Wednesday, February 18, 2026

#2987: Aaron Hartman (?)

Aaron Hartman is a Richmond-based family physician who is also one of many (see e.g. last entry on Angelique Hart) who has recognized the financial benefits of incorporating non-mainstream modalities into their practices and who, because he has no scruples he has an open mind, has promptly joined the dark side. In addition to his main practice, Hartman sees patients through Richmond Integrative & Functional Medicine, which he launched in early 2017 to target those who are either gullible or somewhat desperate because they can’t find a proper treatment for whatever ails them in conventional medicine, and who has money to spare. As with functional medicine practitioners in general, Hartman offers a range of alternative treatments, including intravenous vitamin C and other supplements. And he’s got anecdotes and marketing glitter to prop up his recommendations (there’s little else).

 

Functional medicine, as we’ve had ample opportunity to note (e.g. here), is quackery: Basically, the idea – insofar as there is a clear idea – is to run a battery of often expensive tests, usually including dubious ones, for anything whatsoever to see if some value along any parameter is unusual. Or, in other words, if you don’t know of anything wrong, they’ll find something. Then they prescribe some unnecessary and often questionable (as in the case of Hartman) treatment regime to address it. Of course it’s lucrative (marketing gambit: the diagnoses and treatment regimes are personalized). And as an added boon, the practitioner will frequently be able to harvest some testimonials, since whatever they addressed was actually not anything that bothered you neither before nor after treatment and you, as a patient, won’t know that it didn’t need addressing and will base your assessment on what the practitioner says.

 

How lucrative? Well, Hartman also offers a membership program – i.e., he runs a quack concierge medical service – which, for the regular plan, requires a membership induction fee of $730 and a monthly maintenance fee of $135 (during the next 12 months of membership); the executive “optimum wellness plan, however, is a fair $1,500, although it offers, in addition to access to the practice, “advanced testing”, including organic acid analysis, comprehensive stool genomic and functional analysis, nutritional analysis, and something called a “comprehensive vascular biological inflammatory analysis”.

 

Diagnosis: It is, of course, hard to sustain the belief that Hartman is merely a loon, but we’ll tactfully assume that it is. And there are lots of these people out there.

 

Hat-tip: Respectful Insolence

 

Monday, February 16, 2026

#2986: Angelique Hart

Angelique Hart is an Albuquerque-based MD who has, as so many others, been lured by the lucrative scam of integrative medicine and joined the dark side of altmed grifting. Her website tells us that she “works with each patient to get to the root cause of the problem” (insinuating that conventional medicine generally doesn’t), and it has a prominently placed store section where you can purchase useless but expensive supplements – which should at least deter those aware of the first rule of online medical advice (don’t take it from anyone with a store section on their website) but unfortunately not deter a rather significant target base of potential customers.

 

Hart offers “regenerative & holistic services”, including useless vampire facials and IV nutrient therapies that purportedly help you “[r]ejuvenate, [d]etoxify, and [h]eal from [w]ithin” and which are highly popular among quacks – and yes, she’ll offer the whole range of IV quackery, from Myers’ cocktail and high-dose Vitamin C, to alpha lipoic acid, glutathione therapy, and detox & chelation therapy. Indeed, Hart’s offerings and recommendations encompass an impressive range of questionable methods and quackery, including hyperbaric oxygen therapy.

 

Diagnosis: It’s not like there isn’t a massive number of these, and covering even a sample of them would be a Herculean (and repetitive) task. Hart, anyways, seems to be a relatively prominent representative of these slick marketers of nonsense and bullshit.

 

Friday, February 13, 2026

#2985: Brian Harrison

Brian W. Harrison is an Australian-born, Missouri-based Roman Catholic priest and theologian, emeritus professor of theology at the Pontifical Catholic University of Puerto Rico, and associate editor of Living Tradition, a publication of the Roman Theological Forum hosted by the Oblates of Wisdom in St Louis. Harrison is also, contrary to official Catholic doctrine, a young earth creationist and demonstrably scientifically illiterate.

 

So, according to Harrison, “[i]t is a core element of science that any finding must be reproducible if it is to be valid. Someone must be able to do the same experiment and get the same results. Well, since evolutionary theory plainly lacks that core element, it is not science. The supposed development of all different phyla (macroevolution) from a hypothetical original cell cannot be observed, much less experimentally reproduced.” … which of course demonstrates a misunderstanding of reproducibility and observability that would (hopefully) ensure that Harrison would fail any legitimate high school science class. And if anyone here is actually unsure but don’t dare to ask:

 

-       Yes, science deals with observations. But there is, of course, no requirement that the phenomena described by a scientific hypothesis or theory should be observable – they usually aren’t – but that the hypothesis yields observable predictions. The theory of evolution does – including predictions e.g. on what fossils one will find in various geological strata. Harrison is illiterate.

-       Yes, scientific results should be replicable. But that means that scientists checking your data or scientists using different methods to gather data should arrive at the same conclusions. It does not mean that the hypothesized phenomenon should be repeated – detectives investigating a murder do not need to commit the murder again for their evidence to count. Good grief. Harrison is dazzlingly illiterate and stupid about these things.  

 

Oh, but Harrison has other objections, too: creationism is ruled out by fiat: “One of evolution’s own core elements is the highly debatable philosophical assumption that all observable phenomena are to be explained by natural causes alone, i.e., excluding any appeal to divine intervention or revelation.” Here, Harrison’s misunderstanding is arguably more understandable: Harrison is appealing to the myth of methodological naturalism, that the assumption of “no magic” is some sort of operational constraint on science. And in fairness: We have seen intelligent people who should know better invoke that myth, too. But it is of course bonkers bullshit – and seeing that methodological naturalism is a myth requires only a moment’s reflection (how could science have arrived at quantum mechanics if it were constrained by substantial metaphysical assumptions about causality?). In reality, science is constrained by empiricism: evidence for or against a hypothesis is acquired by checking whether the hypothesis’s observable predicitions are accurate. If you wish to invoke God or magic to explain the development of life, feel free – but what you need, in that case, is an operationalized concept of God or magic that allows you to actually derive observable predictions from your hypothesis (something creationists refuse to do), and then check whether your hypothesis does a better job of predicting and explaining the data than alternative hypotheses. If it does, you win. But no creationist has, of course, ever even gotten close, for obvious reasons (a hypothesis that is sufficiently precise to actually yield predictions is, after all, also a falsifiable hypothesis).

 

Diagnosis: Complete ignorance about a field and confidence in one’s assertion about that field is a pretty common combination. Harrison’s ignorance and illiteracy is spectacular but hardly novel – we have heard his nonsense many times before. Fundie dolt.

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

#2984: Steven J. Harris

Chronic Lyme is not a genuine diagnosis. People who think they suffer from chronic Lyme (but don’t) are really suffering, however, and since most medical organizations have standards and observe things like accuracy and accountability, they are often unable to come up with clear answers or help to these people. So we have a discrepancy here, ready to be filled by conmen and opportunists. Lyme-literate Doctors is a group of scammers, conspiracy theorists and confused medical providers (it is usually hard to determine to which subgroup particular members belong) who have decided, for various reasons, to grab the opportunity and dazzle people in vulnerable positions with the trappings of recognition and care, pseudoscience and expensive bullshit. They are organized in the group the International Lyme and Associated Disease (ILADS), which provide rather aggressive support, including legal support, for whatever quackery any one of their affiliated doctors might decide to engage in. And the organization has become rather powerful.

 

Steven Jeffrey Harris, a California-based physician and the son of ILADS cofounder and IgeneX founder Nick Harris, is a bit of a celebrity in chronic Lyme circles and a central member of ILADS and Lymedisease.org (formerly CALDA) as well as a “clinical consultant” for IgeneX, all organizations famous for spreading misinformation about Lyme disease. Though he is board certified in Family Medicine, Harris has no recognized advanced credentials in infectious diseases, and it is notable that he practices in California, where real Lyme disease is rather uncommon – people who think they suffer from chronic Lyme are not that rare, however, and Harris has received some attention for his work with celebrities, like Kris Kristoffersen, whom Harris treated with a.o. antibiotic intramuscular injections, which has of course no effect on a condition that doesn’t exist but may decimate the patient’s natural bacterial flora and breed resistant bacteria (as well as giving the impression that the patient is taken seriously).

 

Harris’s dubious practices haven’t quite escaped attention. In 2013, the Medical Board of California charged him with Gross Negligence and/or Repeated Negligent Acts and/or Incompetence with respect to three patients, to whom Harris had recommended a variety of quackery, including bizarre drug cocktails, lab tests, and visits to doctors and alternative practitioners. The nonsense included dozens of medications and homeopathic remedies, and at least one of the patients suffered life threatening complications from the treatments, despite no plausible evidence that any of them were suffering from what Harris claimed they were suffering from. Even so, the reprimand, probably due to California’s Lyme quack protection law, only applied to the intravenous garlic Harris had prescribed to two of them – although at least the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation refused to renew his license to practice medicine. (The complaint also listed one Y.L., presumably Harris’s long-time employee Yvonne Lin Sorenson, and C.R., presumably naturopath Claire Riendeau, whose website has listed Harris as one of her advisers.)

 

Harris has apparently also suggested, utterly ridiculously, that there might be a link between Lyme disease and autism, and he has allegedly also supplied patients to Indian predatory stem cell clinic Nutech Mediworld.

 

Diagnosis: A genuine public menace. Avoid at all cost.

 

Hat-tip: Lymescience.org

 

Monday, February 9, 2026

#2983: Steve Harris

The 2020 book America’s Secret History: How the Deep State, The Fed, The JFK, MLK, and RFK Assassinations, And Much More Led to Donald Trump's Presidency, which purports to contain “the truth behind the stories they don’t want you to know”, might perhaps be judged to be the epitome of 20th- and early 21st-century conspiracy thinking, and a potentially canonical text for QAnon-adjacent activists (were it not for such groups’ proclivity to suspect anything like this of being establishment psyops). The book promotes pretty much every significant and familiar politically-oriented conspiracy theory you can think of, and purports to offer e.g. conclusive proof that Sirhan B. Sirhan didn’t kill RFK, that James Earl Ray did not kill Martin Luther King, Jr. – the book instead blames (of course) the US Government, the FBI, and the city of Memphis of first conspiring to kill MLK and then cover it up – that the establishments of the Carnegie, Rockefeller and Ford Foundations were the beginning of The Deep State, and that John Hinckley, Jr., who tried to assassinate Reagan in 1981, was an agent of George Bush Sr. Also, of course, 9/11 was an inside job (controlled demolition), and so on. At least the book manages to utilize an impressive number of deranged historical sources, including paranoid anti-communist government reports from the 1950s like the Reece Report, and embellishes them with wild-eyed speculation. The book was, of course, well received by other conspiracy theory authors. We don’t have much other information on the book’s author, Steve Harris (he may or may not have written a number of other books (the name is common enough to make it hard to determine), except that he seems to be something of a veteran on the ‘alternative history’ stage, but judging his level of trustworthiness on the contents of America’s Secret History doesn’t exactly suggest any point to investigating further.

 

Diagnosis: Admittedly more of a ‘classic’ conspiracy theorist than a QAnon- or altright-related one. Still.

 

Friday, February 6, 2026

#2982: Samantha Harris

Samantha E. Harris is a “demonologist, deliverance minister, guest TV host, director of MPRA” (the “Michigan Paranormal Research Association”), “psychic, and spiritual healer” – yes, she is an adult person who fails to distinguish Poltergeist and The Conjuring franchises from real life (or, as she puts it herself: “The Exorcism of Emily Rose and The Exorcist are two of the more accurate films depicting demonic possession in Hollywood productions”). Her career is devoted to removing hauntings and demons  – basically performing ‘blessings’: “[a]s of 2017, she has performed over 120 house blessings for severe hauntings and counting” – and to ‘educate’ people on how to avoid such things: it’s basically the tricks you’ll find featured in the aforementioned movies. Her work has been featured on venerable purveyors of evidence-based information like the Travel Channel and the Discovery Channel. Insofar as she is “a sensitive”, her “most personal and frequent experiences are: dream premonitions, intense empathy, and discerning spirits/energy”, or in other words: Her standard of assessment for her choices, diagnoses and assessments are largely whatever she feels about the issue at hand. She also has a book, Fighting Malevolent Spirits: A Demonologist’s Darkest Encounters, which we admit to not having read.

 

The MPRA, on its side, was “established to allow experienced paranormal groups in Michigan to unite, creating a paranormal think-tank and allowing groups to assist each other with educating, training, experience, scheduling and manpower”; its website really fulfills all your preconceptions about paranormal research, with its commitment to horror-movie aesthetics (fuzzy black-and-white pictures of old abandoned houses and so on), and thoroughly fails to dispel the suspicion that they’re not entirely serious.

 

Diagnosis: Whatever. Probably mostly harmless.


Wednesday, February 4, 2026

#2981: Cliff Harris

Cliff Harris is an End Times preacher, climate change denialist and general conspiracy theorist. Harris is perhaps most notable for his book Weather and Bible Prophecy, which is signed “Climatologist Cliff Harris”, although it is difficult to find any information on his credentials, education or any research background whatsoever other than him having been involved in something called Harris-Mann Climatology, which seems to be little more than a (now-defunct) website, with fellow fundie endtimes loon Randy Mann (you can find some discussion on some of their work in the comments here). His own website lists him as one of the “top 10 climatologists in the world”, but it is unclear on what that assessment is based given that he has no discernible credentials or scientific publication record.

 

In any case, his book – for which we cannot find any publisher info – putatively explores the link between weather events and biblical prophecies, in particular prophecies connected to the End Times: weather and climate events are ostensibly means God use to draw attention to himself (apparently with varying success), and play some role (we can’t manage to motivate ourselves to delve into details) in the potential emergence of “New Jerusalem”. At least Harris is clear that climate change, as understood by scientific communities, is a “hoax” being used to grow the size of government. And growing the size of government is, of course, deeply unChristian and a mark of the end times: In a discussion with Rick Wiles, for instance, Harris claimed that the mass support for Bernie Sanders’ presidential campaign in 2015 is clear evidence that the second coming of Jesus is imminent.

 

In parallel with his scrapbook projects on climate, Harris has also been pushing geoengineering and chemtrail conspiracy theories, claiming for instance that chemtrails are a significant cause of allergies, chronic illnesses and ‘flu-like symptoms’ across America. His expertise in medicine roughly parallels his expertise on climate.

 

Diagnosis: Completely bonkers, but it seems that his feeble analyses have had some impact in denialist communities – and possibly even among people with actual power (there are some references to them even in government documents). And if the lunatic rants of Cliff Harris don’t fail to find traction, it's hard to hold on to the hope that there are any boundaries whatsoever.