Mark Grenon is definitely one of a kind. The short version of the story he will tell at the upcoming Red-Pill Expo is that he had spent a major portion of his adult life tending the illnesses of low-income people throughout Latin America as a
missionary.
There's nothing extremely unusual about that, but where the story jumps the rails is that he was using a substance that mimics the natural healing cycle in mammals (including homo sapiens) with great success. Not only that, but the substance is easily prepared from
readily available chemicals that are almost as inexpensive as water. In fact, it is estimated that the cost is a mere penny per treatment.
Furthermore, the substance has astounding detoxing and healing qualities. That means that relatively few treatments are required. Imagine that. He
was actually healing people, not just treating them for life with super expensive patented meds. No wonder they wanted mark and his sons to, somehow, just disappear.
You might think that Mark would have been awarded the Nobel Prize for Medicine for this but, alas, the substance is so plain
and so common that it cannot be patented. That means the pharmaceutical industry has no interest in it and actually considers it to be a threat to its lucrative monopoly over medications.
Although Mark was caring for the sick in Columbia at the time, The American government issued a warrant
for his arrest and petitioned the Columbian government to Extradite him to American soil for prosecution but, at the same time, the petition came with a hefty financial bribe to delay the delivery and keep him in Columbia's prisons for the sole purpose of delaying a fair trial in the U.S. for as long as possible, perhaps even for life.
There is much more to the story, but we'll leave that for Mark to tell at the Red-Pill Expo. Two of the sons are still rotting in American prisons. This family deserves justice, but that will never happen until the truth is widely known. That's where you and I come into the picture.
This link goes to the Expo website. Then scroll down to the speakers' section and click on Mark's photo.
Edward Griffin