Dr. Elezer Ben Joseph
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13 Benghazis That Occurred on Bush's Watch Without a...
The Republican inquisition over the attacks against Americans in Benghazi has never really gone away, but it appears as though in the wake of the Boston Marathon bombing and the House Oversight Committee's Benghazi hearings this week there are renewed psycho-histrionics over Benghazi. read more
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U.S. Military ‘Power Grab’ Goes Into Effect U.S....
The manhunt for the Boston Marathon bombing suspects offered the nation a window into the stunning military-style capabilities of our local law enforcement agencies. For the past 30 years, police departments throughout the United States have benefitted from the government’s largesse in the form of military weaponry and training, incentives offered in the ongoing “War on Drugs.” For the average citizen watching events such as the intense pursuit of the Tsarnaev brothers on television, it...
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Supreme Court sides with Monsanto in major patent case
The Supreme Court usually isn't friendly toward questionable patents, but it came down overwhelmingly on the side of agribusiness giant Monsanto Monday in a case that's bound to resonate throughout the biotechnology industry. read more
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25 Belt-Busting Obesity Facts
The Food and Drug Administration approved the weight-loss therapy Belviq from Arena Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: ARNA ) in June 2012. It took nearly one year for the company to gain marketing approval, but Belviq's launch is finally within sight. The drug will join Qsymia from VIVUS (NASDAQ: VVUS ) in breaking the newly accessible obesity market wide open. read more
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Alaska Endures Record Cold While Still Buried Under Snow
The central and eastern United States are not the only areas experiencing a colder-than-average spring. Alaska is also hanging on to winter's chill and snow. read more
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The fight over what grief means
How much is too much grief? And how long do you wait before you decide? Among all the changes in the fifth version of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5), the most controversial may have been removing the so-called "bereavement exclusion." The proposal galvanized what the New York Times dubbed a "bitter skirmish" over what depression means, inspired petitions, and roused a former DSM-IV task force chair to call its removal a "dreadful mistake that flies in the...
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'Crazy' Ants Driving Out Fire Ants in Southeast
Invasive fire ants have been a thorn in the sides of Southerners for years. But another invasive species, the so-called "crazy" ant — that many describe as being worse — has arrived and is displacing fire ants in several places read more
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'Smart Rifle' Begins Shipping to Gun Owners This Week
A Texas startup has developed a "smart rifle"that barely needs to be aimed. The maker of the gun, being shipped to stores this week, brags that "even a novice shooter can become an elite long-range marksman in minutes." read more
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92 Deaths Linked to Cholesterol Lowering Statin Drugs
British government figures released last week show that 92 deaths have been linked to the statin drugs developed to lower cholesterol. read more
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Huge Rock Crashes Into Moon, Sparks Giant Explosion
The moon has a new hole on its surface thanks to a boulder that slammed into it in March, creating the biggest explosion scientists have seen on the moon since they started monitoring it. The meteorite crashed on March 17, slamming into the lunar surface at a mind-boggling 56,000 mph (90,000 kph) and creating a new crater 65 feet wide (20 meters). The crash sparked a bright flash of light that would have been visible to anyone looking at the moon at the time with the naked eye, NASA...
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The 10 Best Foods for Flat Abs
Try these ab-flattening foods to boost your abs routine's effectiveness, control belly bloat, and maintain a healthy metabolism. Here, the top 10 foods for flat abs. read more
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Natural Solutions Radio with Dr. Eliezer Ben-Joseph...
Date: Saturday, May 18, 2013 Guest/Author: Dr. Rappard Dr. Ben-Joseph speaking with Dr. Rappard about Micro Back Surgery, and its benefits over conventional back surgery. Media: natural_health_radio_02_05.18.13.mp3
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Natural Solutions Radio with Dr. Eliezer Ben-Joseph...
Date: Saturday, May 18, 2013 This week, Dr. Eliezer Ben-Joseph speaking with callers about many different topics about health and alternative healing. Media: natural_health_radio_01_05.18.13.mp3
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California Police Break Down Door Without Warrant, Taze...
Police are called out to an apartment for a noise compliant by the neighbors. The three occupants inside non-aggressively exercise their fourth amendment right, refusing the police entry as they demand at gun point to let them inside without a search warrant or probable cause. read more
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How Contractors Raked in $385 Billion to Build and...
Outside the United States, the Pentagon controls a collection of military bases unprecedented in history. With U.S. troops gone from Iraq and the withdrawal from Afghanistan underway, it’s easy to forget that we probably still have about 1,000 military bases in other peoples' lands. This giant collection of bases receives remarkably little media attention, costs a fortune, and even when cost cutting is the subject du jour, it still seems to get a free ride. read more
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Builders Bulldoze Big Mayan Pyramid in Belize
A construction company has essentially destroyed one of Belize's largest Mayan pyramids with backhoes and bulldozers to extract crushed rock for a road-building project, authorities announced on Monday. read more
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Cemetery Reveals Baby-Making Season in Ancient Egypt
The peak period for baby-making sex in ancient Egypt was in July and August, when the weather was at its hottest. read more
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Which is Healthier: Juicing or Smoothies?
Juicing and smoothies are all the rage right now. While both can boost your fruit and vegetable intake (something most Americans need to do) and are great for getting a variety of produce into your diet, one is the better choice. read more
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Why is there so much poop in swimming pools?
A CDC report finds that more than half of public pools are basically toilets Who would've guessed Caddy Shack would prove so prophetic? read more
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Doctor who promised cancer cure faces sentencing
At the age of three, Brianica Kirsch was diagnosed with brain cancer. Her parents, desperate to find alternative measures for their daughter who had undergone surgeries and chemotherapy, turned to Dr. Christine Daniel, who offered an herbal supplement with a success rate she claimed was between 60 and 80 percent. read more
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Ten Food Items You Might Be Surprised to Learn Contain...
So just how much high fructose corn syrup are you consuming, anyway? If you regularly dine out or eat processed foods, the chances are high you’re taking in more than you might have ever imagined. Back in the 1980s, when HFCS was a fairly new food ingredient, it was being touted as “better use of an abundant homegrown crop” in a trade publication ad for Cargill read more
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Could Human Beings Be Cloned?
The news that researchers have used cloning to make human embryos for the purpose of producing stem cells may have some people wondering if it would ever be possible to clone a person. Although it would be unethical, experts say it is likely biologically possible to clone a human being. But even putting ethics aside, the sheer amount of resources needed to do it is a significant barrier. Since the 1950s when researchers cloned a frog, scientists have cloned dozens of animal species,...
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Senator Warren Wants Banks to Admit Guilt
Following up on an exchange with Comptroller Thomas J. Curry, United States Senator Elizabeth Warren today sent a letter to Chairman of the Federal Reserve Ben Bernanke, Attorney General Eric Holder, and Chairman of the Securities & Exchange Commission Mary Jo White to request the disclosure of any research and analysis done on the costs to the public of settling an enforcement action without requiring an admission of guilt. read more
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1.3 million wrongly treated after false positives from...
The Susan G. Komen for breast cancer awareness reports on their site that breast cancer will strike more than 1.3 million women annually over the next 20 years. They are proud to report that 70 percent of women 40 and older receive regular mammograms now. What they aren't telling the public is that their pharmaceutical and radiation-funding "awareness" project is giving millions of women false diagnoses by the very mammogram technology they promote. As a matter of fact, the New England...
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Parents have no 'right' to homeschool their kids, says...
Individual liberty is being burned at the stake, as governments set fire to people natural rights. This time it has everything to do with homeschooling. read more
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What’s Behind the Secret Epidemic of Hypothyroidism
Most of us don’t ever think about our thyroid. This gland is located in the neck and produces hormones that regulate energy metabolism, control protein synthesis, and adjust the body’s sensitivity to other hormones. The thyroid is also involved in detoxification, growth functions, immunity, and more. Given all of these critical actions, it makes sense to take care of such a precious and sensitive area of health. But, as noted, thyroid health is often just an afterthought, usually following a...
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FOCUS | Supreme Court Sides With Monsanto in Major...
The Supreme Court usually isn't friendly toward questionable patents, but it came down overwhelmingly on the side of agribusiness giant Monsanto Monday in a case that's bound to resonate throughout the biotechnology industry. read more
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13 Benghazis That Occurred on Bush's Watch Without a...
The Republican inquisition over the attacks against Americans in Benghazi has never really gone away, but it appears as though in the wake of the Boston Marathon bombing and the House Oversight Committee's Benghazi hearings this week there are renewed psycho-histrionics over Benghazi. read more
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Quantum physics has confirmed it - the universe is...
As quantum physics can now confirm, the universe we live in is not made up of solid objects but of energy and information. This discovery holds vast implications for understanding the nature of our world and in understanding the true source of vibrant health. It also means that it is possible to encapsulate all the concepts discussed in the world of holistic natural health into a single unified theory. read more
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Raising Healthy Eaters – Part I
As a father of two, I have had my share of parenting trials and tribulations. Raising children is the hardest yet most rewarding job I have had. What I have come to realize as a parent is that there is a great deal of letting go and going with the flow. read more
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Raising Healthy Eaters – Part II: A Journey Throughout...
In Part I of the Raising Healthy Eaters series we talked about flexibility and guidelines. In Part II we continue the journey providing guidelines and hints for introducing your baby to the art of healthy eating. read more
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Raising Healthy Eaters – Part III: Cooking in the...
In this final blog on raising healthy eaters I share effective tactics to introduce your little ones to the kitchen, create a playful and safe space for experimenting and learning, and instill a lifelong love for the process of nourishing themselves and their loved ones. read more
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Cholesterol is NOT the Cause of Heart Disease (PART 2)
Before we can begin to talk about the real cause and effective treatment for heart and blood vessel disease, we must first look at what is known, or I should say what we think we know. read more
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One-third of honeybee colonies in US died last winter:...
The Bee Informed Partnership (BIP) recently published preliminary data from its annual review of bee colony declines in the U.S., and the findings from this report are mind-boggling. According to the latest survey results, an astounding 31.3 percent, or roughly one-third, of all managed bee colonies in the U.S. were wiped out during the most recent 2012/2013 winter season, a rate that represents a 42 percent increase compared to the number of colonies lost during the previous 2011/2012...
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Genetically-modified humans are already walking among us
An undated article discussing the invention of genetically-modified (GM) human beings that was published by the U.K.'s DailyMail at least 10 years ago is gaining fresh attention from the online community these days. And even though the heinous practice, which is known as cytoplasmic transfer, is technically illegal in the U.S., the current regulatory framework offers little in the way of enforcement capacity against those that breach this moratorium. read more
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How Angelina Jolie was duped by cancer doctors into self...
In a New York Times op-ed explaining her decision to have both of her breasts surgically removed even though she doesn't have breast cancer, Angelina Jolie cited risk numbers as key to her decision. She said that doctors told her she had an "87% risk of breast cancer." Her solution? Undergo three months of surgical procedures and have her breasts cut out. read more
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Genetically Modified Babies Already Born – How Will They...
When I first read that genetically modified humans have already been born, I could hardly believe it. However, further research into this story featured in the UK’s Daily Mail1 proved it to be true. They’ve really done it… they’ve created humans that nature could never allow for, and it’s anyone’s guess as to what will happen next. read more
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Food Fraud: What Are You Really Eating?
When you order sushi at your favorite restaurant or pick up a pound of coffee from your local supermarket, you assume you’re getting the red snapper or Columbian beans as stated on the menu or label. read more
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Who served their country better: George Bush or Kimberly...
So said George W Bush in his speech at the dedication of his presidential library in Texas last week. The library officially opened to the public on 1 May, the tenth anniversary of his famous "Mission Accomplished" speech aboard the USS Abraham Lincoln, anchored just off the coast of San Diego. Bush, in his remarks at the library, along with President Barack Obama, former secretary of state Condoleezza Rice and others all failed to mention the word "Iraq". read more
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Houston braces for giant snail invasion
A giant African land snail has been spotted in a Houston garden, and residents are being warned to stay away from it—and to watch out for others. read more
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Meteor Shower from Halley's Comet Peaks This Weekend
Early Sunday (May 5), just before dawn, we'll have an opportunity to see some of the remnants of the most famous of comets briefly light up the early morning sky. read more
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Is Pot Too Potent To Legalize?
Slate reports in an article titled “Not That High: Today’s marijuana is too strong, and that’s bad for new business,” that the potency of marijuana is now “too high.” Writer Emma Marris’s brother is a professional chemist who tests the composition and potency for growers and medical marijuana dispensaries. Based on the information she obtained from her brother, Marris writes: read more
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Fracking Ourselves to Death in Pennsylvania
More than 70 years ago, a chemical attack was launched against Washington State and Nevada. It poisoned people, animals, everything that grew, breathed air, and drank water. The Marshall Islands were also struck. This formerly pristine Pacific atoll was branded "the most contaminated place in the world." As their cancers developed, the victims of atomic testing and nuclear weapons development got a name: downwinders. What marked their tragedy was the darkness in which they were kept about...
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Rat meat sold as lamb in latest China food scandal
Chinese police have broken up a criminal ring accused of taking meat from rats and foxes and selling it as lamb in the country's latest food safety scandal. read more
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A must read for women
My friend, Andrea Donsky, that has the website www.naturalsavvy.com, wrote an incredible article that is extremely relevant to all women that have a monthly cycle. She has given me permission to submit it here. As you read the article and become upset there is a link to go to to sign a petition. It is probably one of the most important petitions you will ever sign. The link is: http://chn.ge/10hDR2w . It will be repeated. read more
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What if television news disappeared and we invented...
This article is dedicated to Bonnie Lange, my dear friend and publisher, who passed away last week. Bonnie was an unbound creative spirit who lived her life as a titanic vision. Leaving her physical form behind, she expands her vision, her life, her work, her ever-present joy. Much love, my friend... read more
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One can of soda a day makes you substantially more prone...
Drinking as little as one can of soda pop per day is enough to increase your risk of both type 2 diabetes and stroke by a significant percentage, according to a new study out of Europe. Based on an analysis involving about 27,000 people who were surveyed on their health and dietary habits, researchers determined that over the course of 16 years, those who drank just one soda a day were 18 percent more likely than others to either develop type 2 diabetes or suffer a stroke. read more
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Australian Telegraph newspaper endorses medical child...
In a new low for even the mainstream media, the Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph newspapers in Australia are pushing a campaign of outright medical child abuse they call "NO JAB NO PLAY." The campaign demands that unvaccinated children be barred from all social contact with other children and condemned to the life of a social outcast where parents are presumably supposed to raise them in cages in dark basements. The paper has launched its horrific, anti-human-rights campaign, "NO JAB NO...
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Why Federal Efforts to Ensure Clean Tap Water Fail to...
Laura Garcia was halfway through the breakfast dishes when the spigot went dry. The small white tank beneath the sink that purified her undrinkable water had run out. Still, as annoying as that was, it was an improvement over the days before Ms. Garcia got her water filter, when she had to do her dishes using water from five-gallon containers she bought at a local store. read more
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Stop Granting Special Privileges to the Police
The horrific Boston bombings already have led to irrational calls for more security cameras and more police officers, with some Democrats absurdly using this tragedy as a reason to stop the slight sequester-mandated cuts in federal spending growth. read more
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An Open Letter to the Arab League by Mordechai Kedar
We in Israel received with great pleasure your agreement to normalize relations with Israel on condition that we agree to the establishment of a Palestinian state and exchanges of territories between that state and Israel. The Palestinian state that you propose to establish in Judea and Samaria would be the second Palestinian state, since the first Palestinian state was established six years ago in the Gaza Strip, and you clearly recognize it as such in practice. How else can the state...
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Amazing Lost 'Atlantis' Survives Beneath English Sea
The sharpest look yet at an underwater medieval town dubbed England's "Atlantis" reveals that the lost city was once almost as large as the modern City of London, a major district in central London. Medieval Dunwich was a thriving port in the Middle Ages. Major storms beginning in the 1200s swept the city out to sea and silted up the Dunwich River, choking off the Dunwich harbor. By the 1400s, Dunwich lost its perch as a major port. The city was abandoned, and over the centuries, the ruins...
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FDA, FBI Raid Tulsa Cancer Clinic
A U.S. Food and Drug Administration investigation shut down a Tulsa cancer clinic Tuesday afternoon. Federal agents showed up at Camelot Cancer Care in south Tulsa around 11 a.m. and served a search warrant. read more
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Guardian: Prof. Hawking accused of hypocrisy for boycott...
Stephen Hawking‘s decision to boycott an Israeli conference in protest at the state’s 46-year occupation of Palestine was derided as hypocritical by some, who pointed out that the celebrated scientist and author uses Israeli technology in the computer equipment that allows him to function. read more
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Minerals: The Missing Elements Implicated In A Plethora...
Drugs can be patented and billions of dollars made on a lifetime patient, but basic elements such as minerals will never offer same financial success. The patentability and profitability just is not there like it is with drugs, not to mention that they would not have lifetime patients because most of them would get well. Until mineral science is properly addressed in medicine, there will be no end to the widespread disease epidemic we are witnessing across the globe. This is quite sad,...
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The Plight of the Honeybee
Bees are back in the news this spring, if not back in fields pollinating this summer's crops. The European Union (EU) has announced that it will ban, for two years, the use of neonicotinoids, the much-maligned pesticide group often fingered in honeybee declines. The U.S. hasn't followed suit, though this year a group of beekeepers and environmental and consumer groups sued the EPA for not doing enough to protect bees from the pesticide onslaught. read more
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Evidence suggests that up to 90 percent of landmark...
The vast majority of the published scientific literature on cancer and cancer research is inherently flawed and non-reproducible, reveals a new review published online in the journal Nature. Researchers C. Glenn Begley and Lee Ellis found that a mere 11 percent of 53 papers on cancer published in reputable, peer-reviewed journals was solid, while the other 89 percent could not be reproduced, implying that it may be false or at the very least misleading. read more
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Natural Solutions Radio with Dr Eliezer Ben-Joseph...
Date: Saturday, May 11, 2013 Dr. Ben-Joseph speaking to callers about various health issues and concerns. Media: natural_health_radio_02_05.11.13.mp3
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Natural Solutions Radio with Dr Eliezer Ben-Joseph...
Date: Saturday, May 11, 2013 Dr. Ben-Joseph speaking with callers about health conditions and concerns. Taking about Lugol's Solution, cholesterol, and many other topics. Media: natural_health_radio_01_05.11.13.mp3
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FDA finally gets around to conducting safety review on...
After more than 40 years of complete inaction in evaluating the potential side effects of the antibacterial chemical triclosan, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is finally getting around to conducting a review of this pervasive chemical additive, which is now found in more than 75 percent of all conventional hand soaps. And to many experts familiar with the nature of triclosan, this review could not have come soon enough, as it is becoming abundantly clear that triclosan is...
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Is There A "Safe Upper Level" Of Vitamin D? asks Prof....
A recent Israeli study raises some concern that certain individuals may be able to get too much vitamin D. But leaving such judgments in the hands of violently anti-nutrition orthodox doctors would be something that worries me. The evidence would have to be very convincing. read more
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Meteor Shower from Halley's Comet Peaks This Weekend
Early Sunday (May 5), just before dawn, we'll have an opportunity to see some of the remnants of the most famous of comets briefly light up the early morning sky read more
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Tiny Baby Dinosaur Discovered in China
Scientists have discovered the fossilized skeleton of a baby dinosaur representing a new species of coelurosaur, a group of theropods that includes ancient beasts like T. rex. read more
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New Experiment Seeks Mysterious Dark Matter Underground
A new hunt for dark matter — an invisible but bountiful constituent of the universe — is under way inside an underground laboratory a mile and half below Ontario, Canada, scientists report. read more
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Manatees Are Dying in Droves, Florida Says ‘Too Bad’
A record number of endangered manatees are dying in Florida's algae-choked waterways. So far this year, 582 manatees have died, more than any year on record, according to preliminary numbers from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC). read more
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Ancient Roman Cemetery Discovered Beneath Parking Lot
Hidden beneath a parking lot in Leicester, England, archaeologists have discovered a 1,700-year-old Roman cemetery that seemed to show no religious bias. read more
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More than 900 arrested in China over meat contamination,...
Chinese police have arrested 904 people and seized 20,000 tonnes of illegal products since the turn of the year, in an investigation into "meat-related offences" which revealed fox, mink and rat meat all being passed off as mutton. read more
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Every television newscast is a conspiracy
Focus on the network evening news. This is where the staging is done well. read more
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Benghazi a premeditated terrorist attack, not a response...
For weeks after the attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya, in which U.S. Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other operatives were killed, President Obama and his administration told the American people and the world that it all went down because of an anti-Muslim video made by a hapless California man. read more
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Roundup herbicide causes smorgasbord of fatal diseases,...
The immense dangers associated with exposure to Monsanto's Roundup herbicide are becoming incontrovertible, with the latest indictment of this deadly chemical cocktail coming from a new paper published in the open access, peer-reviewed journal Entropy. A scientist from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and her colleague found that, contrary to industry claims, the active ingredient in Roundup, glyphosate, interferes with human digestion and the biosynthesis of nutrients, which...
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FDA, FBI raid natural cancer treatment clinic in Tulsa...
read more
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Strategies for optimal nutrient absorption
Nutrient absorption is a very important health topic that gets very little attention. The amount of available nutrients in a food is important as well, but not particularly helpful if those nutrients do not get absorbed and therefore used by the body. There are a few things that you can do to increase nutrient absorption and make the most of the available nutrients in your food. read more
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North Carolina police arrest black man in a parking lot...
Another day, another saga about the growing police state in America. Apparently some North Carolina communities are cracking down on the consumption of iced tea in the parking lots of some businesses. read more
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IRS loophole hands out billions of dollars to illegal...
The U.S. government is broke and $16 trillion-plus in the hole, spending hundreds of billions of dollars more per year than it collects in revenue, because Washington, collectively, is addicted to spending. read more
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The lying liars who lie about psychiatry
These days, we are witnessing an acceleration in the use of psychiatry to target Americans, to label them as dangerous, to take away guns they own, to blame gun violence in the US on mentally ill people. read more
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Frankenbeef - It's whats for dinner
Apparently, modifying fruits, vegetables, and grains isn't enough. Now scientists are taking the future of genetically modified food to the next level: They've successfully created lab-grown meat. It's been over a year now since Dr. Mark Post invited media into his laboratory at Maastricht University, Netherlands to witness how he's developed the methodology to create lab-grown meats. read more
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Manuka oil conquers deadly MRSA bacteria where...
With life threatening instances of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infections on the rise, many are seeking safe and effective alternatives in the realm of natural medicine. Manuka oil is a shinning example. Reports of healing attributed to the oil are becoming more commonplace - oftentimes in cases where patients have suffered from MRSA boils, lesions and open wounds that did not respond to antibiotic treatments. Extracted from the leaves and branches of the L. scoparium...
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Antioxidants can help treat children with celiac...
A landmark study, conducted by researchers from the University of Belgrade, Serbia, and published in the journal Clinical Biochemistry in 2009, suggested that treatment with antioxidants may be able to significantly reduce the symptoms of celiac disease. read more
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Beat PCOS naturally with omega-3 fatty acids
PCOS stands for polycystic ovary syndrome, quite a mouthful that implies something that rarely occurs. But it is common among women. The word polycystic refers to multiple small cysts around the edges of the ovaries. read more
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Natural Solutions Radio with Dr. Eliezer Ben-Joseph...
Date: Saturday, May 4, 2013 Dr. Ben-Joseph speaking with callers about various health issues and concerns for their health conditions. Media: natural_health_radio_2_05.04.13.mp3
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Natural Solutions Radio with Dr. Eliezer Ben-Joseph...
Date: Saturday, May 4, 2013 Dr. Ben-Joseph speaking with callers about various health issues and concerns and speaking about the different kinds of CoQ-10 that are out there on the market, and the differences between them. Media: natural_health_radio_1_05.04.13.mp3
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Ubiquinone vs. Ubiquinol: Don’t believe the Hype!
Don’t be fooled by the advertising hype about ‘the other CoQ10 that supplement companies don’t want you to know about’, it is nothing more than advertising hype so they can sell their more expensive CoQ10. Let me give you the facts about CoQ10 so you can save some money $$$. read more
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Suicide Rate Climbs For Middle-Aged Americans
It may be time to change the benchmark for discussion of public health problems in the U.S. read more
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How Can You Tell You’re Eating Real Chicken? And Is It...
The six decades’ old fast food franchise KFC recently rolled out Original Recipe boneless chicken in its 4,500 US locations.1 The new slogan: “No mess. No fuss. No bones about it.” read more
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Biotech giant Monsanto announces expansion at Saint...
Showing no signs of slowing down, Monsanto announced expansion of its Chesterfield Village Research Center in St. Louis by 400,000 square feet. On the same day, April 24th, a bipartisan bill was introduced to Congress requiring the labeling of genetically modified foods. It seems nothing can stop the power of the biotech industry to overtake the nation's food supply, but average citizens are demonstrating in growing numbers their dissatisfaction with GMO foods. It is urgent that consumers...
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Five natural alternatives for banishing fibromyalgia...
Though there is still some debate over whether or not it is an inflammatory or a neurological condition, or some combination of both, most everyone will agree that fibromyalgia is a severely debilitating health condition that robs its victims of their energy, their strength and ultimately their lives. But the good news is that there are a number of natural remedies that individuals with fibromyalgia can use to help keep the chronic illness under control, and maybe even cure it altogether....
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Just one can of soda raises diabetes risk by 22 percent
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), more than 310 million people worldwide are affected by type 2 diabetes, a long-term condition characterized by insulin resistance. What is at the heart of this growing epidemic? According to a new European study, the mass availability of sugary soda drinks may be one of the greatest single contributing factors to the growing diabetes epidemic. In fact, researchers concluded that drinking only one 12-ounce can of sugar sweetened soda a day...
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Body fat: Turn an enemy into a friend with a new...
There are so many people around the globe trying to lose weight at this very moment. It is a global pastime. Ironically, although many people desire to lose weight, not many people actually even know what the extra weight is. They just want to get rid of it. read more
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Colorado bill will give Secret Service agents police...
Increasingly, states are beginning to distinguish themselves either as bastions of liberty and freedom, like Texas and Arizona, or lackeys for big government federalism like California and New York. read more
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Obama's new budget a complete lie: Massive spending...
Most Americans know that politicians use a lot of fiction when it comes to things like budget calculations. That is especially true in the nation's capital, where simply not increasing spending as much from one year to the next qualifies as a real budget cut. read more
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Lower your blood pressure naturally with tomatoes and...
Did you know that there are natural ways to lower your blood pressure safely and effectively? Scientific studies have shown that both ordinary tomatoes and the naturally occurring substance CoQ10 can provide benefits to people with high blood pressure. read more
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Top three most dangerous pain medications
Pain medications and the adverse drug reactions to them are the fourth leading cause of death in the US. This is only behind cancer, heart disease, and strokes. But still, millions of people take some form of pain medication every single day. Prescription or over-the-counter, the vast majority of these people taking these just don't realize the incredible dangers. read more
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Chinese activist speaks out about 130,000 forced...
"The respect of life among the common people is on the verge of extinction," says Chen Guangcheng, a blind Chinese activist who escaped China and moved to the United States. Now Chen speaks to Americans about the torturous population control system that the Chinese government has in place and the abusive tactics officials used to force compliance. read more
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How DuPont profits from drought: Half the rainfall,...
When there are drought conditions, you might think that an agri-business corporation's bottom line would suffer, but not so for chemical giant DuPont, whose quarterly profits more than doubled despite the worst dry spell in decades. read more
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Los Angeles County now targeting low-income, uninsured...
A media-induced panic has apparently set in across Los Angeles following the recent death of a West Hollywood lawyer due to bacterial meningitis. According to reports, both the AIDS Healthcare Foundation and Los Angeles County are now busy jabbing as many local residents as possible for the condition, including low-income and uninsured residents who are among the primary targets for the "free" vaccine. read more
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Eating watermelons can help reduce blood pressure
According to a new study, a pre-hypertensive condition is one of the major risk factors for serious health threats such as strokes and heart attacks. However, not too many people are aware that simply eating watermelons can be very effective in naturally fighting off pre-hypertension and therefore, considerably lessening the risk for heart attacks and strokes. read more
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Forty percent of parents still giving kids dangerous...
Despite years of warnings from the medical establishment about the dangers over-the-counter medications pose for young children, it is alarming to know that as many as 40 percent of parents are still giving their kids these harmful substances. read more
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Crazy scientists develop implantable microchip that...
Pretty soon every bodily function will be capable of regulation and control by futuristic, man-made technologies, and this bionic insurgence is apparently starting with the human appetite. As reported by BBC News, U.K.-based scientists have developed an implantable microchip that they say can suppress hunger and induce weight loss better than weight-loss surgery and other conventional methods. read more
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Official EU research verifies bee holocaust caused by...
A class of insecticide chemicals commonly applied to rapeseed, also known as canola here in the U.S., as well as sugar beets, corn, and various other crops is killing off bee populations across the globe, and a prominent environmental watchdog group is now demanding that these insecticides be immediately pulled from the market. As reported by the U.K.'s Daily Mail, a report issued by the U.K.'s Environmental Audit Committee (EAC) confirms that neonicotinoid insecticides are to blame for mass...
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Martial law is real: Americans now being forced out of...
If you ever wanted to see what a police state looks like up close and personal, look no further than Boston in the aftermath of the marathon terrorist attack. read more
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Majority of Southern California's airspace to be...
Don't look now, Southern Californians, but the remaining shreds of your privacy rights - and they are threadbare already, to be sure - are about to vanish into the dustbin of history, if the "see everything all of the time" crowd gets its way. read more
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Studies prove that consumption of sugar and cancer are...
Sugar lurks in many places within our food system today. From certain breads and juices, to children's cereal, it has been discretely introduced into the food supply on a catastrophic level. Over the years, much research has been conducted regarding the toxic effects of sugar, and the conclusions have all been quite troubling - cancer being a common trend within many of the studies. read more
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Doctors walk out of national Obamacare implementation...
According to live tweets and images sent from ophthalmologist Dr. Kris Held, nearly all doctors had walked out in protest and disgust of Obamacare implementation talks at a prominent national health care meeting. Typically, The American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery Government Relations session is a well attended, formal business conference where brilliant minds in medicine convene. This year was a different story. With talks of Obamacare implementation and compliance underway,...
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Californians sign petition to inject children with...
Activist Mark Dice is at it again, this time asking citizens on the street of California to sign a petition mandating maximum mercury injections for children along with door-to-door gun confiscations using police and military forces. read more
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Your home is filled with toxic flame retardants
Two new studies published in the journal Environmental Science & Technology confirm that the average home is filled with toxic flame retardant chemicals that may cause anything from cancer to hormonal problems to birth defects. read more
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Join the Perpetual Patient Program
It starts so innocently, so easily, you hardly noticed. You've been stressed lately and getting to bed later than normal with all the things on your "To-Do" list. You tell yourself: "It's only temporary", but with your recent reliance on pre-prepared and fast foods, you've been experiencing some stomach upset, a little gas and burping, even occasional burning. Your physician quickly diagnoses GERD and you receive a prescription for a proton-pump inhibitor to reduce your stomach acid. It...
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Kansas enacts law to nullify federal violations of...
The state of Kansas has enacted legislation that essentially cancels out any future federal attempt to regulate guns or impose new gun control measures and restrictions in a move seen by supporters as protecting the integrity of the Second Amendment and Kansans' right to bear arms without government infringement. read more
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Sugar-laced soda increases diabetes risk by 22 percent
Drinking a can of sugar-laced soda a day will raise your risk of developing diabetes by 22 percent! According to a new study out today evidence suggests that just one 12-ounce serving of a sugar-sweetened beverage can significantly raise the risk of developing type 2 diabetes. read more
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Minority groups bought off in Portland as part of water...
Taking a page from national political parties and federal lawmakers, an Oregon group trying to convince Portland residents to approve adding fluoride to the city's drinking water has taken to buying off key constituencies for their support. It seems like all aspects of American government are for sale these days. read more
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HHS spending millions in taxpayer money to run Obamacare...
Every supporter of Obamacare, from the president on down, has spent hours upon hours and expended exhaustive amounts of energy telling Americans what a wonderful law it is and how fortunate we are to finally have the federal government running (sorry - "managing") our healthcare system. read more
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Incredible! NYT pushing toxic cancer drugs for healthy...
A taxpayer-funded government task force has issued new guidelines that literally urge healthy women to take toxic cancer drugs "preventively" in order to allegedly decrease their risk of developing breast cancer. As recently promoted by The New York Times (NYT), these shocking new recommendations from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) have been issued despite a complete lack of evidence that the dangerous cancer drugs being recommended have any preventive efficacy whatsoever....
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America has devolved into a nation of welfare zombies...
If you want to look where America is headed, look no further than the recent activist video released by Mark Dice. He attempted to gather signatures for a petition that demanded America become a Nazi-style Orwellian police state, complete with forced mercury injections of children and door-to-door gun confiscation nationwide. Astonishingly, people gladly signed it! read more
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Natural Solutions Radio with Dr. Eliezer Ben-Joseph...
Date: Saturday, April 27, 2013 Dr. Ben-Joseph speaking about many therapies, about Alka Genesis, Thyroid, and many other topics of concern. Media: natural_health_radio_02_04.27.13.mp3
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Natural Solutions Radio with Dr. Eliezer Ben-Joseph...
Date: Saturday, April 27, 2013 Dr. Ben-Joseph speaking with callers about many topics of interest, from general health, supplements, and answering questions about many health issues. Media: natural_health_radio_01_04.27.13.mp3
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What you should know about cinnamon and how it can help...
Cinnamon, which is generally an appreciated spice for its good taste when added to certain foods, definitely seems to have much more going in its favor than simply pleasing your taste buds. It's a potent anti-bacterial and anti-fungal medicinal herb offering many advantages to the human body. read more
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Why does anything exist? Scientists find a bit of the...
Scientists probing the nature of antimatter have found a bit more evidence to explain why the universe is not an empty husk, although not enough to account for the billions of galaxies strewn across the cosmos. read more
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Massive, uncontained leak at Fukushima is pouring over...
The tsunami-caused nuclear accident at the Fukushima power station in Japan is the disaster that never ends, as new reports indicate that a wealth of new radioactive materials have been spewed into the atmosphere. read more
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Man With Hole in Stomach Revolutionized Medicine
A man whose gunshot wound created a window into his stomach enabled scientists to understand digestion. read more
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Hubble Telescope Looks to the Future After 23 Years in...
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope celebrates a whopping 23 years in orbit today, but astronomers are hopeful that the iconic instrument can keep studying the heavens for years to come. read more
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New Theory on Why Stonehenge Was Built
A site near Stonehenge has revealed archaeological evidence that hunters lived just a mile from Stonehenge roughly 5,000 years prior to the construction of the first stones, new research suggests. What's more, the site, which was occupied continuously for 3,000 years, had evidence of burning, thousands of flint tool fragments and bones of wild aurochs , a type of extinct giant cow. That suggests the area near Stonehenge may have been an auroch migration route that became an ancient feasting...
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New 'Fairy' Insect Is Mind-Blowingly Small
A new species of tiny fly named after the fairy in "Peter Pan" is mind-blowingly miniscule, with delicate wings trimmed in fringe. read more
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Extreme Green: Earth Recycles 2.5-Billion-Year-Old Ocean...
The lava that erupted from the Cook Islands volcano, called Mangaia, contains a few tiny grains of sulfide, a mineral, with a peculiar ratio of sulfur isotopes, according to research published in today's (April 24) issue of the journal Nature. The unusual ratio could only have formed before oxygen-breathing life appeared on Earth 2.45 billion years ago. Isotopes are versions of elements with different numbers of neutrons, giving them differing weights read more
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Monsanto vs. Mother Earth: Join the millions who have...
The world's most evil corporation, Monsanto, has taken a new interest in conventional food crops, which the company is currently trying to seize ownership of in Europe by exploiting a little-known loophole in European patent law. And a petition created by the human rights group Avaaz, which has already garnered nearly two million signatures in less than two weeks, may help stop this unscrupulous takeover of food by drawing global attention to it. read more
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Environmental expert: GMO farming causes one billion...
The future of food is not one in which the global seed supply is owned and licensed out by an oligopoly of multinational biotechnology and industrial agriculture corporations, but rather one in which the peoples of the world are free to save, reuse and replenish their own heirloom seed stocks without the shackles of outrageous patent limitations, dangerous pesticides and perpetual dependency on non-renewable inputs. This is the vision of Dr. Vandana Shiva, a prominent environmental advocate...
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Ancient Europeans Mysteriously Vanished 4,500 Years Ago
The genetic lineage of Europe mysteriously transformed about 4,500 years ago, new research suggests. The findings, detailed today (April 23) in the journal Nature Communications, were drawn from several skeletons unearthed in central Europe that were up to 7,500 years old. read more
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EDITORIAL: Defending the First Amendment
Seven years ago, Judith Miller, a reporter for The New York Times, became the heroine of a cause celebre when federal prosecutors demanded she testify to a grand jury investigating a White House leak divulging that Valerie Plame was an undercover operative of the CIA. The government demanded she reveal her confidential sources for stories she wrote about the leak. Ms. Miller refused, and she was found in contempt of court and jailed for 85 days. She became a household name and the poster...
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Alternative therapies may help lower blood pressure
Alternative therapies such as aerobic exercise, resistance or strength training, and isometric hand grip exercises may help reduce your blood pressure, according to the American Heart Association read more
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The modern-day 'slave class' is anyone who cannot do...
Throughout human history, most slavery has been enforced physically -- with whips and chains. You either did what you were told or they beat you into submission. read more
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What's Your Reaction?
Caffeine is probably the single most popular psychoactive drug available in the United States of America and around the world. It’s surrounded by controversy because it seems to have health benefits as well as risks. Most people know that caffeine is inadvisable during pregnancy, can keep you awake, help you lose weight, and make you either exceedingly enthusiastic or just plain irritable. But do you know how caffeine actually affects your brain? You should. Even if you’re not consuming...
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Your Thoughts Can Transform Your Health: Truth Or Hype?
You’ve probably heard it before: “Just think positively; everything will work out.” And you probably wondered: “Is this simply an unfounded cliché from personal coaches and those preaching the power of positive thinking?” read more
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Burning Question: Is it OK to Heat Food in Plastic?
Lunch at your desk can be a downer, especially when it involves leftovers reheated in the office microwave. But are you putting more into your body than just lukewarm pad thai? Rolf Halden, the director for the Center for Environmental Security at the Biodesign Institute at Arizona State University, stirs the pot. read more
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Is there a link between vitamin D status and kidney...
Renal transplantation is now a common procedure. End-stage renal disease is the reason for kidney transplantation. Causes of end-stage renal disease include untreated hypertension, infections, diabetes mellitus, and other rarer conditions. Diabetes accounts for one fourth of transplants. The majority of recipients are on dialysis at the time of surgery. read more
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Police State on Display
The Boston Marathon bombing has already demonstrated the best and the worst of America for all the world to see. read more
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Israeli spy says Syria used chemical arms, U.S....
Syrian government forces have used chemical weapons - probably nerve gas - in their fight against rebels trying to force out President Bashar al-Assad, the Israeli military's top intelligence analyst said on Tuesday read more
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McDonald’s goes belly up in Bolivia
After 14 years of presence in the country, and despite all the existing campaigns and having a network, the chain was forced to close the eight restaurants that remained open in the three main cities: La Paz, Cochabamba and Santa Cruz de la Sierra. read more
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Israeli firm talks up mankind’s recovery from the Tower...
The Bible ascribes the diversity of languages on Earth — some 6,500 tongues in current usage, according to most estimates — to the hubris of post-flood mankind in seeking to build a tower to heaven, and a divine decision to punish that Tower of Babel construction project by “confounding” man’s capacity to communicate in a single tongue read more
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Executive Action: JFK Witness Deaths and the London...
The 1973 film Executive Action depicted a conspiracy to assassinate JFK. It was based on a book by Mark Lane, who in 1966 was the first JFK investigator to debunk the Warren Commission in his book “Rush to Judgment”. Burt Lancaster and Robert Ryan played CIA operatives involved in the plot. They were resisted in their efforts to have the film made by mainstream Hollywood producers. The movie reveals how Kennedy’s progressive agenda and peace initiatives were a threat to the establishment. He...
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Now Your iPhone Can Read Fingerprints, Scan Irises and...
Cops and soldiers may soon be able to pull out their iPhones to track the eyes, facial features, voice and fingerprints of suspected criminals and combatants. read more
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National Geographic Channel Airs MAMMOTH: BACK FROM THE...
Today, the National Geographic Society in Washington, D.C., plays host to a first-of-its-kind event: TedxDeExtinction, a public forum on the groundbreaking science surrounding efforts to bring extinct species back to life, and the ethical and conservation issues that may arise. Next month, the National Geographic Channel will explore this very topic in MAMMOTH: BACK FROM THE DEAD, airing tonight, April 12, at 8 p.m. ET/PT. This one-hour special follows a team of international scientists as...
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The ATF Wants ‘Massive’ Online Database to Find Out Who...
According to a recent solicitation from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the bureau is looking to buy a “massive online data repository system” for its Office of Strategic Intelligence and Information (OSII). The system is intended to operate for at least five years, and be able to process automated searches of individuals, and “find connection points between two or more individuals” by linking together “structured and unstructured data.” read more
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Twist in dark matter tale hints at shadow Milky Way
THE HUNT for some of the most wanted stuff in the universe took a new twist this week with the first results from a high-profile, space-based dark matter detector. The results are inconclusive, but, if combined with recent theory, they hint at something exciting. Could the universe have a dark side, complete with its own force, a zoo of particles and even a shadow version of the Milky Way? read more
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Clones of clones make clones
Since mammals were first cloned, concerns have been raised about their efficiency and health. The new study reveals that clones of cloned mice can be produced for at least 25 generations. read more
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WE ARE STAR PEOPLE: Scientific proof we were created by...
DON'T be alarmed, but you have alien DNA in your genetic code. Science says so. Scientists from Kazakhstan believe that human DNA was encoded with an extraterrestrial signal by an ancient alien civilisation, Discovery.com reports. read more
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Mapping the ‘fountain of youth’
University of Copenhagen researchers and an international team have for the first time mapped telomerase, an enzyme with a rejuvenating effect on cell aging. read more
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Is An Alien Message Embedded In Our Genetic Code?
The answer to whether or not we are alone in the universe could be right under our nose, or, more literally, inside every cell in our body. read more
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"The Shroud is not a fake"
New research from ENEA on the sacred Linen kept in Turin read more
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Scientists 'read dreams' using brain scans
Scientists have found a way to "read" dreams, a study suggests. read more
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Nine foods that lower blood pressure
High blood pressure (BP) or hypertension is considered a high risk factor for heart attacks and strokes as well as kidney failure. Many have high BP, but most don't know as it doesn't usually have its own symptoms. read more
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Smart phone app 'Fooducate' could be the beginning of...
One of the biggest obstacles holding people back from eating healthy is easy access to resourceful information, about chemicals in foods, or natural remedies and supplements, and about new choices to make right at the store. If only technology made something for your phone, so you could scan every product's barcode and get a quick, reliable summary of what you're really getting. For instance, is it GMO? Does it contain gluten? Am I allergic to the ingredients? Guess what? The smart phone app...
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CISPA is back - Big brother tries yet again to invade...
Recent cyber attacks on media giants such as the New York Times and The Washington Post have escalated concerns for strict internet regulations that would prevent future attacks. This has led the House of Representatives to pass the highly controversial Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA) with 288-127 vote. Last year, Congress's CISPA bill fell flat on its face, defeated by online freedom activists across the United States. Opponents to the bill are taking action again,...
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Associated Press refuses to use 'abortion' tag to...
When is murder not murder? Apparently whenever the mainstream media (MSM) says it isn't. read more
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More U.S. states looking to legalize gold and silver as...
As the U.S. government continues to crank out dollars like they were Monopoly money, more and more states - fearing an eventual collapse of the currency, most likely - are looking at ways to legalize and utilize gold and silver as currency. read more
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How to beat sciatica naturally
Even though up to 90 percent of Americans suffer from sciatica, there is hope. Made up of low back spinal nerves L4 through S2, the sciatic nerve is the largest nerve in the human body and runs from the hip, down the back of the thigh, to the inside of the leg and finally the foot. Commonly affecting adults 25 to 45 years old, irritation or injury to the sciatic nerve is generally caused by what chiropractors call a "misalignment in your lower spine." This is when a bone in your spine is out...
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Plenty of Americans bypassing medicines to cut back on...
A new study has shown that Americans on a tight budget often bypass dosages of expensive prescription medication or use a lower amount than was prescribed by their physician. read more
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Chlorinated water, pesticides linked to food allergies
A chemical used in pesticides, antibacterial soap and water chlorination increases people's risk of developing food allergies, according to a study conducted by researchers from the American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology (ACAAI) and published in the college's journal, Annals of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology. read more
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New therapy induces body's own cells to destroy...
Scientists at the German Cancer Research Center have developed a technique that induces the body's own immune cells to attack and destroy cancerous tumors. read more
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Social networks inform parents about vaccine choices
A study published in the journal Pediatrics (April 15, 2013) has determined that parents' vaccine choices are often informed and influenced by online social networks. Parents who choose not to vaccinate according to the recommended vaccination schedule are much more likely to get information from other parents online compared to a group of parents who follow the schedule. read more
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