A Bloomberg report just told us that millions of people worldwide have been taking rat poison as a prescription blood thinner. It also said that the risk of bleeding in the brain with this drug called warfarin was one of the drug's most feared complications. It's interesting, because the medical establishment normally doesn't admit their drugs are poisons. In fact, they go to great lengths to hide this fact from people.

The only reason this is being admitted so openly is because they have another drug lined up to replace the rat poison. Just as a matter of curiosity, when was the last time you found that consuming rat poison created health? Or any type of poison for that matter?

The truth is that the average American and citizens all over the world are bombarded by poisons each and every day, and a truly astounding number of them are legal, and encouraged. Yet, the irony is that medical doctors regularly deny that these poisons could possibly be causing any harm - all while they've been prescribing their patients rat poison for the last 50 years.

It's an eye-opening view-point, because it's showing us the medical community literally believes that poisons create health, while most rational people could never conceive of such nonsense. No wonder medical professionals don't think people need to detoxify all of the poisons they've already accumulated from daily 21st century living. It's literally against their belief system of what creates health.

The real question is: Were the millions of people worldwide who've been swallowing rat poison on the advice of their medical doctor informed about the exact nature of what they were swallowing; more precisely, did they know they were taking rat poison?

If they were uninformed, it says a great deal about the ethics involved in the medical field. And if they were informed, is it true the seven million people around the world have that kind of blind trust in the medical establishment - that if a doctor tells them to eat rat poison, they'd actually do it? Both are disturbing viewpoints.

The new drug that's set to replace the rat poison offers either a 34 percent less chance of stroke or a 20 percent less chance of bleeding, depending on the dose given. The medical establishment thinks this is a success. Perhaps they've never heard of daily cayenne pepper, a naturally-oriented plant-based diet, and a clean colon. With that, they might see real success.

More:
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?...
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/art...
http://www.organicfacts.net/health-...
http://www.shirleys-wellness-cafe.c...