Candida International by Emma Holister

Networking for health freedom internationally

Networking for health freedom internationally

Candida International

News Blog

Site Map

Aids Dissidence

Alternative Therapies

Candida Intro

Candida News

Diets & Recipes

Health Freedom

Inspiration

Jokes

Latest HFM News

Macrobiotics

Nutritional Supplements

Women's Issues


Articles Archive

 

Communication Agents:

 

Robin Good's
Web sites:


October 26, 2004

Interview with Martin Walker and his Biography

Categories

As the European world of alternative medicine braces itself once again in its ever more ardent fight to preserve itself against such legislative attacks as the ban on supplements and natural therapies, more people are hearing of the health freedom movement and with it such pionneers as Martin Walker, author of 'Dirty Medicine' and 'Skewed'.

If the mainstream press in the United Kingdom is hell bent on smothering the facts of medical and pharmaceutical corruption clearly enumerated in his books, they can do little to prevent word of this outspoken author's works being spread on the alternative medicine grapevine.

On reading Martin Walker's interview and biography I was reminded of the quote by Krishnamarti: "It's no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society" (1895-1986).

Best wishes

Emma Holister

AN INTERVIEW WITH MARTIN J WALKER

by Louise Mclean

Martin and son.jpg

When Martin Walker published his fifth book in 1993 - Dirty Medicine: Science, big business and the assault on natural health care, it sent shock waves through the natural healthcare industry. He set up Slingshot Publications to publish this book and others for writers having difficulties getting their books published by mainstream publishing houses. Louise Mclean talks to Martin about his books, his views and his writing.

Many people believe there is presently a worldwide move through Codex Alimentarius to outlaw natural therapies and remedies. The first phase of these has been implemented through the EU Food Supplements Directive, with the Herbal and Medicines Directives to follow. In your book Dirty Medicine you outlined some of the strategies used by the pharmaceutical industry to discredit alternative medicine. What do you think is going on at the moment?

When I was writing Dirty Medicine from 1988 to1993, I don't think I realised the importance of the attack on vitamins and mineral supplements. It's only recently that I've understood that the people attached to the Campaign Against Health Fraud (CAHF - now called HealthWatch) in the UK, the American National Council Against Health Fraud (NCAHF) and Quackbusters in America were only the first wave of a more organised, powerful and centralised attempt to destroy vitamin and mineral supplements. I tended at that time to view the people I was writing about as rather quirky individuals who were in favour of professional medicine, biased towards scientific medicine and the pharmaceutical companies, but not as people supported by multinational agencies involved in a continuous conflict over supplements and holistic health therapies.

Of course now that the plan has been unveiled, I can see that the organisation of CAHF and NCAHF was the first stage in the battle. The techniques they were using - the character assassination of alternative practitioners and researchers, the commissioning and planting of press stories, the linking up with more formal agencies like the FDA and the MCA, raiding premises, striking people off professional registers, bringing people before disciplinary board hearings, conducting bogus scientific trials, the undeclared work with large corporations. All these things were linked to a kind of regulatory ground clearing exercise. Now, a legislative battle is taking place on a different level and involving whole groupings of countries.

CA_Quackbusters.jpg

CA_Quackbusters2.jpg


The pharmaceutical cartel are losing money worldwide to natural health care. They don't really want people to get better by themselves when they could be taking pharmaceutical medicine.

The chemical and pharmaceutical companies would like to retain hegemony over the social structure of health and medicine. It isn't that they want to do away with vitamins and food supplements, it's that they want to control production and distribution of these things to maximise profit. The fact that they are campaigning to end self administration of vitamins, minerals and food supplements would not stop them from putting them in food, for instance. They want to control pre-packaged distribution of vitamins and if they could put them in foods, shirts, lipsticks or patches or whatever, they will do that. They also want to end the confusion that has arisen between nutrition and medicine and they want to end any evident connection between nutrition and health so that in the public perception, health is dependent upon professional medicine and pharmaceutical products.

Tell me more about the other books Slingshot has published or is going to publish?

When I published Dirty Medicine in 1993 I set up Slingshot Publications and it was my intention to publish my own books. Dirty Medicine went out of print in 1998 after selling 7, 000 copies mainly by mail order.

In 1998 I published a small booklet about Loic Le Ribault, an important French forensic scientist, mercilessly denigrated by the French State and by medical interests because he discovered the use of organic silica as a medicine for arthritis. I wrote a short booklet about him and he has since published his own series of books about his struggles, culminating in the recent publication of The Cost of A Discovery (available from LLR-G5 Ltd., C/o Ross Post Office, Castlebar, County Mayo, Republic of Ireland).

Around 1999 or so, I thought that I would actually like to publish other people's work as well. In December 2002 Slingshot published A Cat in Hell's Chance, a campaigners view of the battle to close Hill Grove Farm in Oxfordshire, which bred cats for vivisection. During its production I came to understand more than I had previously about the link between vivisection and medicine and therefore people's health. There are no good aspects of vivisection or chemical testing and they have to absolutely abolished, they cannot be reformed. SHAC, the campaign against Huntington Life Sciences is the way forward, attacking companies and the industry on every front possible and trying to cut off their financial backing and destroy their economic infrastructure.

One of the things that has always been of interest to me is the generational continuity of ideas, especially political ideas. So I thought it would be a good idea to publish some of the original texts which had a great impact on people. I offered to reprint an English language edition of Hans Ruesch's ground-breaking and seminal anti-vivisection book Slaughter of the Innocent . This book has just come out.

Although it was first published over 20 years ago in 1979, it still gives you a sense of direction today. It was very difficult to do, we had to create an electronic manuscript for it which meant copying every page with data recognition technology. Then it all had to be typeset again in the original form, so that there was continuity of the references.

Despite the fact that testing on a tiny mouse or rat cannot have any real bearing on how a drug will affect a human and can lead to adverse reactions when given to humans, there are apparently more animals being experimented on today than ever before, even though New Labour promised in their manifesto to cut down.

The New Labour government has reneged on its anti-vivisectionist vote-catching rhetoric because they are so heavily indebted to and entrenched with the pharmaceutical multinationals. They can't back down from the position the chemical and pharmaceutical companies demand and that is why millions of animals continue to be slaughtered every year.

Testing of chemicals on animals is growing in Britain and America. When it comes to the questioning of a particular chemical, which has been known to be carcinogenic for a long time, the solution that has occurred to the chemical companies is to get full scale massive animal testing trials for that chemical. This means that they can put off making decisions for at least 5 or 6 years, which gives them another 5 or 6 years' profit and another 5 or 6 years' unaccountable deaths, while we wait for these massive animal slaughtering exercises to be carried out. Then of course there is another 5 or 6 years in implementing any reforming regulations.

Buying time?

If the tests prove to be unequivocally against the chemical, no doubt the chemical companies will come up with bizarre arguments such as: 'Oh well, you can't rely on animal testing, can you? It's not the same as human physiology'. Which is what they have said in the past. Then you get another 5 years of: 'How can we test chemicals on humans?' or 'How can we collate anecdotal stories of the effect of chemicals on humans?' and 'Let's have a think about this and find some way of doing it'. Then there's another 5 years and it just goes on indefinitely.

Talking of chemicals, I believe you wrote a paper about the epidemiologist, Sir Richard Doll and his work on the (lack of a) link between cancer and the vinyl chloride industry, while he was a consultant for Monsanto, at that time one of the major producers of vinyl chloride?

I don't want to go into the details of that particular paper, its one of two papers I wrote over the last couple of years about the contemporary role of medical epidemiologists. I am very interested in writing about the connection between the life of the professional and those larger agencies in society which have power and which determine power and the direction of society. One of the best works on asbestos for example, is the book by Geoffrey Tweedale, called From Magic Mineral to Killer Dust. It isn't just about the company that manufactured asbestos or about the scientists who agreed the toxic and regulatory levels for asbestos fibre. It's about a whole nexus of social, scientific and economic factors. In important writings about health, one has got to take account of a whole series of social and political ideas, not just write about one particular avenue.

There is a real problem with much contemporary writing about health, in that it is over-simplistic, written by people who are trying to push a particular theory or aspect of health. Sociologically or in relation to campaigns, such books are useless because they don't take into account the whole of the social structure that surrounds that illness or therapy.

Can you tell us about companies and organisations that are set up to allay the fears of the public on health and environmental issues but are really working for the benefit of chemical and pharmaceutical industries?

Up until the end of the'80s, if a company wanted to deflect public criticism, in the area of health, it would set up its own propaganda arm, creating an institute or some kind of lobby organisation that was probably part of a PR company. Towards the mid-1990s, a lot of critics, commentators and journalists began to see these organisations for what they were. You couldn't just run a fake institute that published good news about your industry without somebody finding out the financial links between the industry and that institute.

So in the mid-1980s, a number of companies came into being which were problem solving companies. A part of these companies' briefs entailed finding technical, scientific or mechanical solutions to industry or company problems. Another part of their work however, involved solving problems of 'consumer perception' faced by a particular industry, company or product. So if the waste disposal industry had a problem with the public perception of Dioxin, for example, then the 'problem solving' company would take this on.

Their role is clearly similar to the one taken by PR companies in the past. The difference is that their approach is more integrated. These companies have their own epidemiologists, their own scientists, their own smaller agency companies. They have managed to integrate all of these areas into government structures as well. They receive government grants for various projects and are represented on peer review panels, etc. They carry on a more authoritative and aggressive protection of harmful products and a more determined attack on consumer and citizens' lobbies. These organisations are much more dangerous in terms of their defence of bad health products because you can't track them down easily.

Lets move on to another Slingshot book due out next year,'The Gatekeepers', which deals with alternative cancer healers.

The Gatekeepers is a book which I started by accident. When I finished Dirty Medicine, I was doing a lot of research into chemicals and cancer and I came across a particular naturopath, who had been a cancer healer in England. I followed and researched his work and looked at his methods in some detail. I found that the British Ministry of Health as it was then and the organs of orthodox medicine, had waged a campaign against him. I had only previously read about American cancer therapists and the way the American government, American industry and American professional medicine had attacked them.

I studied the work of this naturopath and uncovered the things that happened to him. I went on to look at others and decided to write The Gatekeepers, about the struggle between natural cancer curers, orthodox medicine and the British government from 1850 to the present day. It's not a book about alternative cancer cures or a book about cancer. It's a book about the power of professional medicine - dirty tricks and strategies that are used by people in power to deny other people a competitive place in the market. It deals with just three or four people and looks at their cases in depth, as individuals and therapists in an attempt to describe them in rounded terms and not just at their cancer cures.

I've tried to look at these people, at their therapies and philosophy as an aspect of their life and then I've looked at the people who are attacking them in the same way - although it's quite difficult. For instance in the case of this particular naturopath, somebody in the Ministry of Health set the police on him. It's difficult to understand the consciousness of police officers trying to track down and bring to trial an alternative medical practitioner. We can understand the police arresting a criminal doing obvious harm to property or to a person but we are not quite sure how to describe the social environment of a police officer involved in a campaign on behalf of the State against an alternative medical practitioner.

This obviously has something to do with the common view about medicine, the honesty of the medical profession and the implied lack of competence of 'untrained' practitioners. There is clearly a view, very often projected in the press, that whereas doctors have only one motive which is to cure people, alternative practitioners have pecuniary motives and can be responsible for harming people.

Yes, this is clearly the case when you think about it and of course there is the contact with the pharmaceutical industry which affects much professional medicine. The Gatekeepers is going to be an interesting book to finish because I've been working on it now for nearly 10 years on and off. I spent 2 years in 2001 and 2002 trying to help look after my mother who died of cancer and that brought me into conflict with a lot of things I questioned in the NHS.

I have tried to introduce personal anecdotal narrative into the book because I became very involved in my investigation into the naturopath. I wanted as well to write about the process of investigating because I think it is important to people. Writers as a professional body tend to keep their methodologies to themselves. We should really try to explain how we research a subject and put information together, just so the reader can more fully understand where we are coming from. In The Gatekeepers, I talk about my investigations, and how you look at people and their past.

An idea that has come into focus for me recently, is to do with the intrusion of the State and medicine into the life of the family. I want to write more about this. The State and the medical profession these days seem to be taking great leaps and bounds into the previously accepted private area of the family. Ironically a direction which the British Conservative establishment was accusing communists, socialists and Labour followers of in the early part of the last century.

Are you referring to situations like the Shaken Baby Syndrome and MMR court cases?

Yes, and for example the HIV baby test case about whether the baby should be tested for HIV. And of course the whole trend in North America of legislating for pre-birth or even pre-pregnancy testing for possible hereditary illnesses. At the end of this continuum there is the overshadowing question of legislating for various kinds of genetic testing.

There are examples too in another of my books, SKEWED, regarding ME and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. Cases are described where psychiatrists put children with ME in closed mental hospital facilities. In some cases the parents are arrested and in one case imprisoned because they were said to be inflicting false illness beliefs on their children. Some of the mothers were accused of having Munchausen's Syndrome by Proxy.

It appears that we are entering an area where abuse becomes defined by doctors, not simply in criminal terms or in terms of violence or even mental cruelty but on the grounds that the parent disagrees with orthodox medicine. This is going in the wrong direction and appears to be part of a much larger plan for the medical profession, science and pharmaceutical interests to gain a greater hegemony over the family.

Martin Walker - Skewed Cover.jpg

Let's talk about your book 'Skewed'. Nowadays many people are becoming ill from 'hidden' causes such as air pollution, pesticides in food, prescription drugs, vaccinations, radiation from mobile phones and computers. They become tired and weak. This book deals with the fact that these people, who are diagnosed with ME or Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, are frequently referred to psychiatrists. Since no concrete physical diagnosis can be found, these sufferers are told that 'it is all in their minds', that it's psychosomatic.

Skewed came out at the end of October 2003 and it's a book about the way that a small group of psychiatrists have tried to control and redefine the illness of ME.

What this particular group of psychiatrists have done is to erase ME and subsume it into a whole category of illnesses which they have termed Chronic Fatigue. What was once a very specific illness, with very specific signs and aetiology, has now been incorporated into a massive group of symptoms with one set of treatments being given to all sufferers. A moratorium has been called on diagnostic testing so that there is going to be no further research, in Britain anyway, into what actually caused ME or what ME is. One of the treatments now prescribed for CFS is graded exercise therapy to get people fit and out of their fatigue.

Surely that would make them tireder?

If you are suffering from fatigue, and especially if you are one of the 25% immobilised sufferers, in considerable pain, why would you want to get involved in graded exercise? Some psychiatrists say that fatigue is all in the mind and the patient has got to be able to conquer it. They prescribe GE along with 'cognitive behaviour therapy'. The idea is to get the patient to understand their symptoms, to get rid of false illness beliefs.

What about the drugs they prescribe?

Both these therapies go along with the prescription of anti-depressant drugs.

Which are very addictive.

And they don't solve the problem. What the psychiatrists say is that depression and the psychiatric condition are primary in these cases. Other people say yes, of course if you've got an illness like ME, you're going to be depressed, you can't get out of bed, you can't do the things you used to, you may be in considerable pain and you have probably had to stop work.

However, SKEWED is not a book about ME or Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, about their causes or even about their treatment. I've tried to trace the arguments used by psychiatric doctors since World War II - they believe that people who suffer from ME and certain chemically induced illnesses are suffering from mental rather than physical illness. I've tried to suggest where this argument comes from, how it has been used since the 1950s by chemical companies and the government to dismiss anybody who has an illness which isn't easily identifiable, doesn't have a characteristic symptomatology and doesn't have any clear treatment. The last thing the chemical companies in Britain or America want to do is admit such a thing as chemical illness because it means a massive liability. SKEWED deals with ME, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Multiple Chemical Sensitivity and Gulf War Syndrome. It uses them all as examples of how the psychiatric argument is used to cloak any research into organic aetiology.

Can you tell me more about your plans for Slingshot?

We are concentrating at the moment on getting an Associate Membership scheme working, where people pay £50 to receive all the books published by Slingshot over the first year they join, in the following year they get a year's books at perhaps half the membership price, somewhere around £25. If we could get a good turnover and large enrolment of Associate Members, we would be well on the way to financing the books. The message of the books are the important thing.

I would be grateful if anybody can help Slingshot to distribute these books, get more Associate Members or help with publicity. We just want to produce books which are integral to campaigns, that can be sold on the ground to people involved or interested in these campaigns. We try to sell our books either by mail order or by campaigning groups in the community. We are trying very hard to create a situation whereby we can offload hundreds of books to organisations at very low prices, so that they can then sell them at cover price to make money for their campaigns. I want this to be an organic thing that gets books to people cheaply. We don't have significant problems selling our books but we are always undercapitalised when going to the printers with a new book. Obviously we are never going to be a multinational with significant amounts of money in reserve but if we could find some way of being assured of borrowing up-front printing costs of each book it would be a great relief.

Although you have a major interest in politics, I believe your true profession was that of an artist?

I have been involved in politics since I was at Hornsey College of Art in 1968. I try to keep the 'art' side of things going. For many years I designed and printed political posters and for the last five years or so I have been doing ceramics, mainly tile design, which I am very committed to.

I'm of the generation of 1968. I was expelled from Hornsey for my part in the occupation of the college during those months around May 68, when occupations and demonstrations swept through Europe. Then, politics was so organic, so much ingrained in our lives. For my generation of activists, politics was a part of everything you did. I did political posters as a part of a poster collective in the seventies, and between 1974 and 1994, I was consistently part of community campaigns of different kinds.

Between the 60's and the 80's, politics appeared relatively straightforward. Then for a variety of reasons, the climate changed. In my case, the vacuum began to be filled with questions about health. Even though sometimes I'm tempted to think this isn't real politics, it is. Even in the 1960s, the politics of mental, sexual and physical health was at the forefront of the agenda.

I've always wanted my writing to grow out of my actions. I think the struggle to understand your own health is part of the struggle to understand your own identity in a complex world. It's to do with an ongoing internal movement to find a way of living that is in tune with the environment that you want to live in.

People tend not to link the older forms of politics with newer ideas. Current ideas in relation to nutrition are a good example of this. Nothing is more political than the production and consumption of food. People should be as expansively political about attacking multinational food companies, about setting up food cooperatives, about boxed deliveries of organic food, about setting up well women clinics in their areas, as they are about campaigning, say, against the arms trade .

People are constantly treating what they consider to be newer ideas about nutrition or health therapies as personal, rather than political. Of course the two things are intimately involved. We need a political collective or a community response to ideas about health. Our thinking, for instance, should not just be against drugs, it should be for good nutrition. It should be against pharmaceutical drugs but for new health care practices based in the community.

Slingshot Publications, BM BOX 8314, London WC1N 3XX.


Martin Walker's Biography

Born in Manchester, England, in 1947, I attended Hornsey College of Art until the student uprisings of 1968. After that I was a libertarian/Marxist political activist and campaigner, involved in a wide range of anti imperialist and community campaigns. Throughout the seventies and early eighties I was part of the prisoners movement and researched police corruption and wrongful arrest, in London.

In 1985, when the miners strike began, I went to work with Yorkshire NUM, advising the union and the pickets on their rights and on police strategy. Throughout the eighties, I worked as an investigator for lawyers in criminal and civil cases and with many defendants in criminal and civil trials, with and without lawyers. In the late eighties, I was a founder member of Hackney Community Defence Association, an anti-racist group which worked on the defence of people assaulted, fitted up and wrongfully arrested by the police in north east London.

In the early nineties I began writing about the health fraud movement and vested interests in science and medicine, and have continued in this area. I have written books since the early seventies, always trying to write about campaigns and issues in which I have been directly involved.

I think that I will continue to write about health, science and vested interests and consider this an important part of post industrial politics. I will remain committed to the health freedom movement and opposed to the medical monopoly which has power in Europe and North America.

Despite finding it hard work, I like writing and think that we don't pay enough attention to style. I am interested in writing which links sociological investigation with journalism and I am particularly attracted to the North American muckrakers, who challenged powerful interests with good investigative prose in the early part of the twentieth century. In the 1990s, the number of really good investigative writers/ activists has proliferated massively to the point where it is now almost impossible not to be stunned, impressed and influenced at every turn by writers such as Sheldon Rampton and John Stauber, Barbara Seaman, Jonathan Harr, Sandra Steingraber or Liane Clorfene-Casten.

Before this sudden blossoming of the form, I had been most influenced by Janet Malcolm, to the point at which I could think of no better writer. Also, Paul Brodeur, Rachel Carson, and Judith Okely. Modern movements are particularly bad at giving credence to their history; in relation to the Health Freedom movement, I think it is important to be cogniscent of the writings of, Christopher Bird, Morris Bealle, Hans Ruesch, Howard S. Berliner, Fritjof Capra, Harris L. Coulter, Samuel S. Epstein , John Lauritsen, James Carter, P. J. Lisa, Guylaine Lanctot and the greatest of them all, Ivan Illich.

Throughout my adult life I have also designed and printed posters, some of which are referenced in publications and a number of which are exhibited in the Victoria and Albert Museum. Over the last ten years I have produced ceramics, especially tiles. In 2001, I had an exhibition of black and white photographs taken in Manchester in the 1960s, in Salford Museum and Art Gallery.

Books

I have written a number of books and contributed some chapters to edited editions. The books written before 1990 are generally about crime or imprisonment. They include, Frightened for my Life, a book about deaths in British prisons which I wrote with Geoff Coggan, the most prominent prison activist of the seventies and eighties. Fontana published the book and it was quickly taken off the shelves when a prison officer threatened to sue. The book of which I am most proud, written during this period is, With Extreme Prejudice: An investigation into police vigilantism in Manchester. The book tells the story of a campaign of harassment against two University of Manchester students and was written after a long investigation, carried out in part with David Pallister of the Guardian and the staff of the Manchester City Council Police Committee Unit.

After 1990, all my investigative work and my publications became coloured by a long investigation into the British and American Health Fraud movement, which drew me into what has more recently come to be called the Health Freedom Movement. In 1993, after a two year investigation, I published Dirty Medicine: Science big business and the assault on natural health care. This book is about the Health Fraud Movement and the marketing of AZT, the first AIDS medicine. In order to publish the book , which was over 700 pages long and had over 2,000 references, I set up a small publishing company named Slingshot Publications. The publication of Dirty Medicine met with considerable opposition from different quarters. However, despite the fact that I was threatened, neither I nor the book suffered any permanent damage. After a second edition published in 1994, the book sold 7,000 copies by mail order and was out of print by 1997. The printing of two issues of the book cost around 26,000 pounds and it was impossible to reprint the book. I did get a chance to update and re-write the book for an established publishers but after I had done this the publishers turned the book down. Dirty Medicine is still in demand and unfortunately copies of it can be seen changing hands on the internet for up to $100 dollars.

Since Dirty Medicine, my general areas of interest have stayed the same; they include vested interests in science and medicine, industrial intervention in medicine and the creation of illness and the marketing of treatments by the medical monopoly. Between 1993 and 1998, I worked in and around the London organisations of AIDS dissidents, principally centered on the magazine and campaigning support organisation Continuum.

During this period, I wrote a number of articles and longer pieces particularly on AZT.

In 1997, I was introduced to Loic le Ribault, an exceptional French scientist, who had laid the basis for the use by the French police of modern forensic science. Then, following his investigations into silica, had introduced an organic silica treatment for arthritis. His life after that has been blighted by attacks from the French State and the medical profession, which resulted in him going to prison on two occasions. My friendship with Loic resulted in the booklet, Loic Le Ribault's Resistance: The creation of a treatment for arthritis and the persecution of its author France's foremost forensic scientist, which was published by Slingshot.

In 1995, I began work on a book about British alternative cancer curers between 1850 and 1990, focusing on the way in which their work has been censured and criminalised by the Ministry of Health and the medical profession. This book, The Gate Keepers, is not yet finished.

In 1997, I linked up with ME/CFS campaigners and and began work on a book about the way in which interested doctors and research workers, in tandem with the chemical and medical insurance companies have redefined ME and now diagnosed Gulf War Syndrome, Multiple Chemical Sensitivity as psychiatric illnesses. This work resulted in the publication of SKEWED in December 2003.

In the late nineteen nineties, I did some lecturing in Liverpool and Lancaster. In 1999, I was fortunate enough to be put into contact with Marco Mamone Capria and Stefano Dumontet, two Italian academics, who through the Science and Democracy Conferences and the Italian Ordine Nazionale dei Biologi, respectively, gave me an opportunity to publish some of my work in Italy. Particularly, II ruolo dell'industria nel mediare informazioni sulla salute occupazionale e pubblica: verso una teoria generale, in Scienza e Democrazia edited by Marco Mamone Capria and published by the Instituto Italiano per gli Studi Filosofica in 2003. And, Biotechnology and Conflict Interests: The European Convention on Bioethics and Human Rights, in Vol. 1 of Atti del XV Congresso Internationale, Progresso Scientifico, Etica, Tutela delle Risorse: Sfide Professionali del Terzo Millennio, edited by S. Dumontet, E. Landi and F. Pastoni. Published in 2002 by the Ordine Nationale Del Biologica.

Although Slingshot Publications has continued to publish my work and the campaigning work of others, I would dearly like to find a publisher who is both seriously committed to the radical causes, unafraid of libel threats and who would not take two years to publish my work.

Internet access to my work
http://www.zeusinfoservice.com/archive.htm
http://www46.safesecureweb.com/positivehealth
Interview with Martin Walker
Interview first published in Positive Health Magazine. February 2004

http://www.archiveshub.ac.uk
Martin Walker papers, miners strike

http://www.findarticles.com
HEALTH Ltd.The Ecologist, April, 2000, by Martin Walker, Helen Fullerton

http://www.findarticles.com
Two part article. The Great Outdoors. Health hazards in the workplace and elsewhere,
UK. The Ecologist, June, 2001,

http://www.cygnus-books.co.uk
Book club distributing SKEWED

http://www.whale.to/w/walker.html
Totalitarian science and media politics. Continuum Magazine, vol 5, no 5, Mid-Winter 1999,

http://perso.wanadoo.fr/sidasante/azt/aztbiz.htm
AZT - An AIDS-defining drug. Continuum Magazine

http://www.loicleribault.com/fwalker.htm
Traduction de l'article de Martin Walker intitulé Loïc Le Ribault's Resistance. In French, a rough translation of my booklet.
The original booklet in English, which reports on Loic's exciting life up until 1998, published by Slingshot Publications, is out of print and presently being updated.

http://free-news.org/walker01.htm
Channel 4 censura una producción de Meditel. In Spanish, a very condensed article for
Asociación de Medicinas Complementarias, THE organisation for alternative health and politics in Spain. http://www.amcmh.org. The AMC produces an amazingly good journal in Spanish called Medicina Holistica.

 


mandato da Robin Good il Tuesday October 26 2004
aggiornato il Sunday September 24 2006

URL of this article:
http://www.newmediaexplorer.org/emma_holister/2004/10/26/interview_with_martin_walker_and.htm

 


Related Articles

Dr Jacques Benveniste: The Case of the Missing Energy
Following the recent death of the renowned, some say infamous, scientist Jacques Benveniste, I am reminded of the words of Herman Hesse: "The bourgeois today burns as heretics and hangs as criminals those to whom he erects monuments tomorrow" ('Steppenwolf') A few days ago Benveniste's death was lamented by the French newspaper Le Monde, who said of his passing away that the world of "biology has lost one of its... [continua a leggere]
October 18, 2004 - Robin Good

'Your Money and Your Life' by Martin Walker
As published by the Ecologist. Britain's cancer charities are a multimillion pound industry. But they are no nearer to 'curing' cancer than they were half a century ago. Quite the opposite -much of their time and money is spent avoiding awkward questions about what causes the disease. Martin J Walker investigates. Everybody knows what causes cancer. Bad diet; too much sunlight; cigarettes; faulty genes - and, of course, that virus... [continua a leggere]
October 10, 2004 - Robin Good

'Skewed' by Martin Walker
Reviewed by Robert Allen - Blue Reviews Skewed is an essential text that needs to be available to everyone who goes to college with the ideal in their head that they want to work in the chemical industry or practice medicine. It also needs to be in every major bookstore, and the author needs to appear on tv, radio and in print telling his story. For too long industry and... [continua a leggere]
October 10, 2004 - Robin Good

Heads Will Roll
By Marcus Sircus AC OMD Who does the medical media work for? It's a simple question. Why does the medical media ignore all the controversies that exist around major medical issues and concentrate on reporting only on the official party lines of the CDC, FDA, AMA and the World Health Organization? These are questions that will lead to a kind of scandal the public media has never faced, one that... [continua a leggere]
November 6, 2004 - Robin Good

Shiatsu Massage - Another Valuable Therapy Now under Threat
It comes as rather a surprise to people in countries such as the UK and the US, where alternative medicine is still practised relatively freely, to learn that in the more medically repressive countries such as France, shiatsu massage is a crime punishable by law. With massage having been 'colonised', redefined and controlled by the medical authorities, the only legitimate form permitted (unless you choose to sneak off and bravely... [continua a leggere]
October 31, 2004 - Robin Good

What You Should Know About Women's Health Care
"In a world of profits before health, women are being lied to and receiving second-rate care. In the year 2000 alone, more women went to alternative health care practitioners than to conventional physicians, even though insurance doesn't pay for the majority of alternatives."... [continua a leggere]
October 26, 2004 - Robin Good

 


Readers' Comments


This guy is a total crank. It's unbelievable that anyone would take him seriously.

Posted by: A candid observer on November 12, 2005 04:08 PM

 


I can't think of anyone LESS cranky than Martin Walker. It would be interesting to know the provenance of the chap who made the previous comment!!!

Personally, I don't know of a better investigative reporter who dares to publish such incisive and well-documented articles and books, but then I am 'biased' because I am a homeopath !!!

Posted by: Peter Smith on May 19, 2006 11:15 AM

 

Post a comment















Security code:




Please enter the security code displayed on the above grid


Due to our anti-spamming policy the comments you are posting will show up online within few hours from the posting time.



 

"Art does not reproduce the visible; rather, it makes visible." Paul Klee 1879-1940

 

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

Medical Disclaimer: The information on this site is not a substitute for medical advice.

 

1394



Enter your Email


Powered by FeedBlitz

 


Most Popular Articles

Interview with Martin Walker and his Biography

What You Should Know About Women's Health Care

'Vaccination Overdose' by Sylvie Simon

Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy Denied to Doctor, Embraced by Government

Dr Jacques Benveniste: The Case of the Missing Energy


Most recent articles

What Does MHRA Stand For??

Bono and Bush Party without Koch: AIDS Industry Makes a Mockery of Medical Science

Profit as Usual and to Hell with the Risks: Media Urge that Young Girls Receive Mandatory Cervical Cancer Vaccine

Martin J Walker's 'HRT - Licensed to Kill and Maim'

Cartoons on Candida International


Archive of all articles on this site


Most recent comments

Bono and Bush Party without Koch: AIDS Industry Makes a Mockery of Medical Science

Bono and Bush Party without Koch: AIDS Industry Makes a Mockery of Medical Science

Alternative Therapies - An Introduction

The Disappearing Nutrients in America's Orchards

The Disappearing Nutrients in America's Orchards

 

Health Supreme

Multiple sclerosis is Lyme disease: Anatomy of a cover-up

Chromotherapy in Cancer

Inclined Bed Therapy: Tilt your bed for healthful sleep

 

Share The Wealth

Artificial Water Fluoridation: Off To A Poor Start / Fluoride Injures The Newborn

Drinking Water Fluoridation is Genotoxic & Teratogenic

Democracy At Work? - PPM On Fluoride

"Evidence Be Damned...Patient Outcome Is Irrelevant" - From Helke

Why Remove Fluoride From Phosphate Rock To Make Fertilizer

 

Evolving Collective Intelligence

Let Us Please Frame Collective Intelligence As Big As It Is

Reflections on the evolution of choice and collective intelligence

Whole System Learning and Evolution -- and the New Journalism

Gathering storms of unwanted change

Protect Sources or Not? - More Complex than It Seems

 

Consensus

Islanda, quando il popolo sconfigge l'economia globale.

Il Giorno Fuori dal Tempo, Il significato energetico del 25 luglio

Rinaldo Lampis: L'uso Cosciente delle Energie

Attivazione nei Colli Euganei (PD) della Piramide di Luce

Contatti con gli Abitanti Invisibili della Natura

 

Diary of a Knowledge Broker

Giving It Away, Making Money

Greenhouses That Change the World

Cycles of Communication and Collaboration

What Is an "Integrated Solution"?

Thoughts about Value-Add

 

Best sellers from