butters
High on a Hill
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2009
- Posts
- 85,693
of course, some of the more savvy promoters of these wunderbeds (which aren't beds) refrain from making SUCH extreme claims but are happy to sell the gizmos for tens of thousands of dollars to the desperate and the gullible. Some believe trump knows all about them but is saving them for the most extreme cases; the Japanese version of q have been experimenting with making their own using copper coils (what could possibly go wrong?), and the self-proclaimed "queen of Canada" says she'll make them available free to everyone after the revolution. yes, you heard me right.
of course, most of it's a grift to relieve the dumb of their money and leave them happy to be used this way.
of course, most of it's a grift to relieve the dumb of their money and leave them happy to be used this way.
An increasingly popular conspiracy theory falsely centers around the existence of “med beds,” a fabled medical instrument that does everything from reversing aging to regrowing missing limbs. The theory has grown in popularity among followers of far-right movements like QAnon, some of whom claim to be urgently awaiting a med bed to treat severe health conditions.
Some companies are capitalizing on the sudden demand. Julie, the woman advertising her husband’s med bed treatment in QAnon chat groups, is not an impartial med bed fan, but a marketer for Tesla BioHealing, one of multiple companies selling what they describe as “med beds,” sometimes for tens of thousands of dollars. The company credits its technology to a doctor who has previously been accused by the Federal Trade Commission of misleading advertisements for asthma treatments, and whose previous company board issued a resolution accusing him of sabotage, forgery, and sending company money to an online girlfriend.
“We were asked by many potential consumers if our products could be that kind [of] device, or similar to that hoax device,” Liu told The Daily Beast via email. “We have 100% distanced our products from that false claim. Because the bed is the right place for the user to gain life force energy to be able to heal her/his body, we use the bed to deliver our life force energy. When we communicated with the FDA, we used the term of bed, med bed, powered bed, etc. Any bed used in a hospital is a med bed. Those beds have no life force energy. Our life force energy empowered bed is unique.”
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/n...pc=U531&cvid=4a6bb2518fd9481a898d28c8e6a8bdb3Other supposed med bed companies make even loftier claims. A Swiss company called 90.10, which scored the coveted URL “medbed.com,” claims to allow users to access “infinite energy” and “reprogram your DNA”—all without side effects.
Unlike Tesla BioHealing, 90.10 doesn’t even offer users the tangibility of a metal can. Instead, it purports to convert users’ regular beds into the fabled med beds, using “Faster than Light Technology®” to “teleport or beam quantum energy and frequencies into the human body without time delay.”