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Given Adams' track record, if he were to proclaim that it's raining outside, I'd stick my head out the window to verify it before accepting that it is, in fact, raining outside. Such was the case yesterday, when I came across a post entitled Vaccination rights attorney Patricia Finn threatened with criminal charges New York State demands she surrender names of all clients. Sometimes, in bringing home the crazy, Mike Adams brings up a story I haven't heard of before and flogs it to death. Lately, however, he has been branching out into New World Order conspiracy theories and the like so maybe someday he'll get there. The difference is that Adams has not achieved the sheer breadth of crazy, given that he tends to specialize more than anything else in promoting quackery and antivaccine pseudoscience.
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Perhaps the one I encounter the most is Mike Adams, creator of, a man for whom similarly no quackery is too quacky, no pseudoscience too ridiculous, and no conspiracy theory too outlandish. Truly, that is a high bar of crazy to surpass, but there are certainly people out there trying to do it. There is, of course the granddaddy of all conspiracy sites, Whale.to, and its creator John Scudamore, for whom no quackery is too quacky, no pseudoscience too ridiculous, and no conspiracy theory too outlandish. If there's one thing I've learned over the last seven years, it's that there are a handful of people in the "natural health" movement (a.k.a., quackery movement) who can reliably counted upon to bring home the crazy in spades.