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"Medical Intuitive"

Yeah, in the email I sent him I mentioned that "The American Academy of Medical Acupuncture" does not qualify as a medical journal.
 
Jay's quasi-sixth sense allows him to see health-related maladies in people in what he describes as a three-dimensional image of energy, which has led others to call him the man with x-ray vision. Jay's innate ability enables him to see what processes are occurring inside individuals, which allows him to help others in deciding which type of doctor or practitioner they should seek for treatment. If this ability sounds mysterious don't feel alone; others along with Jay, are equally mystified when he is able to demonstrate an 89% accuracy rate.
He has a quasi-crypto-hemi-demi-semi-neo-hyper-uber-wunder-ultra-quantum-recipro-para-super-sixth sense.

And to decide there is an 89% accuracy rate there must be loads of verifiable research published in real medical journals about him to check out.
Mustn't there?

Medical Intuitive - for when you want to practice medicine but are too lazy to actually learn stuff.
 
Don't tell him about this month's Skeptical Inquirer magazine, else he might chicken out of taking the challenge. Article about Natasha Demkina, "The Girl With the X-Ray Eyes," who claimed to have the same power. CSICOP tested her.

I don't think I have to tell you how she did.

Hilarious caption:
This is one of the six test cards that were used to assess Natasha's ability to see abnormalities within the subject's bodies. In English and in Russian, the card directed Natasha to identify the number of the subject who doesn't have an appendix. Natasha answered subject number 2 -- a woman who still has her appendix. Natasha protested during the test that appendixes can grow back after an appendectomy. When told this isn't possible, she insisted that they do grow back in Russia.
 
Ashles said:

Medical Intuitive - for when you want to practice medicine but are too lazy to actually learn stuff.

No, no, no. According to his website…
Q: What is a Medical Intuitive?
A: A Medical Intuitive is one who has the immediate knowledge of something without reasoning or logic. A Medical Intuitive has received no medical training, yet relies on intuition to specialize in the detection of medical conditions. Jay uses this ability to assist clients, physicians and health care practitioners in the detection of illness and the direction of treatment.
He’s not too lazy. He didn’t need to learn it, it just came to him after he was Baptized.
As a young adult in 1973, he became a Christian and was baptized. Since his baptism, he's been able to see an image that he describes as a black and white-type X-ray. He uses this image to provide answers to clients and physicians alike in the detection of emotional and physical pain and illness.

Now this guy would be even easier to test then the Russian girl. He does all of his readings over the phone.($120.00 TO $150.00 usd) No need for travel.
Something tells me he will not be applying for the Challenge. Call it a hunch.

JPK
 
JPK said:
No, no, no. According to his website…
As a young adult in 1973, he became a Christian and was baptized. Since his baptism, he's been able to see an image that he describes as a black and white-type X-ray. He uses this image to provide answers to clients and physicians alike in the detection of emotional and physical pain and illness.
Now this guy would be even easier to test then the Russian girl. He does all of his readings over the phone.($120.00 TO $150.00 usd)
Can I assume that as a devout Christian, he talked this over with Jesus, asked Him if it was okay with Him if he conned sick, ignorant people out of their money, and The Savior said, "It's cool with me; just make sure I get my usual ten percent"?

This is the kind of story that almost makes me wish I could believe in the whole Christianity thing, 'cuz then I could have pleasant dreams of this guy spending eternity being taunted by demons demanding he tell them what he thinks is causing that frightful, searing pain that runs from his piehole to his cornhole.
 
Hey, guys, I'm back after a couple years to post that I just emailed KXXT and their sponsors to protest the airing of Caliendo's show.

What an irresponsible, idiotic fraud.
 
Question: Wouldn't x-ray vision be impossible unless you had a source of x-rays? How many x-rays are there passing through us on a sunny day? How many of them are actually reflected and don't just smack right into (or through?) the ground?
 
He uses this image to provide answers to clients and physicians alike in the detection of emotional and physical pain and illness.

My psychic ability tells me that over the phone he will tell you about back or leg pain, and all of the stress you are under.

Funny how he 'sees' this x-ray image, but can do readings over the phone for substantial fees. Do you have to have a video phone?
 
Starrman said:
My psychic ability tells me that over the phone he will tell you about back or leg pain, and all of the stress you are under.

Funny how he 'sees' this x-ray image, but can do readings over the phone for substantial fees. Do you have to have a video phone?

A video phone that captures X-rays, in addition to visible light? ;)
 
This is probably off-topic, but am I the only one who finds it appopriate that Air America is full of pseudo-scientific quackery ? I guess they know their audience.
 
Francois Tremblay said:
This is probably off-topic, but am I the only one who finds it appopriate that Air America is full of pseudo-scientific quackery ? I guess they know their audience.

It's both off-topic and incorrect. Non-liberal talk radio - that is, every station but Air America - is chock full of ads for mind-blowingly retarded crap like herbal supplements, colloidal silver, debt consolidation scams, and the like.

That this thread was even posted indicates how unusual and surprising and depressing it is that the only liberal radio station now has some of the same worthless nonsense that plagues the conservative stations.

To claim that either end of the political spectrum has a monopoly on the acceptance of quackery is as foolish and short-sighted as the quackery itself.
 
We're all kinda focused elsewhere... and Friday afternoons into evenings are kinda dead on JREF. We're all out partying. :D
 
To claim that either end of the political spectrum has a monopoly on the acceptance of quackery is as foolish and short-sighted as the quackery itself. [/B]

I agree absolutely. All statism is based on quack ideas, whatever side it's on. I just thought those marketing guys really knew where their public is. I didn't mean to say that conservatives don't believe in quackery - it's just more of the religious kind.
 
LFTKBS! Hey now, welcome back. I don't do much but read and splurt out something from to time so don't be a stranger.

From what I hear on AM radio in general in USA: its demographic is "talk radio" people (so there is lots of Rush and Hannity, some Savage, etc.) or totally "sports" stations. The totally sports stations have games on weekends, new panels for endless discussions of sporty topics, lots of new sports news, so it's a fine format. The talk stations have to fill a lot of time on evenings and weekends, so they run stuff like Art Bell/Noory late and then gardening or financial shows on weekends. If you're in farm country you'll hear farm reports. Lots of good baseball on AM radio. When there is no local sponsor there are the Public Service Announcements, some of which are pretty weird. I heard a heartfelt plea for recycling tin cans in New York (except I was in Idaho at the time).
 
JPK said:
Now this guy would be even easier to test then the Russian girl. He does all of his readings over the phone.($120.00 TO $150.00 usd) No need for travel.

Something tells me he will not be applying for the Challenge. Call it a hunch.
Hey, JPK, your underestimating yourself here. It is not just a hunch, you are a "wacko intuitive". Get online, offer your services for $150 per "hunch" and you're in fat city.

(PS: Don't forget my 10% agents fee).
 
I didn't mean to say that conservatives don't believe in quackery - it's just more of the religious kind.

In the Houston market, the same stations that carry Rush and O'Reilly run infomercials for herbal supplements (including oriental and ancient ones), health magnets ("the same kind that the Apollo astronauts used"), and mineral supplements ("colloidal siver is good for blood electrification").
 
SezMe said:
Hey, JPK, your underestimating yourself here. It is not just a hunch, you are a "wacko intuitive". Get online, offer your services for $150 per "hunch" and you're in fat city.

(PS: Don't forget my 10% agents fee).

Good evening SezMe,
Unfortunetly, there isn't a very strong market for being able to detect wackos. I think we might be on the non-money making side of the sillyness. I will gladly send the 10% of the nothing I will get. :)
JPK
 
So, out of 3 subjects, he guessed correctly the major area, "digestion", of one of the subjects correctly, but with no specfics. Why am I not impressed?

Not quite the 93% accuracy he claims.

IXP
 
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"a lot of times I will pick up on information the patient doesn’t know about yet, or medical tests can’t confirm."

lawl.
 
Didn't we go through this before with Anita Ikonen?

Yes, but Anita actually wanted to be tested. This guy's been around for almost a decade (based on the OP). He's known about the MDC and yet he has not applied, as far as I know.

Ward
 
'Kortum said the medical community has been pretty open to this new, alternative way of thinking.'

'“To me, it is very exciting that medical science is embracing this,” Kortum said, adding everyone – not just doctors – can learn his technique.'

What's this idiot talking about? He's a medical cold reader why is he news all of a sudden?
 
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