all images.

Abusers: Pierre Kory / Jenna McCarthy

A deep dive into "The War on Chlorine Dioxide"

CONTENT WARNING: This page will mention child sexual torture and animal cruelty.

Pierre Kory was an Ivermectin influencer and Children's Health Defense insider who recently pivoted to chlorine dioxide. His new book, "The War on Chlorine Dioxide" (cowritten by Jenna McCarthy and at least two AIs) definitely has entertaining levels of nonsense in it if you can forget just how vile the bleachers are. The book is written from Kory's perspective, so we will generally refer to the authors as "Kory" even though we don't know which passages were Kory and which were McCarthy. There is also a possibility that additional ghostwriters were involved.
Kory is well aware that bleach abuse can be extremely dangerous. That's why he says he won't recommend any specific doses, formulas, or protocols. Instead, he recommends other sites that will recommend the specific doses, formulas, and protocols.
Kory also mentions offhandedly that he has had at least two "suspicious poisoning-like episode"s. He frames them as possibile assassination attempts from Big Pharma, not considering the possibility that one or another of his quack treatments might be to blame.
Like most bleach advocates, Kory is extremely clear that this is Not Bleach, instead it's a chemical used for purifying water, decontaminating hospital rooms and purifying food processing equipment. And it is an outrage to him that suggesting using meat grinder cleaner inside the human body gets such a strong negative reaction.
The first chapter introduces the "Kory Scale" for evaluating treatments. You may be familiar with the mainstream scientific technique for evaluating prospective treatments: first you consider the theory to see if it makes sense, then you test on cell cultures, if those tests look good you test in animals, if the results of THOSE tests look good (most don't, and we'll see a bit of this later on) tests in human volunteers. Instead, Kory proposes that you can tell how effective a treatment is by how vigorously The Establishment opposes it. The more people go to jail for it, the more news articles say it's bad, the better the treatment. One wonders if this applies to everything. Since child molestation carries harsher penalties than libel, does that mean child molestation is better?

Kory introduces a new character to the chlorine dioxide cinematic universe: Colonel Mondragon. We're not going to post the whole story, but to summarize:
Mondragon is a pseudonym used by an elderly man who went from dyslexic teen lying about his weight to join the National Guard, to photo recon specialist, to Doctor of Science, to helping the "Operation Paperclip" Nazi scientists develop the diet for astronauts, to using chlorine dioxide to sterilize NASA food and equipment. Mondragon went on to help more Paperclip scientists make missile nosecone tiles. He spent a while developing bunker fuel and the fuel for the U-2 Blackbird. From that he went to chemical weapons disposal. From there he pivoted to bioweapon defense, developing the machine the President carries around to detect bioweapon attacks. While in Nigeria leading the project to create a steel industry, used chlorine dioxide to shut down a cholera outbreak, and accidentally cured malaria with his "magic water".

After this, a billionaire Nigerian Prince (who, I shall stress, was not a triceratops) invited him to meet Ghanaian King Kuntunkununku. The King explained that curing malaria would cause a population explosion, so therefore he had to stop. The Ghanaians and Soviets started telling everyone that chlorine dioxide was killing people, and Mondragon had to flee Africa.

Unable to spread the Gospel of Bleach at home due to his work being classified, Mondragon settled for quietly sending samples to adventurers. One of the recipients of Mondragon's samples was Jim Humble, founder of the Genesis II Church of Health and Healing. This classification also conveniently explains why exactly none of Mondragon's story is externally verifiable.

The thing is... at the time these events supposedly took place, Ghana was ruled by the Provisional National Defence Council, not the traditional kings. King Kuntunkununku was a real person, but he's conveniently dead and so unable to comment on Mondragon's story. And those of you who are familiar with the map of Africa may recall that Nigeria is not part of Ghana. The two countries don't even share a direct border.

The part of the story about Humble is also suspicious - why, exactly, would it require a secretive government agent to expose Jim Humble to a commonplace water purifier?

While Kory is coy about Mondragon's real identity, it's clear that he is none other than Walter Jackson Mitty - that is to say, he is a fictional character. We don't know whether the author of the Mondragon character is Kory, McCarthy, or a third person who duped one or both of them into believing that his story was true. Regardless, it's clear that Colonel Mondragon never existed.

Mondragon introduced the authors to the work of another, likely equally fictitious, researcher: Dr. F.M. Eugene "Fritz" Blass, who supposedly worked with Nikola Tesla to invent his own miracle cure: Homozon (a magnesium oxide preparation). Blass's work was detailed on Wrecks Research. Correction, Rex Research. At RexResearch.com. ChatGPT assured Kory that the people behind RexResearch.com had been anonymous since the site's foundation in 1982 - a fact which the human authors were so favorably impressed by, they didn't notice that the .com TLD was first launched in 1985.
AI also helped Kory find one other reference - a declassified document from the Special War Problems Division of the State Department, showing that Blass was repatriated to Germany after the Second World War. In 1944. You may recall that the Second World War ended in... 1945. Still, Blass's background was extremely scanty. Mondragon assured Kory that the lack of references was due to the fact that They scrubbed Blass entirely off the Internet, not due to the fact that the guy didn't exist.
From Rex Research, Kory did find another lead - pictures of Homozon led him to the distributor: TrueHealthFacts.com. Or, it turned out, to a site that claimed it used to sell it but no longer had any stock, but you could buy plenty of other products from them.
And when you zoom in close, you will notice that the original package is a photo of a cylinder with a printed label wrapped around it... and the website and phone number have distinct seams and aren't curved around the cylinder. They were added to the image later.

You may think that this apparent difficulty remembering which way time goes is a sign that Kory and McCarthy are lying and/or that they are deeply stupid. However, if you look at RexResearch.com, you will see that Blass isn't the only researcher listed. After a relatively pedestrian collection of perpetual motion machines and antigravity devices, we see... a tested, working time machine. Clearly the temporal anomalies are because everyone involved has been travelling backwards in time.

Or, alternatively, they're just plain too stupid to realize that someone might look at the site they cite. Rex Research is an aggregator of crank claims, collecting what are basically the alt-science enthusiast version of creepypastas for conspiracy theory appreciators. You might as well cite a research paper on the SCP Wiki.

The section on Blass continues to his supposed murder at the age of 87... oh, and the fact that he'd cured his cancer.

Blass being murdered gives Homozon a "Kory Scale" score of infinity. Now, you might think that someone interested in suppressed treatments, who believed that he'd found a cancer cure the Establishment killed to suppress, would call for further research into this miracle cure. In fact, with Blass memory holed and murdered while the chlorine dioxide group's leaders are being left alive, it should be far MORE interesting than chlorine dioxide. This is why the rest of the book, logically, will give up on chlorine dioxide to focus on finding a way back to the Homozon.

If you actually expected the authors to believe (or even PRETEND to believe) the thesis they presented at the outset, you would be sadly disappointed. Kory is here to shill chlorine dioxide. Other claimed miracle cures buried by the Establishment are only to be used to prove the villainy of the Establishment.
Blass's story concludes with an explanation of how his brilliant invention (a pollution-free smokestack for the coal industry) was stolen by the Rockefellers and Standard Oil, and he was branded a Nazi. While it could theoretically be real, this sort of thing is also classic crank-bait. Blass, if real, would not be the first delusional person to insist that famous people were stealing his ideas. He would not even be the first one this reviewer has met in person. And to the best of my knowledge, Standard Oil has not used pollution-free smokestacks anywhere...
Kory then goes into a lengthy section on South American successes in reducing coronavirus deaths, supposedly attributable to chlorine dioxide. However, other countries that did NOT touch chlorine dioxide (or Ivermectin, his other go-to miracle cure) showed similarly low death rates.

From there, Kory goes to his own experience. One morning, he did not poop. Day One was Constipation. Day Two was More Constipation, and also pain. He bought laxatives and started taking MMS in the evening - three drops at first, then "some more". After the second MMS dose, he developed chills, fever, and dry heaves. He suspected an assortment of conditions, including infectious colitis. On Day Three... Poop! At last! The fever went down. He kept taking MMS and dashing to the bathroom to poop, then realized he was dehydrated (he had gone most of the day without peeing) and ordered IV fluids. On day four, he felt like crap but quit the MMS. His digestion returned to normal.

From this test with a sample size of 1. Kory concludes that the MMS most likely cured a case of infectious colitis. Now, N=1 tests feel extremely convincing when you are the 1.

Most cases of infectious colitis typically resolve, with or without treatment, in approximately 7 days. Nontyphoidal salmonella, a common form of bacterial colitis, lasts for 3 to 5 days in patients manifesting with gastroenteritis. Kory's self-test is consistent with untreated salmonella.

Kory told Scott Marsland about his experience, and Marsland suggested one possibility Kory had not considered... what if he had been poisoned? His symptoms are, in fact, consistent with poisoning. Specifically, the fever and nausea that occurred after his second MMS dose are consistent with... oral chlorine dioxide poisoning. So is the diarrhea on day 3, when he was continuously dosing with MMS. Did he have salmonella... or did he have MMS poisoning?

The next section focuses on puff-piece biographies of the chlorine dioxide "pioneers". They start by covering Howard Alliger, founder of Frontier Pharmaceutical. The authors consulted Howard's daughter, Valerie Alliger-Bograd, extensively for this section.
Kory and Alliger-Bograd claim that a test found Alcide, Frontier's chlorine dioxide product, could safely kill HIV in mammalian blood without damaging the cells. However, the "source" for the study is simply a PDF of a WhatsApp picture of a Frontier press release. The actual letter is on Ovid: Inactivation of Human T-Cell Lymphotropic Retrovirus (HTLV-III) by Ld™. It's recommending LD as a disinfectant, not a treatment. The letter claims that an 11.5ppm sodium chlorite/63ppm lactic acid solution prevents HTLV-III (now called HIV) from infecting H9 cells, without harming the H9 cells.

You've heard of red blood cells, T cells, and B cells, of course, but what is an "H9 cell"? It's a near triploid lymphoma cell line that's commonly used in AIDS research because it's easily infected. It has has an "extremely complex karyotype with nearly 60% of the chromosomes in each cell being structurally altered marker chromosomes." That is biologist speak for "the genes are really, really weird, in a very distinctive way".
Let's hop back to the beginning. A running thread throughout Kory's book (and the broader field of chlorine dioxide crankery) is the claim that chlorine dioxide is useful as a cancer cure. Many of you will remember from bio class that human cells are diploid, with the exception of sperm and eggs (which are haploid). Diploid cells have two copies of (almost) every chromosome, haploid cells have one. Triploid cells have three. Why are H9 cells triploid? Why are the chromosomes "structurally altered" in 1985, when genetic engineering was extremely difficult?

Well... H9 is a heavily mutated lymphoma. A type of cancer. For some reason the authors don't stop to consider the oddity of marketing chlorine dioxide as a cancer cure while citing research showing that it didn't harm a cancer.
But let's forget about cancer for a bit. With the reports on HIV, Frontier was inspired to go beyond topical use to internal use. They branched out into testing it as an AIDS cure, with a trial on monkeys in the 1990s. The monkeys overdosed overnight. Alliger-Bograd dismisses this as no big deal - apparently nobody was monitoring the automatic doses. The astute observer will note that a test of *internal* bleaching with automated dosing implies that the monkeys were physically immobilized so the machine could continuously drip bleach into their veins.

Frontier was unable to find funding for further animal tests, and so their research was shelved.
Then they move on to a biography of Jim Humble. Humble is dead, but some of his business partners were willing to help. Humble's story is interesting - joined the Marines, was an aerospace research engineer, worked in nuclear weapons testing, worked on ICBMs, put together the first computer-controlled machine in the US, worked on the moon rover, helped test spacecraft engines, brilliant inventor, gold miner, wrote manuals for computers... you know, this sounds a lot like Colonel Mondragon - both in terms of similar activities, and in how obviously fake it is.

Interestingly, none of Humble's associates were willing to pretend to believe in Mondragon for this section. Perhaps they were afraid of the audience catching on if there are too many similar fictional characters in the book.
From Humble's fictional accomplishments they go to his partner, Mark Grenon. Grenon and Humble were the founders of the "Genesis II Church of Health and Healing", a fake church established to try to use religious freedom to get around regulation. The quoted text is attributed to Grenon.

What Grenon neglects to mention is that whenever someone dies of chlorine dioxide poisoning, the bleachers insist the victim "wasn't following instructions", and negative testimonials are regularly censored from bleacher groups.
Next up in the chlorine dioxide pioneers is one Enno Frye, whose 2018 paper was (according to the authors) suppressed by the evil Establishment. Footnote 38 in the book is a bit.ly URL shortener, leading to a paper on ResearchGate. Let's dive into this, shall we?
The original journal has the same paper with a giant Retracted watermark. We're not in position to interview everyone in Cameroon to find out if the study really happened. We can, however, READ the article. And there's this interesting paragraph near the beginning... "Thus, the compressed tablet, aside from containing the prodrug sodium chlorite (NaClO2) and the additive citric acid (C6H8O7) which later serves as the ignition key for the production of ClO2, are kept in a compressed tablet to which artimisin extract was added. This addition deemed necessary being an agent already known for a long time in traditional Chinese medicine as an efficient antimalarial agent but also since WHO demands that any new agent contains parts of artimisin or its active ingredient artemisinin [5]". Huh. Weird, why would WHO require all new treatments to contain traditional chinese medicine? Let's follow the citation chain!
Citation 5 in Frye's paper is "World Health Organization. (2012). WHO position statement on effectiveness of non-pharmaceutical forms of Artemisia annua L. against malaria. WHO Press, Geneva, 4". It's available online here and on our local mirror. Some interesting bits jump out: "However, WHO does not recommend the use A. annua plant material, in any form, including tea, for the treatment or the prevention of malaria." and "In conclusion extensive fundamental and clinical research would be required to demonstrate that non-pharmaceutical forms of A. annua, including tea bag, are safe and effective to treat malaria and that their dissemination would not promote the development of artemisinin-resistant parasites".

NOWHERE in the WHO guidance does it say that artemisinin or "Artemisin" is required in new treatments. The WHO guidance DOES, however, recommend against artemisia tea because "In order to receive a dose equivalent to a 500 mg artemisinin tablet or capsule, patients would be required to drink as much as 5 litres of A. annua tea per day, for a minimum of seven consecutive days, making compliance to treatment difficult to achieve. In practice malaria patients are drinking only 1 litre of A. annua, thus receiving a dose of artemisinin insufficient to eliminate the parasites. Such sub-curative doses could promote the emergence of P. falciparum resistance to artemisinins.".

Take a look at the artemisin (NOT ArtemisinIN) level in a table in table 1 of Frye's paper. 0.0038% of the WHO recommended dose. 0.0038% of the dose they recommend to avoid developing Artemisinin-resistant strains of malaria.

If Frye lies about what the papers he's citing say, why exactly should we believe he's telling the truth about the experiments he did?
A bunch of letters between Kory and Frye Follow. Frye asserts that the coronavirus was a hoax. The authors forgive him for not knowing that Kory had already written a lot of posts "covering "the coronavirus and its treatment with vaccination [being] a mighty big hoax". He shows a great deal of grace here - as well as the ability to completly forget that in chapter 6 the authors cited chlorine dioxide supposedly curing covid in South America as proof that bleach is a "universal antidote".

Oh, and he does think to ask about the drug arrest.
Apparently Frye needed €2 million for his study, so the UN paid to fly him to Bogota where they gave him a package to take to an official bank in Amsterdam. Then... shock! Upon a plane-change in Italy, the Guardia Financia arrested him for drug smuggling! It turned out that there was COCAINE in the package the nice people in Bogota paid him to fly to Amsterdam!

Convicted of drug smuggling, Frye served three years and got special attention from the Mafia members (mostly Fascists), because his German ancestry reminded them of the disciplined Wehrmacht occupation of Italy.

This story gives the distinct impression that Frye managed to find some new cocaine after the Guardia Financia so rudely took away his earlier supply.
Frye has Questions about this. How did the police find out about the package? And what sinister force sent his name and flight number to the Italian police? (He ultimately concludes that it must have been AstraZeneca trying to wipe out the competition.) We can answer the questions a bit more reliably. You see, this very reviewer has flown into the Schengen Area - the passport-free travel zone that includes, among other countries, Italy, Germany, and the Netherlands. When you board a flight to the Schengen Area, the process is pretty straightforward: first, you "check in". This involves showing your passport to a human or machine, which then prints a boarding pass telling you (among other things) where to find the plane going to your destination, what seat you're supposed to sit in, and what airport the plane is supposed to go to. If your ticket allows you to bring suitcases, you also get stickers with your name, where you're going, and what plane you're going on that you're supposed to put on your suitcases. Then the airline staff take your ouggage and put it in the plane's hold.

They can also search your suitcases. Some of them are searched randomly; others are searched on suspicion. For example, if a drug-sniffing dog smells cocaine on your suitcase, they will search it even if they don't know that your plane ticket was purchased by a drug cartel.

What's more, your bag can be searched in multiple places. When you're boarding, the most important check is for bombs. When you're landing, though? Illegal imports. Not just drugs, you might have stuffed your suitcase full of endangered pit vipers or fake medicines.

The Schengen area (like many other jurisdictions) also requires that airlines send a list of passengers to them when they're bringing people in. It does not actually require an AstraZeneca black-ops team to figure out that the suitcase full of cocaine labeled "Enno Frye, Bogota⇒Roma⇒Amsterdam" was probably brought in by "Enno Frye, seat 3A, business class". Further, foreign authorities will sometimes tip off destination governments when they find evidence a criminal is on their way.

While Frye describes a fairly routine sort of drug mule scenario, the fact that he has "How did they know?" at the top of his question list gives the distinct impression that he knew what was in it.
Kory also takes the opportunity to remind us that "Of course I know Wikepedia is run by the same satanic globalists that run everything." - a phrase that gives the impression of some sort of lunatic cult performing torturous rituals on children and using their entrails to lay out magical symbols.
The Curious Outlier (who also goes by "Curious Human Productions" and "Jeff", presumably an alias, is next. His contribution to the chlorine dioxide mythos is not particularly interesting - a video series entitled "The Universal Antidote".
Part IV is for "Notable Modern-Day Proponents". Since "Jeff"'s 2021 videos are obviously modern, we can only conclude that the authors found his story as boring as this reviewer does and decided he didn't qualify as "notable". Lucky Chapter 13 is Michelle Herman. By Herman's account, her then-husband Jack hooked her up with Howard Alliger and grew into a budiness partnership. Alliger offered a 50-50 partnership, with him manufacturing the nasal spray and them doing all the marketing (first under the name Sinox Pharma, then Snoot! Spray.).
Herman explains that they market as a cosmetic and make no medical claims. This is believable as long as you don't look at the website - none of the marketing we found mentions cosmetic use and the official site makes distinct medical claims.
Herman goes on to explain that chlorine dioxide kills bioweapons. Like covid, HIV, and smallpox. Now, while biological warfare is surprisingly old (corpses of people and animals who died of disease were catapulted into cities, for example) the technology to MAKE new diseases is quite new. Smallpox is not "designed as a bioweapon". Frankly this makes me wonder if some of Frye's product went up her snoot.

Oh, and she's also marketing it for "vaccine injury" and autism. Snoot!, that is, not cocaine.
Then we come to Kerri Rivera. She merits her own section on our site. One of the most interesting things about Kory's section on her is the inconsistencies between the 2014 and 2025 versions. Where Rivera's 2014 book says her son declined sharply right after his second birthday, triggered by a vaccine, Kory's book gives a gradual decline from 11 months to 2½ years.
The discrepancies continue. In Kory's book, Rivera herself was the first test subject - and her son's poor condition is left unexplained. Meanwhile Rivera's 2014 book has her testing chlorine dioxide on her husband Memo first, gives no indication she tested other quack treatments on herself first, and attributes her son's poor condition (probably accurately) to the previous experimental treatment she tried.
Later, things got still harsher - the villainous Fiona O'Leary was persecuting Rivera, even leading to a raid of her house in Germany on claims she'd harmed two German children. Rivera claims she never worked with German children since she moved there, that the case cost her almost $350,000, and that her lawyer advised her to drop the case since she couldn't afford a transatlantic legal fight, and that the charges were dropped for "lack of evidence". Now, I am not a geography expert... but if the woman lived in Germany, is charged with harming children in Germany... wouldn't the case be in the country she lives in? Why is this suddenly transatlantic? The only way this could work is if she fled across the ocean after the raid. Was the case really dropped for lack of evidence, or were the German courts unable to pursue the matter because she was outside their jurisdiction?

Prominent chlorine dioxide researcher Andreas Kalcker only merits two pages. The press freaked out because he was invited to Trump's private resort in 2025, along with Kory himself and a handful of Children's Health Defense associates. The authors give his 2018 book a shoutout. Oh, and the authors take the time to wish Kalcker luck in his Argentine court case.

What Argentine court case?

The one where a couple gave their five year old son chlorine dioxide.

And it killed him.

Page 174 starts coverage of attacks on chlorine dioxide from TrialSiteNews. They're an alt-med site themselves, previously friendly to Kory - but then they announced that Kory was going to rejoin the "Independent Medical Alliance". According to Kory, the IMA is a rebrand of the FLCCC, which is an organization Kory and Paul Marik founded together, and apparently that was a horrible lapse of journalistic integrity or something? And then they published an article criticizing chlorine dioxide. Kory devotes more than thirty pages to complaining about TrialSiteNews's perfidy, right down to complaining about the use of "--" instead of "—" and concludes by instructing Perplexity's AI to tell him he's right. Kory's tantrum ends on page 207, so I guess I need to start paying attention again.
Chapter 21, "The Universal Curse", complains about the media's unfair maligning of chlorine dioxide. The media, led by the villainous Fiona O'Leary, runs constant stories giving the impression that chlorine dioxide users are making their children drink bleach. And as a result, Fiona's deluded followers are calling CPS on parents!
Herman also makes sure to mention that O'Leary was prosecuted for what she calls "online harrassment" and got probation for it. Herman doesn't go into the details, but she appears to be referencing a case where O'Leary got convicted of defamation for accusing a fringe Christian sect of anti-semitism. the back Throughout the section on Rivera and O'Leary, you'd get the distinct impression that Rivera wants kids to drink chlorine dioxide and O'Leary says they're making the kids drink bleach. They do, however, leave out a key element of O'Leary's accusations. And of Kerri Rivera's recommendations. But we'll get to that later, after the science section.
And now we get to the science section. The authors want us to "Think of ClO2 as a sniper that takes out the harmful invaders and leaves the healthy stuff alone.
That's not bleach. That's brilliance.
". While the book has frequently acknowledged nonhuman authorship of certain snippets, this part is presented as if a human wrote it.

According to the authors, 0.25ppm chlorine dioxide will wipe out 99% of E. Coli.

Time for a digression into human biology. As you know, poop is full of bacteria. As you may know, antibiotics can sometimes wipe out the good bacteria in your digestive system, which upsets your stomach. This is why doctors sometimes recommend a probiotic to put the good bacteria back.

Escherichia Coli can make you sick, but in your intestines it's one of the good bacteria. What would an 0.25ppm solution of chlorine dioxide do to your digestive system if it got to your intestines? Ah, surely nobody sane would ever do such a thing...
The authors also argue that chlorine dioxide is effective against certain cancer cells in lab settings. Note: this is trivially easy; many things that kill healthy cells will also kill cancer cells. The hard part is finding something that kills cancer cells WITHOUT killing healthy cells. We can also note that the same letter Frontier cited as proof of chlorine dioxide's anti-HIV capabilities showed that 11.5ppm sodium chlorite did not harm H9 lymphoma cells.
The authors take pains to remind us that they are not recommending it, prescribing it, or telling you to drink it... and then on the same page, they recommend you visit mmsguidance.com, which tells you exactly how much to drink.
Colonel Mondragon flies back in to drop the "fact" that Vladimir Pasechnik (a Soviet bioweapons expert) "said in 1985 that chlorine dioxide was "the ultimate antidote to all bioweapons." Huh. Interesting. Who is Pasechnik?

He is, in fact, a Soviet bioweapons researcher who defected. Google AI even says he used chlorine dioxide to clean the system before inspections.

The link the AI gives to substantiate the claim that Pasechnik used chlorine dioxide (and bleach) is A Higher Form of Killing, in the Proceedings of the US Naval Institute. The article does NOT mention chlorine dioxide at all and does not say anything about how Pasechnik cleaned research facilities. It does, however, mention when Pasechnik defected. 1989. It's funny how time keeps going the wrong way when Mondragon is involved...

Now that our wild Mondragon hunt is over, we get back to "Kory" (or McCarthy, or whatever AI they used), who says "Note that our native microbiome should be largely unaffected by weaker oxidizing agents like chlorine dioxide". 8 pages ago they said that chlorine dioxide was extremely effective against E. Coli, which is part of our microbiome.
So. Now it's time to get to what the authors "forgot" to mention when talking about the perfidy of the anti-chlorine-dioxide activists.
You see, while it's technically true that O'Leary does accuse people chlorine dioxide users of making their children drink bleach, it's not the whole story. The theory Andreas Kalcker and Kerri Rivera work off of is that autism is caused by an intestinal parasite. Chlorine dioxide is corrosive because it's highly reactive. The same reactivity that allows it to dissolve clumps inside a meat grinder means it doesn't last long in complex chemical environments, like the throat and stomach. You just plain can't get that much to the intestines when you go orally, because the child would vomit it all up.

So Rivera's customers use something called an "enema" to get the chlorine dioxide in the other end.
The human body is highly resilient. When injured, it tries to regenerate. Cuts, scratches, ulcers, and even broken bones heal. The common cold triggers mucous production as the body tries to protect itself from the virus. The interior surface of the intestines is not that different. When Kerri's followers penetrate a child's anus to pump meat grinder cleaner into their body, the chemical provokes strong reactions. The intestinal lining is damaged, so a new layer of lining grows under it and the dead cells are shed. The damage also provokes increased mucous production.

The intestines are very good at pushing things the body don't need out. The mucous and dead intestinal lining comes out. Intestines are long, so intestinal lining is also long. Kind of wormy-looking.
This graphic was made by one of Kerri Rivera's customers as part of a video MARKETING Rivera's treatment. Those wiggly squooshy things are pieces of her autistic son's intestinal lining, which the woman carefully collects and puts in jars - because Rivera has told her that these are the "worms" that made the boy autistic.

THAT is the centerpiece of Kerri Rivera's "treatment" for autism: take your child, sodomize them with corrosive chemicals that make them shed their intestinal lining, then use the damage she caused to convince the parents that the victim has a bad case of worms and needs more "treatment". THAT is why the German police raided her house; THAT is why the American authorities arrested her.
If the authors of this book did any research, at all, into Fiona O'Leary, they would know that the central accusation underlying O'Leary's "harrassment" of the chlorine dioxide group is the bleach enemas. If the authors devoted a tenth the attention they devote to TrialSiteNews being rude to Kory to actually reading the MSM accusations against chlorine dioxide, they would know about the enemas.

In fact, the introduction to the book even mentions enemas. But when it comes to the children being abused by chlorine dioxide cranks in the name of curing autism, the authors choose to frame it as if the children are merely drinking chlorine dioxide.

No matter how stupid the authors of "The War on Chlorine Dioxide" are, they could not have missed this. Pierre Kory and Jenna McCarthy CHOSE to put their name on a book that paints Kerri Rivera as an innocent victim. A book that glosses over the fact that Rivera's own work claims credit for not ten or twenty, but HUNDREDS of children anally penetrated at her command and tortured until they shed their intestinal lining.
Pierre Kory and Jenna McCarthy CHOSE to put their name on a book that tells readers they should contact Kerri Rivera so that she can put their own children through the same torture.
It would be easy to dismiss the authors as simply lunatic cranks with no real power or influence. However, Kory claimed that RFK Jr. was consulting him for advice on how to respond to questions about chlorine dioxide before his confirmation hearing - and Kory has a long-running association, externally verifiable association with RFK Jr's corrupt NGO Children's Health Defense - including CHD promoting Kory's chlorine dioxide book, despite the fact that they should know what chlorine dioxide abuse does to children.

StopBleachAbuse Main PageAbusers