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D3 said..
Why do you keep using the term allopathic?
Edit: I had a quick look, turns out it's the term the founder of Homeopathy created to describe medicine that's not based on magic water.
: The term allopathisch was introduced by the German physician Samuel Hahnemann (1755-1843), in opposition to his earlier coinage hom?opathisch (see homeopathic). It probably appears first in the essay "Geist der hom?opathischen Heil-Lehre," prefaced to his Reine Arzneimittellehre, 2. Theil (Dresden, 1816), p. 9. Hahnemann notes that the essay appeared earlier, in 1813. It was in fact published, as "Geist der neuen Heillehre," in Allgemeiner Anzeiger der Deutschen, 4. M?rz 1813, pp. 621-34, but the text differs in many respects, and instead of allopathisch Hahnemann used allotriopathisch (with Greek all?trios "belonging to another, foreign, strange"). The noun Allopathie appears later, perhaps first in Hahnemann's Organon der Heilkunst (Dresden, 1818), the second edition, with title change, of Organon der rationellen Heilkunde (1810)
Why does it trigger you so?
Happy to use "Rockefeller Medicine", which is more accurate.
BTW, Dr Luc Montagnier proved that water holds memory, and can even store genetic code.