> This 'documentary' ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3D8RP7vmFeo0k ) point= s to ... I would normally be very unlikely to view videos on this subject. A 43 minute one would have a very very very low chance of getting seen. I decided to run it in the background while I has working. It's remarkably good so far (20 minutes in) due in no small part to the plausible style of the oldish, open necked shirt with loosened tie, German accented presentation style of Dr Dietrich Klinghardt (MD). I certainly do not find some things he says plausible, but he quietly makes a significant number of claims which are eminently testable, and a few *easily testable* claims about eg 'curing autism' that are so stunningly signifcant as to be worth at least considering. Overall he presents as a conspiracy theorist with lots of common sense sounding support material (the best sort of conspiracy theorist :-) ). I was initially very 'antagonised' by his comments around 23:5x re CFLs and mercury, then realised that there was in fact a potential mechanism available for what he said. Is what he says largely true? Probably not. Is there a small but significant amount of merit present? Don't know Worth a listen. As background, yes. As your only task - only if he's right. I don't find his "smart meter " emphasis convincing, but I'd have to look more about what he is actually claiming. I'm about to install a "smart meter" :-). Listening to this had nothing to do with that. Russell - --=20 http://www.piclist.com/techref/piclist PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist .