Hi Alex, about your theory of cows as antibody factories and the Impro 
story...

Ok, let's see....

In about 1980 I worked in a friend of mine's law firm.  There was a client, 
Impro, a company formed and run by a family by the name of Collins.  Mary 
Collins was the President of Impro at that time.  I worked with her brother 
Jim the most.  At that time he was in his 70's.  

The issue I worked on was the testing of Impro by the FDA, which had been 
performed some years before.  I believe that it may have been 10 or l5 years 
before.  The testing seemed to show that Impro was not effective in 
increasing milk production in cows (increased milk production was one of many 
claims on behalf of the product...I'll get the the medical ones later) a 
finding which was completely inconsistent with the family's work with their 
cows for 20 plus years.  The family was stunned, but found themselves 
stonewalled by FDA.   They hired a lawyer, the founder of the firm I worked 
for.  Unfortunately, the founder of the firm, who worked at the headquarters 
in Iowa, was nearly certifiably insane.  Although he of course treated the 
Collins like family, and for years they thought he walked on water,  his 
manner with everyone else was atrocious.  He was an intimidator of the worst 
sort. I have plenty other things to say about him, like he skimmed the till, 
but this is the relevant quality he brought to bear in this case. He 
attempted to proceed to convince the FDA by intimidation to repeat the test.  
The FDA dug their trenches even deeper.

The whole family smelled a rat of some type.  My memory of what they did 
before I met them is sketchy, but it is my understanding that they 
interviewed some of the farmers about the tests personally, and found 
terrible deviations from the experimental protocol.  However during these 
interviews their upset about what they were hearing, and their lawyer's 
atrocious manner, got the farmers in an uproar, and communications completely 
broke down. Investigation into what happened was discontinued. 

Now, my contact, Jim, was rather unusual.  The rest of the family didn't take 
him quite seriously.  He was thought of as the odd duck.  His form of 
communication was unique...I don't know how to describe it to you, really, 
except that rambling might hint at it.  And although he was in his 70's, he 
was quite innocent, and almost like a child.  He was very dear.  I just 
seemed to know how to hear him.  

Over the years Jim had continued relentlessly in his statistical evaluation 
of the data they had managed to get from the first few farmers they 
interviewed.  Jim's statistics finally convinced the family to let him go to 
the individual farms involved in the test and interview some of the other 
farmers to see how they had performed their tests.  

Because I paid attention to his statistics and could see his logic, and my 
understanding somehow helped convince his family that he was onto something 
worthy of the money it would cost to investigate, and because he felt I would 
be a good diplomat with the farmers, everyone agreed he should take me along 
to help out.  We traveled around for about three months.  

What we found out was that the FDA didn't bother to communicate to the 
farmers what the experimental protocol was supposed to be.  Each farmer 
performed the "experiment" in a different manner from the other.  None but a 
very few were told the entire protocol.  I remember that among other things 
there were issues to do with  timing which were critical, and timing issues 
were wholeheartedly ignored by the FDA in all but one or two cases.

Note:  because this test involved cows, and because the FDA did not keep 
cows, the FDA contracted with individual dairy farmers for the experiment.  
For some reason, Impro was not involved in the process of communicating the 
experimental protocols to the farmers.  Whether it was because the FDA 
insisted on keeping the reins, or whether Impro just trusted the FDA to do 
right, I don't remember.

So the results were all over the place.  But the few farmers who did receive 
the entire protocol, or a nearly complete protocol, had great results.  
However, the FDA would not acknowledge the disaster surrounding its 
communication of the protocol, would not agree to a retest, and at the time I 
left the firm were still shutting the Collins family, and its nutty lawyer, 
out.  I don't know what became of it all.

Now Impro was made by ...let's see if I remember this correctly... a process 
whereby an antigen substance ...a bacteria in a form something akin to a 
vaccine... was given to the cow in her udder.  I believe I'm remembering this 
correctly.  When the cow calved, the milk would contain antibodies specific 
to the bacteria with which she was innoculated.  The whey would then be taken 
from the milk, and it was that product which would then be bottled and given 
to people sick with the bacteria, and it would cure them.  There was some 
information about the colostrum from those cows, but that information hasn't 
surfaced yet from stirring my mind on these long ago events.  

Impro had incredible potential.  They had used it with fantastic results on 
many, many sick people who were at the end of the medical factory's ropes.  
People who had been left to die by their doctors experienced a return to 
health after taking Impro.  The whole reason it failed to become known had to 
do with the FDA's test.  

Almost unbelievably, the failure of the test could be raced back to an old 
rivalry between the then-head of the FDA and the inventor of Impro.  (The 
inventor was not in the Collins family, but the Collins family took it on for 
the inventor, and refined the idea over many years.)  The Collins believed 
that the reason the communication of the test protocol was performed in a 
slip shod manner was because of shear spite.  The rivalry had been terribly 
bitter and intense..I can't remember the details now.   I have flotsum of 
details floating about in my brain...something about the inventor beating the 
FDA head to the punch in inventing Impro... they had both been in some 
professor's class together in college, gotten similar ideas because of this 
class, but one the inventor came up with a workable solution before the 
other...

So, there...that's the story.  Sometimes it makes you feel like we need to 
start the world from scratch again, doesn't it?  Entanglements inside of 
entanglements... what a mess we are in.  It reminds me of the FDA going after 
CS.  Who can know what motivates such things?

Best wishes,
Taylor




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