Saturday, July 10th, 2010 | Author: mike

There many ways that people have reported success curing cancer, from prayer, to diet/supplementation protocols, to electrotherapy where you actually hook wires up to the body and zap the cancer cells. Jim Humble says a pool cleaner works well too.

I first heard about curing cancer from these three videos.

A World Without Cancer (70’s slideshow by G Edward Griffin)

“The Science and Politics of Cancer” – his 2005 Lecture

Hoxsey Method – how healing becomes a crime (one of the things people go to Mexico for)

I believe the research, with the exception of limited, blatant disinformation that deserves a separate discussion on its own, points towards Amygdalin as being the natural compound, which is found in many foods, as what the body uses to naturally prevent and get rid of cancer. It is sometimes referred to as vitamin b-17.

This compound is found in high amounts in raw, imported, organic almonds (fairly expensive) and the reason you need to get them imported is because growing almonds organically leads to a bitter variety which was banned from our country in 1995. The word Amygdalin comes from the greek word which is literally “Almond.”

It is also found in high amounts in apricot kernels, which is something I currently eat every day for other health reasons.

This is where I purchase them from and would recommend:

http://www.cancerchoices.com/Merchant2/merchant.mvc?Screen=PROD&Store_Code=001&Product_Code=ApricotKernels

If you know somebody who has cancer, you can get them Amygdalin tablets or skin cream (clincally referred to as Laetrille) from this site http://www.ordershere.com/Merchant2/merchant.mvc

If you think they would be super skeptical, maybe just order some imported almonds from here. I have ordered from them and verified that about 1 in 15 almonds is the bitter variety and they taste just like apricot seeds. Whole Foods in Tustin used to sell those too last year and the ratio seemed to be the same.

Category: Health  | Leave a Comment
Saturday, July 10th, 2010 | Author: mike

I am thoroughly convinced that almost everyone is vitamin D deficient. Most of us can get enough through sunlight to prevent signs of deficiency, but if you would be healthier by having more, then why not supplement?

Last year, I heard about high-doses of vitamin D being used to treat a mysterious H1N1 outbreak in the Ukraine. I have since been finding more and more mainstream research supporting the idea that getting the flu, and even the common cold, is strongly correlated with vitamin D deficiency.

“Dr. James E. Dowd, a professor of medicine at Michigan State University and Diane Stafford stated, in their book The Vitamin D Cure, about the flu/vitamin D connection, “More respiratory infections during the winter are probably directly related to lower vitamin D production.” They note several factors contribute to the winter infection scenario. In the winter, there aren’t as much ultraviolet B rays, which inactivate many viruses. With less ultraviolet B getting through, humans produce less vitamin D of their own.” http://thebulletin.us/articles/2009/11/15/top_stories/doc4b004bbeeeca0983629489.txt

Check out this short video by Dr John Cannel of the Vitamin D Council explaining how Vitamin D increases the bodies production of “antimicrobial peptides”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i1iI_d-ZZ0o (a great explanation)

I also found out recently that the way most people shower can prevent sufficient vitamin D absorption even when they are getting a lot of sun
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J1sTYuL-QsU (highly recommended explanation from Dr. Mercola)

This is the supplement I’m taking now and recommend: Healthy Origins google product search sorted low to high or Now Foods is also a good brand. I like iherb.com because they are accurate when they say the product is in stock, and they ship out pretty quickly

If you think you are healthy enough, take it because it boosts the brain.

I recommend taking 5000IU or more, and it is very cheap if you buy online.

Category: Health  | Leave a Comment
Saturday, July 10th, 2010 | Author: mike

http://www.permanentpeace.org

“A day-by-day study of a two-month assembly in Israel during August and September of 1983 showed that, on days when the number of participants at a peace-creating assembly [Transcendental meditation group] was high, the intensity of an ongoing war in neighboring Lebanon decreased sharply. When the number of participants was high, war deaths in Lebanon dropped by 76%. (p<.0001). [The mathematical expression p<.0001 indicates that, as a result of standard mathematical analysis, the likelihood that this result could be attributed to chance variation in levels of fighting was less than 1 in 10,000. This amounts to a much higher confidence level than is typical in the social sciences.]

The same study also demonstrated improvements in a wide variety of social indicators—including crime, traffic accidents, fires and the stock market. These various measures ordinarily have no correlation (you can’t predict the stock market by watching crime statistics, for example). The fact that they all improved together—in correlation with increases in meditation attendance—strongly indicates that peace-creating assemblies radiate a generalized influence of harmony and coherence throughout society that can be measured many different ways.

The figure above illustrates a highly statistically significant correlation between daily changes in attendance at this peace-creating assembly and the daily changes in a composite quality-of-life index that measured all the variables together—war, crime, fires, accidents and the stock market. The correlation is so strong it can be seen in the raw plot of the data—even without mathematical analysis.”

(Journal of Conflict Resolution 32: 776-812, 1988).

This was then repeated in Lebanon

This time the researchers looked at not just one peace-creating assembly, but seven consecutive assemblies (93 days altogether) over a two-year period during the peak of the nearly continuous Lebanon war. Some of these assemblies were relatively small but close by (one in Lebanon itself, and one in neighboring Israel). Some of these assemblies were large (6,000-8,000) and distant (Holland and the United States). By a ratio of size to distance, all of these assemblies were large enough, in theory, to affect the fighting. This study is especially significant because the ongoing warfare in Lebanon was a combination of conventional warfare, guerilla warfare, and terrorism. As compared to all the other days in the 841-day study, during the 93 days of those peace-creating assemblies:

  • war-related fatalities decreased by 71% (p < 10-10)
  • war-related injuries fell by 68% (p < 10-6)
  • the level of battles and other conflict dropped by 48% (p < 10-8)
  • cooperation among antagonists increased by 66% (p < 10-6).

These four results were combined into a composite Peace/War Index for the Lebanon War between June 1983 and August 1985 (see chart above). During each of the seven experimental periods, time series impact assessment analysis indicates significant progress towards peace. Because the number of days in the study was so large, and a dramatic reduction of war was replicated seven consecutive times, the likelihood that the combined results were due to chance is very nearly nonexistent—less than one part in 10-19 (p<.00000000000000000001), making the peace-creating effect of group meditations the most rigorously established phenomenon in the history of the social sciences (Journal of Social Behavior and Personality 17(1): 285–338, 2005).

http://www.permanentpeace.org/evidence/war.html

Category: New Science  | Leave a Comment
Sunday, June 20th, 2010 | Author: mike

Hey, I’ll be adding a lot to this site soon, and will let everybody know when it is ready

Category: Personal  | One Comment