Oh, look, it's Stew Peters, whose Credible Person credentials were already solidified with the use of multiple exclamation points and the word "Wow!" Now he's headlining his videos with "HORROR."
Here's the "HORROR":
"they have video which they believe shows one of those ["tiny little metallic"] strings trying to wiggle out of a tweezers back into the body," says Stewie, cutting to video of tweezers holding what appears to be a hair or "tiny little metallic string" (these geniuses never heard of "wire," apparenlty) doing absolutely nothing.
"That video makes my skin crawl." LOL. Poor Stewie can't take a short video of a hair being held with tweezers. What a ladyboy.
- There's no such thing as a "detox." That's pure pseudomedicine.
- His wife says it was a "Morgellons detox." Morgellons is an unsubstantiated medical condition, in which fibers appear to extrude from sores on an individual's body. While the fibers are real (and probably from the individual's clothing), the disease is a delusion. This looks like the same kind of thing.
- The "doctor" was a naturopath.
A fake doctor prescribes a fake treatment for a fake disease, and the highly credible Stew Peters breathlessly reports it as fact because some fat chick on Zoom shows him a shakycam video.
So, in short, like everything else you post to this forum . . . it's idiotic.