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Floods death toll set to soar FAR higher than feared as sheer terror of victim who couldn't be saved emerges
Floods death toll set to soar FAR higher than feared as sheer terror of victim who couldn't be saved emerges

Daily Mail​

time09-07-2025

  • Climate
  • Daily Mail​

Floods death toll set to soar FAR higher than feared as sheer terror of victim who couldn't be saved emerges

The death toll in the devastating Fourth of July weekend floods which tore through Texas has risen to 111, but authorities fear that number could more than double in the coming days and weeks. At least 173 people remain missing five days after a '30-foot tsunami wall of water' wiped out cabins along the Guadalupe River and destroyed everything in its path. Texas Governor Greg Abbott said that number could continue to rise as efforts to track down unaccounted for people continue. But hopes of finding survivors are rapidly fading as the hours go by and it is becoming increasingly apparent that the rescue mission is shifting to recovery. Officials confirmed today the last 'live rescue' was carried out on Friday. In the four days since, they had only recovered bodies from the debris. 'We will not stop until we identify, recover every single body,' Abbott said on Tuesday afternoon. One of the tragic stories to emerge from the floods on Tuesday was the death of 64-year-old Sherry Richardson. Early Friday morning, her cabin along Little Creek River in Liberty Hill, Texas, was swept away by the rapid moving waters. Her daughter Delilah Greenslet said Richardson phoned 911 as she tried to seek help during the crisis. She reportedly spent 30 minutes on the phone to a first responder while climbing to the loft of her two-story cabin before the line finally cut out. She was last known to be trying to get onto the roof of her cabin. 'I just find it so hard to believe that we had no warning,' Greenslet said. 'We need some answers here in Texas.' Authorities are still working to identify many of the bodies which have been recovered. The victims include at least 30 children, many were little girls who were enjoying their summer at Camp Mystic - a century-old, Christian, all girls camp. Some 27 campers and counselors tragically died when the cabins primarily housing eight to 10 year old girls were swept away before daybreak on Friday. At least five girls and 19-year-old counselor Katherine Ferruzzo are still missing. 'The primary job right now continues to be locating everybody who was affected by this flood,' Abbott said. He said many of those who are not accounted for were staying in state's Hill Country but did not register at a camp or hotel. In the hardest hit Kerr County, 87 people have died and 161 remain missing, while seven bodies have been found in Travis and at least 10 remain missing. Eight people have died in Kendall, and Burnet has suffered five fatalities, with one person still missing. Williamson County has tragically lost three people, with one still missing, and at least one body has been located in Tom Green County. Abbott also clarified that state officials were aware that flooding was a possibility over the Fourth of July weekend, adding that resources had been deployed to the area for two days before the storm hit. 'We were ready with the resources on the ground to be able to quickly respond,' he said, but 'no one would know that that would be a 30-foot high tsunami wall of water.'

Meet the influencers calling drinking bleach ‘health revolution'
Meet the influencers calling drinking bleach ‘health revolution'

Times

time03-07-2025

  • Health
  • Times

Meet the influencers calling drinking bleach ‘health revolution'

When Christina Dominguez complained of a scratchy throat, a friend from the small community church she attended in Liberty Hill, Texas, told her to do something she had read about online: gargle with chlorine dioxide — also known as industrial bleach. 'I gargled three drops with a very sore throat and it was gone the next day,' Dominguez said. 'My friend said it cured her Covid. I am new to it and don't know much, but I'm a believer.' Ignoring health authority warnings around the ingesting of chlorine dioxide, alternative health influencers are recommending people drink it with water, spray it on skin and even use it in enemas as a 'cure' for everything from measles to cancer, HIV and autism. First touted as a 'miracle cure' in the United States in the mid-1990s, the German biophysical researcher Andreas Kalcker is one of the earliest and most prominent proponents, describing chlorine dioxide as 'possibly the greatest medical discovery of the last hundred years'. But the so-called bleacher movement received relatively little attention until President Trump, at the height of the Covid-19 outbreak in 2020, suggested coronavirus sufferers 'inject' disinfectant. He later claimed he was being sarcastic. Yet adherents kept pushing the theory, largely on the fringes until they were embraced by Trump's second-term health secretary, the vaccine sceptic Robert F Kennedy Jr. Kennedy, who has built a huge following promoting anti-vaccine conspiracy theories, has not explicitly promoted chlorine dioxide as a treatment. But during his Senate confirmation hearing in January, he referred to the chemical substance and praised Trump for 'looking at all of the different remedies' for Covid, 'including even chlorine dioxide'. • 'RFK Jr is a disaster': staff describe chaos in 'anti-science' regime In recent months, interest has exploded among social media groups such as those called 'Chlorine Dioxide' and 'Secret Mineral', some of which have added thousands of new followers on Facebook from the US, UK and across the world. In the groups, users discuss their growing mistrust of science and the medical community, particularly in the wake of the pandemic. In May, the movement was given its first mainstream boost when Kalcker was invited to a 'Truth Seekers' conference at the Trump National Doral hotel in Miami, a two-day event featuring anti-vaxxers and conspiracy theorists. Though the conference was a closed event, The Times found video and photographs posted on the social media accounts of attendees. A number of products appeared to be on sale to ticket-holders, including chlorine dioxide-based nasal sprays sold by Michelle Herman. Kalcker, who claims to be the inventor of the most commonly used chlorine dioxide solution, marketed as Miracle Mineral Solution (MMS), talked up the health benefits to the thousand-strong audience, some of whom paid $2,000 to attend. 'It's very easy, you drink it all the day,' he told attendees in a speech that was recorded on video. 'The important thing is not to drink a lot in the morning. More is not better, more often is better. It works on cancer … it helps necrotic fingers grow back. It's simply amazing.' Influencers and peddlers of chlorine dioxide make money by selling self-published books about the supposed treatment, by marketing MMS and by posting how-to videos on their online platforms. Half a dozen members of the most popular chlorine dioxide Facebook group, which has 30,000 members, told The Times they used the solution for minor ailments such as a sore throat or psoriatic skin. However, some said they were using it as the sole treatment for diseases as serious as cancer and neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism — against all medical advice. Dominguez, a 31-year-old mother of two, said she kept her use of chlorine dioxide on the 'down low' because 'if you look at regular search engines like Google they make it seem like something bad, so that no one uses it. Think of how big pharma would lose money when this is used for so many different things.' In 2019, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) warned that 'ingesting these products is the same as drinking bleach', listing possible side-effects including abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea and acute liver failure. The American Association of Poison Control Centers recorded more than 16,000 cases of chlorine dioxide poisoning, including 2,500 cases of children under 12, in 2020, the last year it published figures on the trend. Many of those individuals suffered serious side-effects, the group noted, including a six-year-old autistic girl who required hospital treatment for liver failure. 'The problem with chlorine dioxide is that these benefits people are claiming are really not proven,' said Dr Josh King, medical director at the Maryland Poison Center and an associate professor at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. Fiona O'Leary, an anti-chlorine dioxide campaigner, said she told managers of Trump National Doral of her concerns about the Truth Seekers event in a failed bid to get it cancelled. Speaking to The Times, she said of the bleacher movement: 'It's always been crazy, but this is totally different to what we've seen before.' Several of the listed speakers and special guests at the Truth Seekers conference have previously faced legal action or been investigated by the authorities. In 2021, Kalcker was charged in Argentina with falsely promoting a type of toxic bleach as a medical cure after the death of a five-year-old boy whose parents gave him Kalcker's chlorine dioxide solution in the belief it would ward off Covid-19. In a response to The Times, Kalcker wrote: 'As a biophysics researcher focused on electromolecular medicine, I believe it's crucial that any discussion about chlorine dioxide solution is grounded in scientific understanding.' Mark Grenon, who attended the event as a special guest, was the main distributor of MMS in the US before he was sentenced in 2023 to five years in federal prison for selling an 'unapproved and misbranded drug'. Grenon, the self-styled archbishop of the Genesis II Church of Health and Healing in Florida, was released this year on probation. Also at the conference was Kerri Rivera, a former Chicago real estate agent turned pseudo medical expert who has more than 17,000 followers on Instagram. She encourages parents to give their autistic children doses of chlorine dioxide as part of a 'protocol' that rids the body of parasites she claims causes autism. Experts say autism is a neurological condition that is not caused by viruses, vaccines or parasites and for which there is no known cure. The authorities in Germany, where Rivera was believed to be living at some point, investigated accusations that she had caused bodily harm to a child, though no charges were filed. Rivera, speaking in both Spanish and English, describes herself on Instagram as 'a woman whose life changed' when her son was diagnosed with autism and claims that for the past 19 years she has 'helped many children lose their autism diagnosis'. On Instagram and in private online support groups she recommends parents giving drops to children orally, through enemas, and in baths. 'Almost all of the people with autism have high levels of pathogens; virus, bacteria, parasites and heavy metals,' Rivera wrote in her book Healing the Symptoms Known as Autism, which was removed by Amazon in 2019. 'Chlorine dioxide kills pathogens and helps the body to detoxify itself,' she added. When reached by The Times, Rivera declined to address the allegations, but has previously defended chlorine dioxide and her credentials, saying: 'This is a medical issue. I have a degree in homeopathy and work with MDs and PhD scientists.' In April, a report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found that autism diagnoses are increasing but attributed the rise to better early detection and evaluation services. Immediately after, Kennedy contradicted the CDC, repeating the claim that 'environmental toxins' and the prevalence of food additives were behind the spike. Emma Dalmayne, an autism campaigner who has several autistic children and was diagnosed herself, said giving any legitimacy to bleach cures was dangerous. 'It's one thing if a consenting adult decides to take this, but we are seeing children held down and given enemas,' she told The Times. 'Sometimes drops are put into their babies' bottles.' Dalmayne said her advocacy has attracted hate mail, threats and even bullets through the post, believed to be sent by members of the bleacher community trying to 'silence' her. She called the chlorine dioxide proponents 'very clever, preying on fears and insecurities', adding: 'Parents are jumping on these 'cures' because they don't want to face the fact that they gave birth to an autistic child. And the kids can't advocate for themselves. It's heartbreaking, actually.' Dalmayne, a 49-year-old mother of five, joined one of Rivera's support groups and shared screenshots with The Times of messages that appeared to show parents reporting vomiting, rashes, seizures and chemical-smelling urine in their severely autistic children after administering chlorine dioxide. One mother called 'Katrina' asked Rivera: 'Hello Kerri, when a child has pain during detox but can't tell me because they can't talk or can't understand, and are crying out what (sic) you recommend, what I might give for pain or calm?' They did not receive a response that could be seen on the site. But in reply to another message of concern about the enema protocol, an administrator for Rivera's group wrote: 'If you move slowly and respect the child's tolerance, there is nothing to fear.' Dalmayne considered it child abuse and has lodged a petition on to have Instagram remove Rivera's account, which has attracted more than 35,000 signatories. Dalmayne said she was waiting for a response from Instagram. Most of the campaigning against chlorine dioxide therapies has come from outside the US. Dalmayne is based in London and O'Leary in Ireland. O'Leary speculates it may be because non-conventional therapies are much more widely accepted in America, where the market is less tightly regulated. 'The problem is there isn't the legislation,' said O'Leary, who describes four of her five children as being on the autistic 'spectrum'. 'Years have gone by where we've been protesting and raising awareness and all of these things.' Meanwhile, several Truth Seekers speakers and guests have praised Kennedy on their social media accounts. Others have posted pictures taken with him before he took up the role. Herman said she met Kennedy in 2023, when she spoke to him 'for 30 minutes' about chlorine dioxide. 'He listened intently, indicated he was not familiar with it but was nonetheless very intrigued and asked for more information,' she said. 'I've been connecting with many of the high-profile medical freedom players to educate them on the benefits of chlorine dioxide and to counteract the misinformation.' After several chlorine dioxide proponents, including Herman, called on Kennedy to remove federal warnings about the use of chlorine dioxide, an FDA web page featuring a warning about chlorine dioxide's life-threatening effects was taken down in April and replaced with a 'page not found' notice. The page is still not functioning. An FDA spokesman told The Times: 'There is not any new FDA action and the general public health position on [chlorine dioxide] being dangerous has not changed.' At the same time, alternative health proponents like Herman are cheering on what they call a 'health revolution'. 'The wholesale reform of these agencies is long overdue and we are thrilled that RFK Jr is in charge,' Herman said. 'A real healthcare can finally ensue. We are excited to have played a part in this revolution.'

Michigan football beats out Notre Dame for 4-star DL
Michigan football beats out Notre Dame for 4-star DL

Yahoo

time15-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Michigan football beats out Notre Dame for 4-star DL

The post Michigan football beats out Notre Dame for 4-star DL appeared first on ClutchPoints. The Michigan football team just picked up its second commitment of the week as four-star defensive lineman Alister Vallejo announced that he will play for the Wolverines. Vallejo recently trimmed his list of college options down to three as he was considering Michigan, Notre Dame and Kansas. Head coach Sherrone Moore and the rest of the Wolverines coaching staff found a way to secure the commitment. Advertisement 'BREAKING: Class of 2026 DL Alister Vallejo has Committed to Michigan, he tells me for @on3recruits,' Hayes Fawcett said in a post. 'The 6'3 310 DL from Liberty Hill, TX chose the Wolverines over Kansas & Notre Dame.' Alister Vallejo had a short message upon his commitment to the Michigan football team: 'Michigan felt like home,' Vallejo said. 'I'm all in—Go Blue!' Vallejo is a four-star recruit, according to 247Sports. He is the #204 player in the 2026 recruiting class, the #32 DL and the #61 player in the state of Texas. Vallejo currently attends Liberty Hill High School in Liberty Hill, TX. He had offers from in-state schools, but Michigan won the battle. Advertisement 'Verifiably big with requisite frame to survive and potentially thrive in the trenches at the high-major level,' Vallejo's scouting report reads. 'Checks multi-sport box with encouraging shot put data. Excellent production for an interior D-line projection with 18 sacks, 26 hurries, 5 kick blocks across past two seasons (sophomore-junior). Serious forward juice with impressive linear closing speed relative to mass. Shows promising redirecting ability.' Michigan is getting a player that should make a big impact in a few years, and the NFL is certainly a possibility as well. 'Moves around with some role flexibility in a primarily odd front,' the scouting report continues. 'Big/strong enough to back up traffic, athletic enough to penetrate and make plays on the ball. Can get caught flat-footed. Still room to improve balance and body control i.e. eliminating wasted motion upon disengagement and pursuit initiation. Potentially scheme-versatile iDL with dominant high school tape against solid comp. Projects as a quality high-major D-line piece who could develop into an NFL Draft candidate down the road.' After this commitment from Alister Vallejo, the Michigan football team now has the #31 recruiting class in the country, according to 247Sports. Expect that number to continue to climb throughout the summer. Related: BET, it's time to bring HBCU Sports back on air Related: Trio of 4-star Georgia football commits shut down other suitors

Michigan football, Notre Dame finalists for 4-star DL
Michigan football, Notre Dame finalists for 4-star DL

Yahoo

time08-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Michigan football, Notre Dame finalists for 4-star DL

The post Michigan football, Notre Dame finalists for 4-star DL appeared first on ClutchPoints. Another big commitment could be coming soon for the Michigan football team. The Wolverines had a solid month on the recruiting trail in May, and they are hoping to see the momentum carry over into the summer. One player that is high on Michigan is four-star defensive lineman Alister Vallejo. Vallejo is down to three schools: Michigan, Notre Dame and Kansas. Alister Vallejo is a four-star recruit, according to 247Sports. He is the #203 player in the 2026 class, the #32 DL and the #31 player in the state of Texas. Vallejo currently attends Liberty Hill High School in Liberty Hill, TX. Kansas is closest to home, but Michigan and Notre Dame have better football programs. Advertisement 'Verifiably big with requisite frame to survive and potentially thrive in the trenches at the high-major level,' Vallejo's scouting report reads. 'Checks multi-sport box with encouraging shot put data. Excellent production for an interior D-line projection with 18 sacks, 26 hurries, 5 kick blocks across past two seasons (sophomore-junior). Serious forward juice with impressive linear closing speed relative to mass. Shows promising redirecting ability.' If Michigan does land a commitment from Vallejo, the team is getting a player with NFL potential. 'Moves around with some role flexibility in a primarily odd front,' the scouting report continues. 'Big/strong enough to back up traffic, athletic enough to penetrate and make plays on the ball. Can get caught flat-footed. Still room to improve balance and body control i.e. eliminating wasted motion upon disengagement and pursuit initiation. Potentially scheme-versatile iDL with dominant high school tape against solid comp. Projects as a quality high-major D-line piece who could develop into an NFL Draft candidate down the road.' The Michigan football team is hoping for a big summer on the recruiting trail, and it could very well include a commitment from Alister Vallejo. That would help the Wolverines finish with another top-10 recruiting class.

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