> Muscle testing worked perfectly in identifying
> specifically where each
> subluxation was occurring, but did not work at all
> (I even tried two
> different chiropractors on this, both had perfectly
> fine credentials) on
> identifying allergies.
I read once about a couple of doctors who wanted to
prove/disprove muscle testing for allergies. They went
to a number of practicioners in cognito and got widely
variable "test" results. Then, under controlled
circumstances, they measured the pressure exerted by
the practicioners when testing patients. During the
controlled tests, when the practicioners knew they
were being tested, there were far fewer indications of
allergies in patients. Their conclusions: that the
practicioners were either outright frauds, or were
subconciously altering test results because they
"thought" the person should have a particular allergy.
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