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‘Miracle’ tonic eventuality in Calgary prompts examine by Health Canada

  • April 09, 2018
  • Health Care

Health Canada says it has non-stop a box to see either a U.S.-based “church” organisation disregarded a Food and Drugs Act in a sale, placement or selling of MMS, a supposed spectacle vegetable solution, during a new assembly in Calgary.

The Genesis II Church of Health and Healing met during a downtown Calgary hotel in March but organizers declined to pronounce to CBC News about a assembly or either MMS was being sole or given to representatives who paid $350 US to attend a two-day event final month. 

The online bulletin for a assembly pronounced doses of MMS competence be handed out.

“We only competence warn everybody each so mostly with a sip of MMS1. Be ready!” review a itinerary.

Mark Grenon, a self-described archbishop with a church, spoke at a Calgary assembly in front of a dozen people.

A still picture from a G2 Voice channel on YouTube. Bishop Jonathan Grenon, right, and CBC contributor Bryan Labby are prisoner on video by someone during a church’s assembly in Calgary on March, 17, 2018. (YouTube)

His son, Jonathan, who described himself as a bishop with a church, refused to answer questions associated to a event and whether MMS was being offering for sale.

“We don’t sell anything,” pronounced Jonathan Grenon. 

An edited chronicle of a sell between CBC News and Grenon was posted on a Genesis II YouTube channel final month.

“We’re going to continue with a use right now, we’re going to stop this since this is not an interview,” Jonathan Grenon told the CBC on Mar 17.

A summary from Grenon posted to the church’s website claimed a “package of sacraments” would be enclosed for convention participants, including “MMS, Activator, MMS2, DMSO, mist bottle, capsules, etc.”

Health Canada has been warning Canadians about a dangers of MMS for years. 

The sovereign group says a product sole as Miracle Mineral Solution might poise critical health risks since it contains sodium chlorite, a bleach-like chemical. MMS is being promoted as a diagnosis for a operation of health ailments, including cancer.

The U.S.-based Genesis 2 Church of Health and Healing hold a assembly during a hotel in downtown Calgary final month. Health Canada says it has non-stop a box to see if a ‘church’ was in correspondence with new warnings about a supposed Miracle Mineral Solution. (Bryan Labby/CBC)

Since a ​March 17, 2018 meeting, Health Canada pronounced it has non-stop a box “to determine correspondence [of a Food and Drugs Act] and will take movement to residence any reliable non-compliance.” 

“​MMS is a drug that has not been authorized for sale by Health Canada. Therefore, it is bootleg to advertise, sell or discharge this product in Canada, either or not remuneration is supposing for a product,” pronounced Health Canada in an email to CBC News.  

In an email to CBC News, Grenon said: “Well, Health Canada can act like they are going to do something. But they will do nothing!!!”

“As a Church, we are totally apart and do not have to give comment to any so called ‘health agency,'” he added.

“So for you to make this matter of “health Canada” or whatever so called “health agency,” it means zero though dung to us,” pronounced Grenon.

Health Canada charged Stanley Nowak of Riondel, B.C., and Sara Nowak of Okotoks, Alta., final tumble underneath a Food and Drugs Act with 29 depends associated to a sale, wrapping and promotion of sodium chlorite, one of a mixture of MMS.

A hearing has been scheduled for Oct in British Columbia.

None of a allegations opposite a Nowaks has been proven in court.  

Health Canada says MMS is infrequently promoted underneath opposite names, including Miracle Mineral Supplement, Master Mineral Solution, or a ingredient, sodium chlorite.

Jim Humble, owner of a Genesis II Church, claims that adult to ’95 per cent of all diseases caused by pathogens can be marinated with MMS.’ (YouTube)

The Genesis II Church of Health and Healing, that describes itself as a non-religious church, touts diluted sodium chlorite as a cure-all for a operation of conditions and diseases including AIDS, autism, cancer, lyme disease, malaria and herpes.

The Genesis II Church was founded by an American named Jim Humble, who claims he is a billion-year-old God from a Andromeda galaxy.


Bryan Labby is an craving contributor with CBC Calgary. If we have a good story thought or tip, we can strech him during bryan.labby@cbc.ca or on Twitter during @CBCBryan.

Article source: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/calgary/health-canada-genesis-2-church-mms-mark-jonathan-grenon-calgary-1.4606633?cmp=rss

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