I sold about 5 copies as I had to get a job after spending a year preparing this version and writing and publishing two editions resulted in me having my house repossessed as I had borrowed $60,000 to do the second edition and publish so it's cost me over £200,000 including lost wages as I couldn't work. I had to re-type the book and redo the chemical structures and tables for the second edition as I wanted to change the font and printing was digital.
I wanted a version with coloured images and many of the media articles from Australia in it but after holding a talk in Ayr Town Hall where only 1 person turned up, I had to get a job and worked for a few weeks in a nursing home operating a dishwasher before I was lucky enough to get a job with Tosoh Bioscience in England (see ORCID.org for my employment history). In Western Australia after immigrating I worked as a cleaner for a company in Perth (had a great Suzuki mini van full of cleaning gear, my first vehicle in Australia) and cleaned at Perth railway station and for the health department and river police cleaning toilets, they were sorry when I left. I really learnt to admire manual workers after an extremely short stint picking bad carrots off a conveyor belt under fluorscent lights at 10pm at night in Western Australia. You stand with others beside the conveyor belt and the lights and rotating belt made me dizzy.
A short evening course bricklaying (I enjoy DIY and had dreams about having somewhere permanent to live) and lead lighting taught me to respect builders as it's not so easy to build straight brick walls, do fancy brickwork, construct buildings made out of stones that weigh a ton and build incredible viaducts that you can see in the UK. How they managed to construct hundreds of miles of railway lines and build with heavy stone centuries ago with poor sanitation, nutrition and housing defies comprehension. The Great Wall of China extending over 21,000kms (13,000 miles) on top of the hills is another amazing construction for which we can thank men. Since men are responsible for most manual jobs today - building, street sweeping, are bus and train drivers and ticket inspectors and pilot ferries and boats it's not surprising that a few resort to using cocaine that pharmacists first promoted centuries ago.
Even Hippocrates (born c. 460BC) known as the father of medicine suffered from hair loss which is a side-effect of cocaine. Today there are many doctors who also probably use cocaine and the UK was said to be the cocaine capital of Europe about 20 years ago.
I did however send a copy of the second edition of my book to the Queen and the Prime Minister and back in 1991 I contacted a well known BBC TV presenter, but none were interested in helping me to inform the public so I threw all but about 20 of the books away.
After an excellent local electrician completed a difficult job for me I warned him about antibiotics. He then said I'm diabetic, I've had a lot of antibiotics. As I was at home most of the time recovering from being illegally sectioned for 7.5years (5 years CTO which is essentially the same thing because if I refused to be forcibly injected I was told that I would be sectioned and sent back to hospital again) I started doing some literature searches about asthma and diabetes.
As a result of this I ended up writing 4 papers about antibiotics causing asthma and diabetes and the overdosing of amoxicillin as the dose was doubled in 2015 and for children of certain ages, it had already been doubled in 2010. These papers are going to be in the news and on this website in the future when the NHS is ready.
My book may be read on my 'BOOK' page; the first pages show media articles from 1994 and the first chapters have some coloured images to explain that the medical profession has given toxic chemicals to patients and cut them to bleed them to try to cure them for centuries. All prescription medicines are poisonous ☠️ and years ago many were labelled poison.
Blood letting was practiced internationally for over 3,000 years, it was an easy cheap way for doctors to get business as they could carry around lances in little cases in their pocket. Herbs were used for centuries and are also toxic but pharmaceuticals have the active chemical in a concentrated form so can be stronger and people usually love free stuff so often resort to taking an antibiotic if they have a sore throat and can see a doctor for free on the NHS and get free or subsidised drugs. Sore throats and ‘colds’ are from my research usually the result of exposure to toxic chemicals in food like bread which has calcium carbonate in it, artificial flavours and colours, flavour enhancers like msg in Chinese food and on many crisps and preservatives like sulphites which can affect breathing so that you may get a bit of a blocked nose. These toxins cause symptoms that may make you think 🤔 that you have a cold.🤧