Friday, November 7, 2025

#2952: Steven Gundry

Steven Gundry is a pseudoscience-based wellness guru who has, apparently, managed to achieve something close to stardom in the wellness community. One thing that has presumably contributed to his success is the fact that Gundry is, indeed, a (former) cardiothoracic surgeon, something that presumably gives his nonsense a sheen of legitimacy to people with no background or knowledge in medicine and who don’t bother to look too closely. He does apparently have little or no scientific background in the fields to which he currently tries to contribute copious amounts of nonsense – Gundry is a nutritionist, not a dietician; his audience consists of people who don’t know the difference.

 

Gundry is probably most famous for promoting the pseudoscientific lectin-free diet, e.g. in his apparently quite popular book The Plant Paradox: The Hidden Dangers in “Healthy” Foods That Cause Disease and Weight Gain, which appropriately made this list. The supposed paradox of the title is the idea that consumption of grains, legumes and fruit (Gundry calls it “toxic candy”) leads to obesity and weight gain, a delusion that is not supported by any evidence but is contradicted by massive amounts of research demonstrating an inverse association (example, if needed; here’s another; meanwhile, Gundry’s own research to contradict consensus is … a poster at a conference). According to real scientists who care about integrity and nevertheless bothered to read the book, “even more egregious [than his well-worn quack gambit of referring to articles that don’t remotely say what he claims they say] are the wild claims he makes with no referencing at all, which is most of the text ... Sometimes it almost seems like this author is just making things up that sound good”. Examples include random assertions that “Up until 10,000 years ago, the average human stood about 6 feet tall” (patently false) and that most of his stage 3 and stage 4 cancer patients got better (no publication or study cited). The book does check every box on the standard pseudoscience gambit list, however. There is a decent review here.

 

Gundry’s guiding, erroneous idea is that lectins – which a lot of plants contain plenty of – cause inflammation (they’re “highly toxic”) and are really the cause of many modern diseases, including numerous autoimmune diseases, cancer, heart disease and some of its risk factors, weight problems, slow infant growth, diabetes, mental health problems, and neurological conditions like Parkinson’s, dementia, and “cramps, tingling, and numbness”. His Plant Paradox diet accordingly tells you to avoid all foods containing lectins altogether. Indeed, a main claim of Gundry’s is that “the continuous availability of fruit is one of the biggest contributors to the obesity crisis”; just think about that for a second (Gundry adds that fruits today are worse than before because they are GMOs, a claim that is false – the only GMO fruit available in the US is papayas – and would anyways have been bonkers crazy, but which probably works quite well with his intended audiences). In reality, by contrast, the evidence of the benefits of high-lectin-containing diets “is so overwhelming as to render Gundry’s arguments laughable”; Gundry, by contrast, has exactly no evidence and no remotely plausible mechanism for the purported effects of lectins on weight. According to endocrinologist and past president of the American Heart Association Robert Eckel, Gundry’s diet advice contradicts “every dietary recommendation represented by the American Cancer Society, American Heart Association, American Diabetes Association and so on”; moreover, it is not possible to draw any conclusions from Gundry’s own attempts as ‘research’ due to the absence of control patients in his studies.

 

Meanwhile, Gundry’s own line of supplements purportedly protects against or even reverse the supposedly damaging effects of lectins and include the Lectin Shield (“to assist the body in the fight against lectins”) and the Enhanced Circulation Formula (“designed to keep your blood flowing smoothly, carrying oxygen to all essential organs, tissues, and muscles”) – it’s notable that his list of ‘yes’ foods in his book consists of mostly expensive and hard-to-obtain products, making his own supplement series an attractive alternative for those who may have bought into his bullshit (he assures his audiences that this conflict of interest shouldn’t undermine his authority, though); and yes, his website does have a Quack Miranda Warning. Ostensibly, he even runs an experimental clinic investigating the impact of a lectin-free diet on health because it might be useful for marketing purposes to be able to refer to something like this. His lectin-free nonsense is apparently also popular with proponents of Dave Asprey’s mostly bullshit bulletproof diet and has moreover been promoted (of course) by pop stars and celebrities.

 

Currently, he is also the host of the Dr. Gundry Podcast on health and nutrition (not recommended) and writes articles for Gwyneth Paltrow’s Goop website. That last fact alone should really be sufficient to fully capture the sort of character we’re dealing with here, but just to pile it on: Gundry has even expressed support for Joseph Mercola, claiming that Mercola provides “very useful health advice”. To top it all off, Gundry also pushed pseudoscientific anti-vaccine nonsense (anti-vaxxers called it a “study) about mRNA vaccines during Covid, because of course he did; the misinformation was quickly debunked by real scientists, but Gundry’s audience isn’t very good at distinguishing good sources from clown train horn honks.

 

His latest book is apparently Unlocking the Keto Code (2022) – yup, Gundry knows to hitch the fad, which is crucial to maintain your success on the wellness pseudoscience idiot circuit. Before moving on to lectins, Gundry had published the book Dr. Gundry's Diet Evolution: Turn Off the Genes That Are Killing You and Your Waistline (2008), which we haven’t read and neither should you.

 

Diagnosis: Once Steven Gundry was a respectable medical practitioner; now he is full of shit. His nonsense reads as the worst kinds of spam and content-covering ads and is about as trustworthy. Whether he himself believes the confused rot that falls out of his mouth is not always clear to us (we wish to be charitable, but a principle of charity sort of pulls in two directions here), but people apparently listen. Good f**king grief.

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

#2951: Zach Guiler

Zach Guiler is a preacher affiliated with the Canal Church of Christ in Waverly, Ohio, and a creationist. In a 2017 letter to the editor of the local newspaper The Pike County News Watchman, he helpfully lays out his reasons for why people continue to believe in the theory of evolution even though Guiler himself has “proven time and again in our Wednesday night apologetics class that the Theory of Evolution is an illogical lie”. The reasons are:

 

1.     that “for the past 50 years, evolution has been the only thing taught in schools”, and not “as an unproven theory, but as scientific fact.”

2.     that “it has been portrayed in popular culture and the media that the most intelligent people believe in evolution”; therefore “people claim to believe in evolution, not based on facts and evidence, but because it will make them appear to be in the same league as those who are educated and intelligent”.

3.     that “it is claimed that the vast majority of scientists believe in evolution”; it is unclear whether Guiler actually believes they do (they do), but in any case “even if the majority of scientists believe in the theory of evolution, that doesn’t make evolution any less of the lie that it is”. Don’t be “a sheep following the masses” or, as the case might be, those who actually know anything about the subject matter. Cynics might also wonder whether he advocates the same attitude in other contexts.

4.     that many accept evolution because they “[t]don’t want there to be a God”. That must be a significant motivation since “[n]o one believes in evolution because of the evidence”. Why not? Because “there is virtually no evidence to back the theory up!” – Guiler hasn’t bothered to try to look up any of it: and indeed, “[E]ven those who believe in evolution must admit this.” It is presumably the influence of Satan that prevents them from voicing this admission.

 

Or in short: “Creationism has evidence while evolution is void of any and “Creationism is logical while evolution is improbable”. He doesn’t mention any of the evidence; we suppose he means that you should take his word for it.

 

Diagnosis: And just like that, Zach Guiler demolished the core tenets of modern public school science curricula. Why won’t those darned scientists listen? It must be Satan, mustn’t it?

Monday, November 3, 2025

#2950: Anthony Gucciardi

Anthony Gucciardi is the co-founder of Natural Society, a group and website devoted to health-related pseudoscience, misinformation and conspiracy theories in a manner reminiscent of NaturalNews and guided – like so many other similar websites and groups – by the pseudoreligious tenet that the vaguely defined category of being natural is a reliable guide to the good. The website pushes all manners of denialism and anti-medicine conspiracies (scientists aren’t just wrong but actively trying to harm you because money), including anti-vaccine misinformation, chemtrails rants and geoengineering nonsense; fortunately, and predictably, they themselves have a prominently placed store where you can buy information materials on e.g. nonsense like detox regimes, as well as a range of useless and expensive supplements instead. (A perhaps illustrative example of their standards is discussed here: Gucciardi’s post “Fifteen Companies Whose Products Contain Wood Pulp” lists fifteen companies with products that contains cellulose, which according to Gucciardi is an indigestible useless filler and therefore shows that these companies are corrupt and willing to sacrifice your well-being for money; do you think he mentions that Natural Society’s own useless and expensive supplement line Slimfy is cellulose put in a bottle and marketed as a diet aid?)


Gucciardi gained some attention for himself in the early 2010s in particular for his anti-GMO activism based on anti-GMO conspiracy theories and pseudoscience (he was e.g. a promoter of the laughable and infamous ‘Seralini study’), and he was a speaker at various conspiracy theory rallies like those organized by March Against Monsanto. Gucciardi has no discernible background in any relevant scientific discipline, of course, but his ability to pull nonsense out of his ass in alarmist, conspiratorial rants nevertheless earned him the status of ‘expert’ at other, similarly conspiracy- and denialism-oriented media outlets.

 

Now, we don’t actually know Gucciardi’s level of involvement in Natural Society at present – most recent posts there seem to be penned by one Mike Barrett, and it is unclear whether any new material has been published the last few years. However, we assume this entry’s Gucciardi is identical to Anthony Gucciardi, President of Gucciardi Creative and a “self-made entrepreneur and seeker of knowledge” who these days writes about spirituality and how to achieve a “higher quality life” (i.e. a self-help guru) and who “releases content on business, leadership, philosophy, development, and life to nearly 1 million social subscribers across his platforms”. This Gucciardi also highlights his work with “FDA-Registered [a weird thing to highlight for anyone aware of some crucial distinctions] dietary supplement and wellness product manufacturers in the United States, formulation experts, multi-generational herbalists, and nutritional scientists” and is the founder of “Of The Ancients, an herbal health supplement line that features high quality herbal formulations traditionally used by ancient cultures for a variety of health benefits.”

 

Diagnosis: He seems to have honed away some spikes over the years, presumably because soft, vague, positive fluff makes it easier to market his nonsense to the intended audiences. But even if the explicit conspiracy theories is town down, what he produces remains nonsensical drivel. Needless to say, you really shouldn’t bother to listen to any of it.

Friday, October 31, 2025

#2949: James Grundvig

James Grundvig is a freelance journalist, relentless conspiracy theorist, senior member of the anti-vaccine movement and contributor to disgraced antivax doctor Sherri Tenpenny’s blog Vaxxter, where he seems bent on trying (and failing) to make even Tenpenny’s nonsense seem reasonable. So, Grundvig is the kind of guy who tried to blame Covid-19 on 5G so that the whole vaccine effort could be dismissed as a smoke-screen and conspiracy targeting a virus that is harmless unless ‘triggered’ by 5G), citing “images” of “people walking down the street, collapsing dead without any external force. Dozens of such videos and photos showed the fallen people spread eagle, flat on their backs, face down on sidewalks. Lifeless” ostensibly from Wuhan and Northern Italy.

 

It’s not Grundvig’s only foray into Covid-related conspiracy theories. In September 2020, for instance, he and Tenpenny tried to argue that food poisoning due to brucellosis is (or will be) passed off as COVID-19. With regard to biology, bacteriology, virology, or basic facts about infectious disease that claim makes absolutely no sense, of course; instead of trying to make sense, Grundvig and Tenpenny offered conspiracy videos by Joe Imbriano that they found between Imbriano’s rants about 5G and how Disney promotes homosexuality and how Apple is Satanic because numerology. They also asserted that Bill Gates and the WHO are behind (and managing) the pandemic for some unspecific but nefarious purpose (with regard to the CDC and the WHO, in particular, Grundvig and Tenpenny noted these organizations’ warnings about future COVID strains: “Why sound the klaxon on a new scourge of COVID when there is zero evidence and zero data to show one is coming? Do the architects of the plandemic know something that the rest of society doesn’t know?” but didn’t consider the rather obvious answer that why, yes: the experts do know more than the rest of us: they have data and understand how to interpret them). Their post also included a “greatest hits of Covid conspiracies” list, including the “only 6% nonsense”.

 

Indeed, trying to downplay the risk of the viruses we vaccinate against (using conspiracy theories) to try to argue that the vaccination is pointless is a go-to strategy for Grundvig. Addressing a 2019 measles outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo that killed at least 5,000 people, Grundvig did a multi-prong deflection attempt to explain how a “generally mild viral infection” (false!) could rack up such numbers:

 

-       That since outbreaks of this severity doesn’t occur “in first world countries”, “hygiene, nutrition, refrigeration, and potable water” must be the cause, something Grundvig calls “a long-known and well-kept secret by the WHO, UNICEF, and medical institutions around the world”. Well, that Grundvig interprets the fact that malnutrition is a major risk factor for death from measles is a “well-kept secret” should tell you a bit about his knowledge of the subjects he discusses. In fact, Grundvig does cite a USAID article mentioning these risks, but notes that “those environmentalist researchers didn’t say vaccines were at the heart of disease reduction”, except, of course, they explicitly did (Grundvig naturally doesn’t expect his audience to read the material he cites).

-       That shedding from measles vaccines are “muddying” the numbers from the outbreak (it most certainly doesn’t).

-       That the purported measles cases arereally acetaminophen side-effects (“could the bulk of the 5,000 measles deaths be a case of mistaken identity?”), since acetaminophen side effects sound a bit like they could be mistaken for measles symptoms; Grundvig even includes pictures of both, which even to untrained eyes (like Grundvig’s) don’t look remotely similar. “This author firmly believes so,” says Grundvig. So there.

 

He also cites research suggesting that the measles virus produces immune amnesia to try to raise worries about the measles vaccine, conveniently forgetting that it takes a full measles infection to damage the immune system in that way – in other words, the research gives you yet another bloody good reason to get the vaccine – or how garbage antivaxx ‘studies’ are “censored when they are rejected or retracted due to methodological shortcomings.

 

Otherwise, Grundvig has given numerous talks and written numerous rants about how anti-vaxxers are “censored by the fact that public health groups don’t take them seriously, listen to them or give them platforms.

 

Diagnosis: Grundvig is first and foremostly an Alex Jones-style conspiracy theorist, and as Sherry Tenpenny’s frequent sidekick he is not a nobody in antivaccine circles. Delirious moron, of course, but at present, people like him seem, in fact, to be informing public health policy in the US.

 

Hat-tip: Respectful Insolence

Tuesday, October 28, 2025

#2948: Shannon Grove

Shannon Lee Grove is a wingnut conspiracy theorist who has represented California’s 12th State Senatorial district (southern Central Valley and parts of the High Desert) since 2018, after having served in State Congress since the Tea Party wave in 2010 and until 2016. She even served as the minority leader of the California State Senate from 2019 to 2021 before her fellow party members, who recognized her idiotic lunacy, conspiracy theories and cultlike devotion to MAGA – Grove believes that Trump is “the greatest of all time” – as “a significant liability” and managed to oust her.

 

Grove is a relentless supporter of Trump, and has spent much effort promoting stop the steal-related conspiracy theories about voter fraud in the 2020 election. Like other stop the steal promoters, Grove had already on election night decided that there had to be something wrong with the results since they weren’t what Grove would have liked – she tweeted images comparing Trump to Moses and stated that she believed Trump would serve for “the next 4 years” – and then looked for straws and conspiracy theories to back the conclusion up, including, for instance, repeating baseless online rumors that votes were illegally “injected” into Arizona’s tally (she was joined in her efforts by a few other California wingnut representatives, like Tom McClintock, Melissa Melendez and Doug LaMalfa, though most California Republicans have vigorously avoided commenting on the issue). Following January 6, 2021, Grove promoted the conspiracy theory that antifa was responsible for the attack. “Patriots don’t act like this!!!” said Grove, hence “This was Antifa.”

 

Grove is a self-proclaimedgun-carrying, tongue-talking, spirit-filled believer” and hasn’t shied away from bringing her religious views to bear on pressing issues. In 2015, she received a bit of attention after linking abortion legislation and the wrath of God to the drought in California. Speaking to a group of anti-abortion activists in Sacramento, Grove showed a copy of the Bible and stated thatTexas was in a long period of drought until Gov. Perry signed the fetal pain bill. It rained that night […] Now God has His hold on California.” When her statement was criticized for being ridiculous, Grove responded that she had been misconstrued, and attempted to clear things up: “Is this drought caused by God? Nobody knows. But biblical history shows a consequence to man’s actions.” In other words, her critics interpreted her precisely and accurately. She had previously tried to blame the drought on the Endangered Species Act, with, predictably, little success. As for abortion, Grove opposed a 2015 bill that could potentially curtail the effectiveness of misinformation from crisis pregnancy centers, likening the bill to Nazi Germany forcing “people [to] wear Jewish stars.”

 

Throughout her career in the legislature, Grove has consistently sought to represent the views and interests of anti-vaccine activists, usually under the guise of health freedom. She has opposed efforts to improve vaccine coverage and has expressed deep support for parents who erroneously believe “from the depths of their soul” that vaccines are dangerous and who should therefore be free to start outbreaks. She is also a climate change denialist who officially opposes efforts to combat climate change because such measures are “unaffordable”; in 2012, however, she invited Lord Monckton to speak to the Legislature, which strongly suggests that her views are based on lunacy rather than hand-wringing apathy masquerading as sense. In 2021, she tried to get the Kern County board of supervisors to block solar energy projects in the county as revenge after state regulators had denied several new fracking permits.

 

Grove is also on the advisory board for Revive California, a dominionist group affiliated with the New Apostolic Reformation (NAR), and was herself a panelist at NAR’s Harvest International Ministry’s Global Summit 2020.

 

Diagnosis: Ridiculous moron, but that still hasn’t stopped many people from getting elected, it seems. Sharon Grove has done her worst to make the world a shittier place for a decade and a half, and seems to be on a trajectory to continue to do so for the foreseeable future.

Friday, October 24, 2025

#2947: Edward Group

Edward F. Group III is an anti-vaccine activist, conspiracy theorist, healer, quack, “industry leader and innovator in the field of natural health” (i.e. quack) and founder of something called Global Healing, which seems to be a motivational standup show with a webpage that has a prominently placed “shop” section. As for credentials, Group is an “DC, NP, DACBN, DCBCN, DABFM, but he was nevertheless touted as an ‘expert’ or so in the anti-vaccine ‘documentary’ series The Truth About Vaccines because he is the kind of ‘expert’ that’ll see a marketing opportunity in appearing on shows like that. Beyond being “a registered doctor of chiropractic (DC)” and “a naturopathic practitioner (NP)”, his websites also boast affiliations likeproud alum of Harvard Business School and MIT Sloan School of Management” even though he didn’t graduate from any of them, doesn’t have an undergraduate degree, and only completed a “non-degree certificate program” at MIT, which according to MIT makes calling yourself an ‘alumnus’ “inaccurate and misleading.”

 

Mostly, Group promotes and sells supplements. And he has had some success, mostly due to his role as medical consultant for InfoWars. Oh yes: for years Group served as the ‘medical alibi’ for Jones’s conspiracy theories and nonsense about health and medicine (for years, Group credentials would include a ‘medical degree’ from the Joseph LaFortune School of Medicine, a Haiti-based unaccredited diploma mill; at some point, that one quietly disappeared from his websites), and he would frequently appear on the show to try to downplay claims that the products, which range from the stupid to the dangerous and stupid, are a scam (they are) and opine about vaccines (a “hidden poison) and fungus (the root of all evil, though luckily Jones and Group sells supplements that ostensibly help banish fungi from the body).

 

Among recurring topics on the show are the alleged benefits of colloidal silver, which Jones sold as Silver Bullet. Indeed, Group and Jones advocate drinking colloidal silver (you really shouldn’t): in 2014, for instance, Group happily told the InfoWars audience that he has been drinking “half a gallon of silver, done a 10 parts per million silver, for probably 10 or 15 days” for years and claimed that the FDA at one point “raided” his office to steal his colloidal silver, because it is too powerful: “It was one of the things that was targeted by the FDA because it was a threat to the pharmaceutical companies and a threat for doctor’s visits because it worked so good in the body,” said Group, because once you’ve started lying as profusely as this, it’s hard to stop.

 

Another mainstay of Group’s contributions to InfoWars is anti-fluoride conspiracy nonsense (Jones reasoned that the government is using fluoride as a means to “cutting us off from higher consciousness”). Instead of fluoride, Jones would promote iodine products, including the “Global Healing Center’s Oxy-Powder”, which would give you a dose of iodine per serving four times higher than the maximum recommended daily dose.

 

Group would also regularly appear in ads for various InfoWars formulas, including Living Defense, which was promoted as a way to fend off “refugees spreading disease” (it’s one weird trick that has “the CDC is going crazy right now,” says Group.) In 2013, Group announced that “Gaiam TV has launched the first of twelve episodes of ‘Secrets to Health’ featuring myself and the Health Ranger, Mike Adams of Natural News!”, and that would have been a useful indicator of what sort of character we’re dealing with, too, if the InfoWars connection hadn’t been amply sufficient on its own.

 

Though popular with conspiracy theorists, Group’s products are indeed, like he admits, not so popular with the FDA, who has issued warning letters to Group’s business e.g. over his promotion of the nonsense product ViraZap as an “Avian Flu Treatment” (“Help treat symptoms of Flu! Strengthen your immune system” – his intended audience is presumably those who don’t recognize that those two sentences are a contradiction). Even Group’s own employees admit that the claims the Global Healing company make are “incorrect, totally circumstantial or based on incomplete evidence”.

 

Notably, Group has also been caught being a proponent of urine therapy. At a 2021 quack conference inTennessee where Eric Trump featured as a keynote speaker, Group suggested to the audience that they should drink their urine as an alternative to getting vaccinated against COVID-19 (an idea most famously promoted by “Vaccine Police” leader Christopher Key). If you wish to hear more, you can look up his segment “The Power of Urine Therapy” on the podcast hosted by batshit moron and flat-earth promoter Courtenay Turner.

 

Diagnosis: Not only instrumental in building Alex Jones’s empire, Group is also partially responsible for popularizing anti-vaccine nonsense and medical conspiracy theories among the MAGA crowd. He is, of course, a complete and utter fraud; but that doesn’t mean he isn’t also a lunatic true believer in everything false and stupid. We don’t know how his reach has been affected by Jones’s fall from grace, but his name keeps popping up in various contexts – contexts in which you really shouldn’t find yourself.

Wednesday, October 22, 2025

#2946: June Griffin

June Griffin was an insane wingnut fundie – a “preacher and morals activist” – who ran as candidate for District 31 of the Tennessee House of Representatives in 2016 and, previously, for Governor of Tennessee in 2010. Her political career seems to have been motivated by her engagement in a 2009 fight to stop decriminalization of homosexuality in Tennessee through a legal suit that she claimed woulddecriminalize sodomy in Tennessee and allow lesbians and homosexuals to teach their deviate lifestyles in our public schools;”  the suit would, if successful (it was), accordingly “move us from our foundation of law, the Bible”, and Griffin warned the judge directly about God making “Sodom and Gomorrah an example to those who should after live ungodly” and complained that “hanging over your head is a chandalier with the ‘Ten Commandments’ written on it and that you want to kill our law with new definitions and alter the source of guilt.” Sodomites, Griffin pointed out, “have a tax scheme of funding of their schools, hospitals, and insurance. They want to soften the rod of God's wrath against sin”; also, if sodomy were to be decriminalized, “the sodomites will then qualify for TennCare!”, fumed Griffin (criminals don’t, apparently).

 

At about the same time, she launched some anti-evolution billboard campaigns; “it is payback time”, said Griffin, apparently referring to the Scopes trial – Griffin herself is a resident of Dayton, where the Scopes trial originally took place, and she is still sore about it. When a statue of Clarence Darrow was erected at the County Courthouse in 2017 opposite a statue of William Jennings Bryan erected in 2005, Griffin was enraged: “This is a hideous monstrosity.And God is not pleased,” said Griffin; she struggles a bit to distinguish herself and God, but that’s par for the course among her peer group.

 

Earlier, in 2006, she was arrested for stealing a Mexican flag from a local business. Noticing the flag in front of the store, Griffin was outraged and deemed it an “act of war” that “insulted my citizenship.” In court, she apparently argued that the act was not theft since it was done openly. So there.

 

Currently – still sore also about court cases like Engel v. Vitale – she appears to travel around handing out framed displays of the Constitution, the Bill of Rights and the Ten Commandments (she calls them ‘The Keys to Americanism’), since to her those documents are on par with regard to American law (they’re really not) and because nobody else is apparently willing to “represent God and the Bible”.

 

Diagnosis: So full of hate and rage that she struggles to pass as functioning in a semi-civilized society. But she is also more or less old enough to have experienced the Scopes trial firsthand. We deem it unlikely that she’ll reappear in any position of power. Still.

Monday, October 20, 2025

#2945: Geoffrey Grider

Geoffrey Grider is an absolutely insane fundie maniac Baptist pastor and endtimes preacher affiliated with Now The End Begins Ministries in Saint Augustine. Indeed, Grider is “author and editor-in-chief” of the Now The End Begins website, which he describes as delivering “aggregate breaking news of the day from a biblical perspective” but which more neutral observers describe as “an extreme right wing Conspiracy website that rarely publishes factual information”. Its contents consist largely of hysterical nonsense based on whatever is cooked up in Grider’s own paranoid imagination, putative conversations with God or Jesus, and things he has picked up from other fake news sites, typically standard MAGA stuff and silly fake stories like “PROOF OF GEORGE SOROS NAZI PAST FINALLY COMES TO LIGHT WITH DISCOVERY OF FORGOTTEN INTERVIEW” (not a chance, and yes: the source is one of Roseanne Barr’s Twitter rants). One example that gained some traction on social media was his story “Joe Biden Says Bible Believing Christians Violate LGBTQ Rights by Simply Existing” based on nothing whatsoever Joe Biden has remotely said.

 

Though a firm Maga cultist, Grider has nevertheless voiced suspicions that Jared Kushner might be the Antichrist (he tries to emphasize that he is not actually saying that) based on an n-degrees-of-separation relationship to Soros and the fact that if you squint, he sort of resembles a fictional character from the Left Behind series (he is also Jewish, of course). Emanuel Macron is apparently also the antichrist, and Grider has spent quite a number of words establishing that case based on fables and endless genealogies (the Bible only matters when it supports what he already wants to believe) – Grider traces Macron’s heritage back several generations to establish that he is really a covert German Jew, which to Grider is rather slam-dunk.

 

Diagnosis: Absolutely amazingly idiotic nonsense, paranoia and feverish delusions. We don’t know what impact he has, but apparently enough people think he’s got something meaningful to say to prop him up with donations. 

Friday, October 17, 2025

#2944: Bruce Greyson

Charles Bruce Greyson is an Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry and Director of the Division of Perceptual studies at the University of Virginia, as well as a semi-legendary parapsychologist and pseudoscience promoter. He is also affiliated with the Esalen Institute and with the International Association of Near-Death Studies, a group of very silly people who try to continue to promote the work and ideas of Raymond Moody, who is most famous for thinking that near-death experiences are a evidence for an afterlife. They are not. Greyson himself is co-editor of The Handbook of Near-Death Experiences (2009) (as well as author of After: A Doctor Explores What Near-Death Experiences Reveal about Life and Beyond (2021)), and has, in fact, himself been called ‘the father of research in near-death experiences` – he has even developed a scale to ‘measure aspects of near-death experiences’ that has apparently become very popular among like-minded researchers (or whatever you call them) and various media of the kind you’d expect would be interested in such stuff. He has also devised a truly pseudoscientific 19-item scale to assess experience of kundalini, the “Physio-Kundalini Scale”. Greyson doesn’t really like science but he enjoys the trappings of science and the sheen of respectability that comes with dressing nonsense up as science.

 

Greyson is a Cartesian dualist of the old-fashioned kind, and like most defenders of Cartesian dualism seems to operate largely in blissful unawareness of the devastating problems with and 350-year history of refutations of that idea. Cartesian dualism is e.g. the point of departure for his book Irreducible Mind (2007), which he co-edited with Alan Gauld and a gaggle of other parapsychologists. Although Irreducible Mind purports to be a kind of psychology book, it is in fact a ridiculous pseudoscience tome filled with anecdotes that are supposed to promote paranormal claims. Serious psychologists were largely unimpressed and/or embarrassed by the book and its attempt to promote substantial (and silly) claims without empirical evidence.

 

Diagnosis: You’d perhaps be excused for thinking that this is hardly among the most serious challenges humanity is facing at present. However, this kind of pseudoscience is, in fact, rather insidious: It is carried out by people with genuine credentials and presented with a sheen of scientific respectability – to very many people, the work of Greyson and his ilk might unfortunately be rather difficult to distinguish from real science. As such, it will certainly be ammunition for those who seek to discredit real science (‘look how silly those scientists are’), and there are quite a lot of those these days.

 

Hat-tip: Rationalwiki

Thursday, October 16, 2025

#2943: Tanveer Grewal

The yogi jacket – which we have encountered before – is probably among the silliest things ever to be (attempted) marketed, regardless of category (‘attempted’ because at the time it was brought to our attention, in 2018, it was still the subject of a Kickstarter campaign to get it started). According to its promotional materials, the jacket will “[n]aturally relieve pain and reduce stress” – they obviously don’t define ‘natural’ – since its “7,000+ acupressure spikes support you in reaching a deep state of relaxation to elevate your overall well-being”. Yes, apparently “over 7,000 strategically placed nontoxic plastic spikes” line the interior of the jacket to “stimulateacupuncture points and “energy centers in the body to provide a sense of happiness and comfort. Of course, since the plastic spikes are all over the place, they wouldn’t primarily hit what quacks identify as “acupuncture points”, but that observation is, honestly, probably of rather limited significance at this point.

 

The jacket was developed by one Tanveer Grewal, who according to himself used to feel uncomfortable and low on energy spending 10–12 hours a day in front of a computer until he designed the jacket, which he currently (ostensibly) wears around everywhere, and feels much better, something he credits the jacket rather than spending time away from the computer. Otherwise, the marketing is unsurprisingly rather vague about the jacket’s indicated health and wellness outcomes and even briefer on the evidence behind the vague gestures toward “reliev[ing] back pain” and “promot[ing] relaxation of tense muscles”. We don’t rule out that it would be a hit if it ever hit the market. We definitely rule out that it would ever do anything but ruin your clothes and potentially cause infections, however.

 

Diagnosis: A strong application for an advisory position on public health in the current HHS. Or influencer status in downtown LA. There might be a worrisome horseshoe situation here. 

 

Hat-tip: Respectful Insolence

Monday, October 13, 2025

#2942: Michael Greger

Michael Greger is a vegan activist, author, MD, and general purveyor of medical misinformation. As laid out in various videos and in his bestselling book How Not to Die, Greger basically claims that eating animal-based foods is the cause of all disease and that, conversely, a vegan diet is the cure for everything. This is, needless to say, incorrect.

 

Greger rose to (some) fame in the early 2000s for his wild alarmism about mad cow disease, which he claimed was “much more serious than AIDS”; according to Greger, “thousands of Americans may already be dying because of Mad Cow disease every year”; that last claim was, in fairness, posed as a question and should be treated accordingly.

 

His current advocacy for a vegan, whole-foods diet is fairly typical for activist perusal of science: Although many of Greger’s statements constitute good and sound advice, and some of it is based on genuinely scientific findings, his claims are also characterized by judicious cherry-picking, omissions (e.g. this), misrepresenting real research (a plethora of examples are mentioned here) and overstating the benefits of his recommendations (and the dangers of animal-based foods). His book How Not to Diet, for instance, is reviewed here: as his other stuff, it mixes good and sound advice with omissions and unsupported speculation, and no: it has not been shown in a randomized controlled trial that a whole food plant-based diet can reverse heart disease. His video on how Death in America is largely a foodborne illness, which purports to offer “practical advice on how best to feed ourselves and our families to prevent, treat, and even reverse many of the top 15 killers in the United States”, is discussed here: In the video, it is for instance claimed that “a plant-based diet of primarily whole grains, fruits, vegetables, and legumes can completely prevent heart attacks” based on some small-scale and flawed research by Caldwell Esselstyn that only purported to show that patients (merely a few) who had already had a heart attack did not have a second one while on cholesterol-lowering medications and a largely plant-based diet that also included animal-based foods; that “those who eat meat are 2-3 times as likely to become demented as vegetarians”, which is demonstrably false; and that diabetes can be cured by a plant-based diet, which is insane nonsense. His best-seller How Not to Die provided data for this study.

 

Greger is a co-founder and fellow of the American College of Lifestyle Medicine and founder of the website NutritionFacts.org. His list of books is long but his stylistic characteristics seem to found in most of them, for instance in Bird Flu: A Virus of Our Own Hatching, which, as public health expert David Sencer tactfully put it, “a professional audience would quickly put aside for more factually correct sources of information”.

 

Diagnosis: No, he is not always wrong. But he is always untrustworthy, and you have no good reason to listen to anything he has to say (if it is correct, you’ll find it in better sources; if you can’t find it in better sources …). His popularity is depressing.