Ok, I've been dying to ask this for some time, but just haven't gotten around to it.
Why exactly do chiropractors get a bad rap here?
Let me explain. I used to have devastating migraines, everyday. They just started one day and got worse. For months I lived with the pain. I went to my family doctor. MRIs were ordered along with other tests. No one could figure it out. In the meantime, the pain was awful, and pain pills wouldn't touch it. I was finally told by the docs that some people just have to learn 'to live w/ pain.' This was unacceptable to me. In an act of desperation, I went to a chiropractor, who made an adjustment in my neck. The pain disapeared. Instantly. No more problems after months of the stuff, and thousands of dollars worth of tests and medications. I go maybe once or twice a year now when I can feel the headaches starting to come on again. I have no idea what a subluxation is, my chiro has never talked about it. He said that I had some pinched nerves that were causing my pain.
So, the moral of the story is that for 20 bucks and ten minutes of my time at a chiropractor, I'm pain free. What's bad about that?
Also, I've always meant to ask Randi about his stance on chiropractors. In one commentary, he blasts them pretty good, but in another commentary where a man is talking about his wife who lost her bladder control because of MS (I think) but then regained it once her hips audibly 'snapped' back into place, he goes on to say that people shouldn't think that what happened to her was anything out of the realm of nature and the way our bodies fit together. So does adjustment of our bones work to improve certain conditions, or no? It just seemed an odd turnabout.