Day's 10-tape audio series, "Conquering Confusion about your medical treatment," illustrates the expansive nature of her thinking. Throughout these tapes, she describes a conspiracy for world domination—with roots going back over 200 years—whose elements include the AIDS virus (created to reduce world population from 6 billion to 500 million); fluoridation; vaccination; pornography; gun control; food irradiation; chemotherapy; radiation treatments; bank centralization; junk food; the medical profession; television programming; computer games (used to program children); subliminal television messages; rock music (a basic "beat" was created to make young people "susceptible to drugs and sex"); the CIA; government-controlled food-management organizations; "the Illuminati" (who began working toward a new world order in 1776); the Rockefeller Foundation, the American Cancer Society; laser and DVD technology; television boxes (that can be used to spy on people) the Communist Manifesto (promoted by the U.S. Government); the news media (behind every story there is a plan controlled from a central source); rewriting of school textbooks; cover-up of the real killers of President John Kennedy, Robert Kennedy, Princess Diana, and Martin Luther King; "diabolic plans for your health care"; melting of the polar ice cap; and plans by National Aeronautic and Space Agency (NASA) to use rocket power to relocate the Earth further way from the Sun. To guard against these many alleged dangers, she advises everyone to stop watching commercial television (because after only a few minutes, watchers lose the ability to think rationally and resist the "lies" that permeate our society). She also states that cancer patients cannot get well if they work or watch television and that getting medical care and taking medication are a betrayal of God [3].
Promotion through Infomercials
In 2004, ITV Direct began brodcasting a 30-minute television infomercial to sell Day's "Cancer Doesn't Scare Me Anymore" videotape. During the broadcast, company president Donald Barrett "interviews" Day who states that standard medical treatment for cancer never cures people and that Day's 10-step plan offers a better opportunity for recovery. Infomercial Watch has posted a detailed analysis of the infomercial transcript [21]. In December 2004, the National Advertising Division of the Council of Better Business Bureaus concluded that the infomercial was misleading [22].
Anti-Semitic Involvement
In September 2003, Day testified at a hearing concerning Ernst Zündel, a hate propagandist whom Canada was trying to deport to Germany. Various sources indicate that Zündel has for many years funded neo-Nazi groups and published anti-Semitic and Holocaust-denial tracts such as the 1977 book
The Hitler We Loved and Why. [23-25]. ADL describes Zundel as "one of the largest distributors of Nazi and neo-Nazi propaganda and memorabilia in the world." [26] At the time of Day's involvement, Zündel was detained in Toronto pending a Canadian Federal Court review of the government's declaration that he was a threat to national security, an order that would trigger removal to his native Germany, which had issued an arrest warrant for him [27].
Zündel's wife claimed that he had used herbs to cure himself of "inoperable, terminal cancer" many years previously but had had a recurrence because detention authorities would not permit him to continue taking them. Her Web site (Zündelsite) listed Day among the signers of a
petition to government officials which asserted that, "Mr. Zundel is an honest, outspoken man, and he does not deserve to be sent to Germany to face FIVE YEARS in prison merely because he has openly questioned the accuracy and veracity of what many claim to have been an historical occurence." Day testified that Zundel had cancer and high blood pressure and needed to be released from the detention center so that he could follow a non-drug treatment [28]. A week later, on the Jeff Rense Program, Day stated that she had been a friend of Zundel's wife for 13 years (many years before she married Zündel) and that the Canadian authorities "plan to kill him by neglect and keeping him under pressure."
Day's effort to help Zündel does not appear to have had much effect. In February 2005, Canadian Federal Court Justice Pierre Blais ruled that Zündel may reasonably be described as a threat to Canada's security. In a scathing 63-page decision, Justice Blais described Zündel as a hypocrite who cultivated a pacifist public image while guiding, aiding, and supporting neo-Nazi groups around the world, including some that "propagate violent messages of hate" and work to accomplish "the destruction of governments and multicultural societies." A few weeks later, he was deported to Germany and charged inciting racial hatred and defaming the memory of the dead.
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