Note: the following email from Fairfax County Board candidate Dan Storck comes in response to my April 10 article on Storck's company, "National Integrated Health Associates," which he manages and co-founded. Among many other strange claims on its website, and/or linked to on its website, include stuff like this: "Autism, ADHD, allergies and asthma (4 A's) and all the other brain disorders are due to neuro-immune dys-function due to too much neurotoxins and the inability of the child to adequately detox or remove these harmful toxins." In addition, the website explicitly blames, completely falsely, the "rapid rise in the vaccination schedules for infants in the last 30 years" for everything from autism to allergies to "leaky gut" to "Lyme, Candida, Herpes virus, Strep, staph, tetanus botulinum, mycotoxins from mold and others."Alrighty then. Oh, and on its Facebook page, it links to an article entitled, "Measles Transmitted By The Vaccinated, Gov. Researchers Confirm," and one about how a "young, brave, wonderful man is showing everyone how to beat cancer, naturally, with no chemo!" It goes on and on like this, with Storck's company claiming that herbs can cure Lyme Disease, that fluoridated water is heinous, that mandatory vaccines may violate your civil liberties, thatwearing a bra or putting on deoderant can cause breast cancer, that kids with cancer shouldn't get chemotherapy, that women shouldn't get mammograms because they are worthless (they link to this article), thatmeasles is "transmitted by the vaccinated," and...ok, I think you get the idea. Anyway, I was at the office opening for Scott Surovell and Paul Krizek the other day, and Dan Storck approached me, clearly not pleased about how his company had been portrayed (even though, as I told him, everything in there was stuff ON HIS COMPANY'S WEBSITE or LINKED TO by his company's website). Basically, Storck's counterargument was a combination of: a) claiming the stuff on his website wasn't really on his website; b) claiming it was mostly links to other sources, not implying any endorsement of those sources; c) repeating his belief that what his company does is good for people's health; and d) claiming I must be working for or supporting one of his opponents, which is 100% not true (I'm overwhelmingly inclined not to endorse in this race). Clearly, a dead end there. So, I tried to refocus the discussion on public policy, since Storck is a member of the Fairfax County School Board and a candidate for County Board. The question I asked was whether his personal beliefs and/or work at "National Integrated Health Associates" in any way impacted his public policy decisions on the School Board, or possibly on the County Board if he's elected. Here's his written response, which I received this morning. I've added bolding for emphasis of what I think are key points.
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