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Thank you all for those interesting replies. Time for me to respond, I think.
Ignoring negative comments like �you need to get out more� and �you have nothing else to do� which, like their companion �get a life�, are just flip substitutes for thought, here goes:
1.I don�t know about mascara, anti-wrinkle cream, nit shampoo and suchlike, but, responding in the same tongue-in-cheek spirit in which I�m sure they were raised, I would suggest that if they were sold as medical therapies and have been proved to be worthless then you might like to complain too. Or not. I will steel myself to stick to magnets. (Ho, ho.)
2. keyplus, you missed the point about anecdotal �evidence� being worthless. I�ll explain it in a later post if you like. And isn�t it a little arrogant of you (�I don�t give a damn about��) to assume that your singular personal experience is worth more than the considered opinion of the US Food and Drugs people who have the results of all those double-blind, placebo tests at their disposal?
3. No,LoftyLottie, they don�t give an honest answer. PR at Head Office (what the hell, I�ll shame them) Boots Head Office still defends magnet �therapy�. Which is why I am writing to a very senior person there.
4. daniela, copper is not sold by my local pharmacy and therefore is not part of this.
As for �snake-oil�, that is what 19th-century quacks used to sell, claiming that it cured everything from leprosy to in-growing toenail. Eye of newt and toe of frog are two of the ingredients of the witches� brew in Macbeth(Act IV.Sc 1).
(cont�d)