Showing posts with label Ben Carson liar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ben Carson liar. Show all posts

Friday, November 6, 2015

Ben Carson's Long History Of Medical Malpractice

Ben Carson
Karly Bailey One of Ben Carson's Victims!

Unless you've been living under a rock then you must know that Dr Benjamin Carson Republican candidate for president is one lying slippery son of a bitch but you may not know that his reputation of being a great neurosurgeon is bullshit as well. Ben Carson is a sloppy and reckless butcher.


Criminal multi millionaire medical quack Ben Carson has faced public allegations of improper medical care from former patients in the past, led mostly by Karly Bailey, whose face was paralyzed as a result of tumor-removing surgery. Her lawsuit is still pending in a Baltimore City circuit court.
“I couldn’t walk, I couldn’t talk, you couldn’t understand me at all,” Bailey toldThe Guardian in early 2015. Her family set up a website called the Karly Bailey Story to help spread the word of Carson’s alleged malpractice, complete with a GoFundMe donation link on the homepage. 

In his greed and recklessness Carson performed an unnecessary procedure and an unnecessary surgery on Mary Perna.  Carson was either too greedy to read the MRI report or he simply operated on this woman out of his well known depraved greed. 

RELATED: Bungling Ben Carson Leaves Sponge in Patient's Brain: CLICK HERE


Perna was suffering from multiple sclerosis and by October of 1994, she had facial pain on the left side of her face and vision problems that “were virtually unchecked,” despite the prescription medication that she was taking.
She was referred to Carson, who performed two glycerine rhizotomy procedures, basically an injection of the chemical glycerol into the brain to reduce nerve pain—but  Perna’s symptoms, and  her pain actually got worse.
Carson then suggested that a more invasive operation be done—a microvascular decompression, which involves a partial removal of the cranium in order to separate a nerve from “adjacent structures.”

RELATED: Why The Hell Is Ben Carson Running For President? He's A ...

RELATED: Ben Carson's Shady Past

Had lying greedy charlatan Ben Carson read the MRI report he would have known that that Perna had lesions on her brain stem as a result of her MS, making the micro-vascular decompression essentially useless. Criminal Ben Carson didn’t review Perna’s MRI before conducting all three procedures.
All in all Ben Carson has been sued at least 8 times for medical malpractice and there is no telling how many out of court settlements he and Johns Hopkins paid off to keep his and Johns Hopkins phony reputation intact.
There you have it folks, Ben Carson's reputation as a brilliant surgeon is total bullshit. To put it in the common parlance; as a surgeon Ben Carson was a fuck up and as a human being he is one evil son of a bitch.


Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Ben Carson Is Bribe Taker



Most doctors are bribe takers but Ben Carson is a sleazy bribe taker and fraudster according to the
ultra-conservative National Review.


For ten years, he mobbed up with a medical-supplement maker accused of false advertising. In March of last year, Dr. Ben Carson, the conservative star considered a potential 2016 Republican presidential candidate, appeared in a video for Mannatech, Inc., a Texas-based medical supplement maker. Smiling into the camera, he extolled the benefits of the company’s “glyconutrient” products: The wonderful thing about a company like Mannatech is that they recognize that when God made us, He gave us the right fuel. And that fuel was the right kind of healthy food. You know we live in a society that is very sophisticated, and sometimes we’re not able to achieve the original diet. And we have to alter our diet to fit our lifestyle. Many of the natural things are not included in our diet. Basically what the company is doing is trying to find a way to restore natural diet as a medicine or as a mechanism for maintaining health. 

Carson’s criminal activity with Mannatech, a nutritional-supplement company based in suburban Dallas, date back to 2004, when he was a speaker at the company’s annual conferences, MannaFest and MannaQuest. He also spoke at Mannatech conferences in 2011 and 2013, and spoke about “glyconutrients” in a PBS special as recently as last year. Like Ben Carson, Mannatech has a long, checkered past, stretching back to its founding more than a decade before Carson began touting the company’s supplements. It was started by businessman Samuel L. Caster in late 1993, mere “months,” the Wall Street Journal later noted, before Congress passed the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994, which greatly loosened restrictions on how supplement makers could market their products. Within a few years of its inception, the company was marketing a wide variety of “glyconutrient” products using many of the same tactics previously described in lawsuits against Eagle Shield, 

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

The suit also presented evidence that Mannatech was still using photographs of the boy in promotional materials on its website in March 2004, “with the clear inference that [the boy] was alive and doing well some seven years after his actual death.” “I don’t know that he’s ever had a compensated relationship with Mannatech,” says scumbag Armstrong Williams, Carson’s business manager, when asked about those appearances. “All we know is that the Washington Speaker’s Bureau, which booked hundreds of speaking engagements for him through the year, booked these engagements. He had no idea who these people are. They’re booked through the speakers’ bureau. The question should be asked to the Washington Speakers Bureau, when did they have a relationship with Mannatech, because Dr. Carson never had one.” (At Washington Speakers Bureau, Carson is listed as a level-6 speaker, meaning his fee is more than $40,000 per speech.) Williams adds that Carson won’t personally be answering any questions about his criminal activity with the company, “because that is the decision that has been made.” 


Ben Carson Shilled Scam AIDS And Cancer Cures For 10 ...


wonkette.com/.../ben-carson-shilled-scam-aids-and-cancer-cure...

Wonkette
Jan 12, 2015 - Ben Carson Shilled Scam AIDS And Cancer Cures For 10 Years, Will Be ... Carson's interactions with Mannatech, a nutritional-supplement ...

In 2007, three years after Carson’s first dealings with Mannatech, Texas attorney general Greg Abbott sued the company and Caster, charging them with orchestrating an unlawful marketing scheme that exaggerated their products’ health benefits. The original petition in that case paints an ugly picture of Mannatech’s marketing practices. It charges that the company offered testimonials from individuals claiming that they’d used Mannatech products to overcome serious diseases and ailments, including autism, non-Hodgkins lymphoma, and life-threatening heart conditions. Separately, the suit alleges that the company sold a CD entitled “Back from the Brink” that “provided example after example of how ‘glyconutrients’ (i.e., Mannatech’s products) cured, treated, or mitigated diseases including but not limited to toxic shock syndrome, heart failure, asthma, arthritis, Lou Gehrig’s Disease, Attention Deficit Disorder, and lung inflammation.” The complaint from Abbott’s office further suggested that the company had used careful wording in a scheme to avoid liability, instructing their sales force “not to refer to Mannatech’s products by name when making certain claims, but instead [to] refer to them generically as ‘glyconutrients,’” before “direct[ing] the customer to the ‘only company that makes these patented glyconutrients’ — Mannatech.” A 20/20 investigative report from the same year revealed a similar pattern, finding that Mannatech sales associates were hawking the company’s signature drug, Ambrotose, which “costs at least $200 a month,” as “a miracle cure that could fix a broad range of diseases, from cancer to multiple sclerosis and AIDS.” “This was a particularly egregious case of false advertising,” said Christine Mann, a spokeswoman for the Texas Department of State Health Services. “It’s rare for us to see a dietary-supplement manufacturer claim a particular product cures cancer, autism, or any number of retractable or incurable diseases. We do see all kinds of claims being made in the supplement industry, but in many cases we find manufacturers do not know the rules and will work with us to make sure they get into compliance with the applicable laws.” In 2009, the state of Texas reached an agreement resolving the lawsuit against Mannatech, Inc., and Caster; under the settlement, Mannatech paid $4 million in restitution to Texas customers while admitting no wrongdoing, and Caster agreed to a $1 million civil penalty and a five-year ban on serving as an officer, director, or employee of the company. The agreement further decreed that Mannatech employees were prohibited from saying “directly or indirectly” that their products can “cure, treat, mitigate or prevent any disease,” and banned the use of customers’ testimonials making those claims.

Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/396193/ben-carsons-troubling-connection-jim-geraghty

Ben Carson's Troubling Connection | National Review Online

www.nationalreview.com/.../ben-carsons-troubling-conn...

National Review
Jan 12, 2015 - In March of last year, Dr. Ben Carson, the conservative star ... distress, negligent misrepresentation, and conspiracy to commit fraud. ... The original petition in that case paints an ugly picture of Mannatech's marketing practices.


Ben Carson endorsed 'sham' nutrition supplement company ...


www.dailymail.co.uk/.../Rising-GOP-star-Ben-Carson-endorse...


Daily Mail
Jan 12, 2015 - Dr. Ben Carson, the rising African-American Republican star who is considering a run ... And in an ABC News investigation, Dr. Hudson Freeze of the .... The new scandal is hitting Carson while he's still reeling from last week's ...



Thursday, August 6, 2015

Biggest Liar In Fox Debate

I figured it would be Scott Walker would be the biggest liar and the second biggest liar would be Jeb Bush but the Biggest liar was Ben Carson. I was not surprised. Carson is an MD and American MDs are filthy liars.

So far in this election Carson has yet to tell the truth. Here's proof. http://www.politifact.com/personalities/ben-carson/

Walker and Bush are the biggest liars over all but in the debate Carson lied the most.

The only candidate that didn't lie was John Kasich.

Carson also lied about the size of the US Navy. The US Navy has more ships than all of the countries COMBINED, Romney told the same lies about the US Navy.




Mostly False
BEN CARSON
— PolitiFact New Hampshire


Ben Carson
FalseBEN CARSON

False
Ben Carson
BEN CARSON

 This prove is that Ben Carson is a true Republican. He's a liar.