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This article is more of an advertisement than anything else. If it is not cleaned up within a month or two, it's a goner. ] 02:39, 8 August 2006 (UTC) | This article is more of an advertisement than anything else. If it is not cleaned up within a month or two, it's a goner. ] 02:39, 8 August 2006 (UTC) | ||
I reverted it back to its pre-advertisement form. | I reverted it back to its pre-advertisement form. It seems this wasn't the first time it was like that. Does anyone think this article should be locked to prevent the advertiser from rewriting it again? |
Revision as of 20:10, 12 August 2006
None who had truly gone for years with almost nothing to eat would be dreaming of such complex, oversweet, and hard-to-digest foods as chocolate and cheesecake. +sj +
- This woman is a dangerous fraud. At least one of her followers won a Darwin Award by self-inflicted dehydration.
- Three people have died of breatharianism. See the article for details. — Omegatron 19:01, September 2, 2005 (UTC)
Yogis in India can transmute poison and people can transmute the negative affects of coffee, chocolate and cheesecake. Jasmuheen does not have followers. She believes in self mastery and self empowerment and that the only guru is within.
Who wrote this drivel? I think you'd be better off deleting the whole thing and starting over. At best this person deserves a footnote mention, anyway. She failed the 60 Minutes test. I would think that 60 Minutes would get much higher ratings (and other monetary rewards) if they could prove Ellen right. They could sponsor her world tour thereafter and clean up. But she didn't pass and the story is a Australian footnote of which most of the world is unaware.
How does one transmute poison? Who verified that the what the yogi drank or ate was poison? Did you just take their word for it? How does one transmute the effects of caffeine? (A new one to me.) If she isn't a guru, than she should keep her mouth shut (and get rid of her web site)so as not to expose anymore weak-willed people to her dangerous philosophies merely to aggrandize herself.
Hey, I have some property off . . .er I mean ON the coast of Florida I think you will be interested in. It's a snake oil farm. Cures everything, except gullibility.
Added tag, will delete if article doesn't improve...
This article is more of an advertisement than anything else. If it is not cleaned up within a month or two, it's a goner. Sukiari 02:39, 8 August 2006 (UTC)
I reverted it back to its pre-advertisement form. It seems this wasn't the first time it was like that. Does anyone think this article should be locked to prevent the advertiser from rewriting it again?