s — the FDA is a paid off puppet of both!”

Unfortunately, parents who need good advice are the ones least likely to get it from reliable and reputable sources. Ill-informed people are being preyed upon by unscrupulous charlatans, snake-oil salesmen and self-appointed experts who have no training or academic qualifications in the field in which the set themselves up as authorities.

The anti-vax movement, in particular, is dominated by self-appointed authorities in vaccine issues who have no formal medical training or relevant scientific background, yet set themselves up as authorities to prey on the fears of vulnerable individuals.

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