Friday, December 30, 2011

Ten Advantages To Eating Raw

By: Susan Jorg

Margaret Mead once said, "It is easier to change a man's religion than to change his diet." 
 

The human race learned long ago that cooking meat before eating it would protect them from certain diseases. Since then this practice of cooking has grown to include all types of foods and is now considered an art. Very few meals are eaten which include raw elements, except for the leafy green salad. 

Some startlingly easy methods of preventing and curing cancer

Check out this guy!  He talks about such simple changes in life to avoid and maintain good health.

Stay alkaline
Eat vegan and raw
Check out this video.  This guy has a really interesting take on health, salt, water and food.  It is hard to argue with his positive message about cancer and degenerative diseases.

Friday, December 9, 2011

19 Studies Link GMO Foods to Organ Disruption

19 Studies Link GMO Foods to Organ Disruption
Posted By Dr. Mercola | April 27 2011

Snap!

GMO Soy Beans new paper demonstrates that consuming genetically modified (GM) food leads to significant organ disruptions in rats and mice. Researchers reviewed data from 19 studies and found that parameters including blood and urine biochemistry and organ weights were significantly disrupted in the GM-fed animals.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

History of Fluoride

Fluoride is THE main ingredient in rat poison.

Fluoride is THE main ingredient in Sarin nerve gas.

Fluoride is THE main ingredient in Prozac.


Fluoride destroys the brain (accumulates the pineal gland), the bones, the organs and causes cancer.

Hitler and Stalin used it in concentration camps and gulags as mass control instrument to make the prisoners docile.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Emmerson:
To laugh often and much;
To win the respect of intelligent people and the affection of children;
To earn the appreciation of honest critics and endure the betrayal of false friends;
To appreciate beauty, to find the best in others;
To leave the world a bit better, whether by a healthy child, a garden patch or a redeemed social condition;
To know even one life has breathed easier because you have lived.
This is to have succeeded. Emerson

It is a sad sad day when we realize that those who run and govern our world do not believe or operate by a single word in Emerson's quote above.  Those who live by Skull and Bones "Illuminati" and such controlling entities in the stratosphere of world politics and control factions.  It is a wonder that our union exists at all or that "freedom" exists even to the mediocre degree to which it does today. 

Many of us think we are free yet we are still slaves.  Slaves to a world that would be so much better if these people were not at the helm.  But they are and there is not much we can do about it but fight them at what ever level we are capable of.

The sadness deepens when we realize how subject everyone we know, including ourselves, is to temptation.  The temptation of money power is psychologically the need to satisfy insecurities and to quiet their demanding screams.  The old saying "if one man  can take something from another man, he will" goes unquestioned.  To steal, pillage and to rape the land, the environment and to subjugate other cultures into slavery is typically human then what ever humanity gets for its ways is appropriate compensation for what they gave in life.  I would not blame the earth one bit if it disposed of humanity entirely to protect itself from our insecurities and stupidity.

Friday, July 15, 2011

On the shortness of life - Seneca

On The Shortness of Life – Lucius Seneca

The majority of mortals, Paulinus, complain bitterly of the spitefulness of Nature, because we are born for a brief span of life, because even this space that has been granted to us rushes by so speedily and so swiftly that all save a very few find life at an end just when they are getting ready to live.

Nor is it merely the common herd and the unthinking crowd that bemoan what is, as men deem it, an universal ill; the same feeling has called forth complaint also from men who were famous…

Friday, June 10, 2011

A great education on society and family in ten minutes

An excellent synopses of the body of work of Erich Fromm.  Fromm attempts to define for us our motives and reason for existence at the very edge of the existential vacuum where reason meets instinct and life retains meaning.

Friday, May 20, 2011

Excellent links regarding Nuclear Technology pollution


No degree of prosperity could justify the accumulation of large amounts of highly toxic substances which nobody knows how to make "safe" and which remain an incalculable danger to the whole of creation for historical or even geological ages. To do such a thing is a transgression against life itself, a transgression infinitely more serious than any crime ever perpetrated by man. The idea that a civilisation could sustain itself on the basis of such a transgression is an ethical, spiritual, and metaphysical monstrosity. It means conducting the economic affairs of man as if people really did not matter at all.
--E.F. Schumacher
Relevant websites:

http://www.survive2thrive.net/2011/05/11/alert-fukushima-radiation-update/


  A New, Low-Cost Way to Shake a Mistaken Mindset, April 2, 2000
  Preventing an Exercise in Self-Defeat:
The Relevance of Medical Radiation to Nuclear Pollution
, April 2000



0.  Radioactivity and the Systematic Falsification of Nuclear Risk
1.  Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant Accidents in Japan, March 2011
2.  The Committee For Nuclear Responsibility
3.  Nuclear Radiation and its Biological Effects, an essential lay-person's primer
4.  Chernobyl: Understanding Some of the True Costs of Nuclear Technology
Health Effects of Chernobyl, 25 years after the reactor catastrophe,
Society for Radiation Protection & IPPNW, 8 April 2011
5.  Poison Fire, Sacred Earth, World Uranium Hearing, 1992, excerpts
6.  Radiotoxic and Chemotoxic Properties of Depleted Uranium (DU)
7.  Comments on Nuclear Power, Stan Thompson, 1998
8.  NUCLEAR GUARDIANSHIP FORUM, articles from Issue No.'s 1-3, 1992-94
9.  Killing Our Own, the complete 1982 book
10.  Secret Fallout, the complete 1982 book
11.  Nuclear Technology: The Inappropriate Exercise of Human Intelligence
12.  A Series posted to the internet in 1992-93
13.  Upcoming Events / Resistance is Life Affirming (last updated, 03/11/05)
14.  further recommended reading:   articles local (last updated, 10/28/01)
                                            and web-based (last updated, 11/25/01)
15.  information-rich jumpdoors / addresses
16.  jumpdoors "out there" pointing to this subtree

Monday, May 9, 2011

Retire Facebook? Unthinkable?

Last night I had a conversation with a friend who disclosed that she disabled her Facebook account. Not that I'd noticed my friend-count decline by one; I don't even know how many I've got (it's somewhere around 100) and I don't check Facebook every day--much less send out narcissistic announcements about my fleeting feelings and momentary interests. In fact, I'm finding it more and more irritating, a time-soaker that leaves me feeling slightly soiled, in need of a shower.
At the same time that my Facebook fascination has plummeted, another real-life friend decided she had to overcome her better instincts and join, lest she miss all the family photos of grandchildren and friends' little ones only available there. Her husband had joined awhile earlier, for business reasons--to increase visibility and ultimately sales of their products.

Was it a coincidence that today's New York Times business section blared the headline, "Is Facebook Growing Up Too Fast?" Having just earned its 200 millionth member, doubling in the last 8 months, the now international "social network" is having "issues."

I could have told them that.

She said: "My son and daughter rejected me as "friends." The new format leaves me cold. And soon, real-time blasts from "friends" will make the networking site little more than a Twitter-clone. With photos. Oh yes, and some "conditions of use" that scare me."
 
I'm considering joining my flesh-and-blood friends and de-activating.

Am I the only one who's realizing that stalking people online is not only a colossal waste of time, but actually lowers me morally? That perhaps a preoccupation with others' soap operas and fascinations and, often--breakfast foods, mishaps, momentary blues and gripes, sucks me into the world of "lushon ha ra" (gossip, unnecessary talk about others' lives) that gays and Jews are cautioned against?

Actually, it's worse than that--immersion in wants and irks on Facebook isn't just about voyeurism, it's about training your own soul away from the transcendent and the long-term, and toward physical here-and-now selfishness. At the top of your own page, next to your own profile picture is a box plaintively asking, "What's on your mind?" (It used to say, so-and-so is... with a blank space). That's the first thing--what's with you? The next thing is to hit "enter" so the rest of your friends all know about it. As many times a day as you feel like inserting yourself in their worlds.

I point out, the two opposites pulling our actions are "do your duty" versus "follow your heart," Facebook indoctrinates toward the latter. No one on FB broadcasts what he, she or others "ought" or "should" do. It's all about want. It's all about feelings. Not much about responsibility, or postponing gratification for greater good or later reward. Either it's about me, now, or you, now. Or about target ads that wiggle on the side of the screen, which, the Times article notes, aim increasingly to "engage" Facebookers, hooking them deviously into products and services via "games" and quizzes. "What's your favorite color m-and-m?" Guess who paid for that on your screen?

I joined FB because I had to. I was doing research on a book and wanted to find out the results of a study conducted after completing the Gerson Therapy. The results were only available on Facebook. Under protest, I created a page. For my mental health, I try to avoid it, but messages that people post, comments and "notifications" get sent through to my email. Most people seem to have a love-hate with Facebook; in fact the Times piece ends with an anecdote by a young woman who quit but rejoined six months later due to peer pressure, confessing, "They wanted me to be wasting my time on it just like they were wasting their time on it."

Exactly. Should I retire my account?